The tests depended on an old fixture profile that skipped a test,
which no longer happens. It also was targeting a test that does not exist.
Signed-off-by: Clinton Wolfe <clintoncwolfe@gmail.com>
At the moment we return the "Truncate" text whenever the setting is
utilized. This PR ensures that we only advise truncation when it's been
executed.
Signed-off-by: Nick Schwaderer <nschwaderer@chef.io>
Fixes#5131
Due to the use of `#split(‘=‘)` against inputs supplied via the CLI we had an edge case where inputs with `’=‘` in the value would cause a breakage.
This PR supplies a test for the regression and fixes the bug with a regex solution.
Signed-off-by: Nick Schwaderer <nschwaderer@chef.io>
We have 72 `skip_windows` that need addressing. This PR removes
confirmed instances where the tests now work on windows. It also marks
tests with a comment where they are confirmed to still break. Unmarked
instances still need review.
It also updates the `skip_windows` expiration date.
72 `skip_windows` needing resolution OR alternative documentation upon investigation
Signed-off-by: Nick Schwaderer <nschwaderer@chef.io>
This is technically incorrect YAML, but if you transcode YAML between several tools you may end up with a date/time value being an explicit string.
It would be helpful if InSpec supported any string value that easily translates to a Time.
Signed-off-by: James Stocks <jstocks@chef.io>
Fixes#5037
The YAML parser may parse a waiver timestamp as a Time rather than a Date. Even when the user doesn't care about time, they may be using a tool that outputs YAML with trailing zeroes for hour, minutes, seconds etc.
Signed-off-by: James Stocks <jstocks@chef.io>
I removed the skip to see what would break, and on my Windows laptop
these tests pass OK. The TODO didn't explain what wasn't applicable to
Windows, so I'm just going to remove it.
Signed-off-by: James Stocks <jstocks@chef.io>
In https://github.com/inspec/inspec/issues/4936 the issue was reported that naming an input the same as a control caused an unexpected failure.
In that particular case, the naming was a result of a pre-waivers workaround which is no longer necessary, but ultimately a breakage of that name clash is an unexpected occurrance.
Due to how inputs are named and registered, `__apply_waivers` thinks that an object is a waiver that is not a waiver and tries to process it. On the micro level, it breaks when trying to pass a variable to a string as if it were a Hash.
It is imperative that we preserve 100% of the current featureset, pass our tests, and fix this edge case along with new test coverage for the failure.
This PR updates the code to do a slightly more elegant and small ‘waiver check’ to stop the namespace clash from breaking our code.
Signed-off-by: Nick Schwaderer <nschwaderer@chef.io>
They don't need to be json specific, they should apply to any reporter if the user has chosen these settings.
Signed-off-by: James Stocks <jstocks@chef.io>