Neither of these cops is helping us write good code, and GuardClause
specifically is actually contributing to us writing sometimes-unclear
code. Disabling both of these cops and removing all unnecessary disable
decorators in the codebase.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
* Bump Rubocop to 0.49.1
This change bumps Rubocop to 0.49.1. There have been a lot of changes
since 0.39.0 and this PR is hopefully a nice compromise of turning off
certain cops and updating our codebase to take advantage of new Ruby
2.3 methods and operators.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
* Set end-of-line format to line-feed only, avoid Windows-related CRLF issues
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
* Uses netstat to detect open ports on AIX
Signed-off-by: Keith Walters <keith.walters@cattywamp.us>
* Adds unit tests for AIX port resource
Signed-off-by: Keith Walters <keith.walters@cattywamp.us>
* port resource: support ss instead of netstat
`netstat` is officially deprecated and is replaced with `ss`. This PR
changes the port resource to use `ss` if it's available on the target
system.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
* Disable Metrics/ClassLength cop on the LinuxPorts class
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
Netstat will sometimes output an IPv6 address that is not
formatted correctly; the address is either truncated or uses
or implies the `::` shorthand notation twice. This yields an
invalid IPv6 address and causes IPAddr.new to choke.
This change guards against invalid IP addresses and ensures they
do not end up in the port resource's entries list.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
On Linux, netstat may show a tcp6/udp6 protocol line but include a
v4 address. This happens with AF_INET6 sockets that can accept
both v4 and v6 traffic. The port check was not properly handling
this situation and trying to pass a v4 address to URI bracketed as
if it was a v6 address.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
This allows the user to write:
describe port(22) do
it { should be_listening }
end
as well as
describe port('22') do
it { should be_listening }
end
without hitting an error.
Fixes#867
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
Many of the resources are named as a top-level class with a fairly generic class name, such as "OS". This causes an issue specifically with kitchen-google which depends on a gem which depends on the "os" gem which itself defines an OS class with a different superclass. This prevents users from using TK, Google Compute, and Inspec without this fix.
Some mocked commands had their digest changed as well due to the new indentation, specifically in the User and RegistryKey classes.
I strongly recommend viewing this diff with `git diff --ignore-space-change`
to see the *real* changes. :)