`must_equal nil` will fail in MiniTest 6. Changing those to `must_be_nil`
quiets down all the warnings we currently see and preps us for Minitest 6.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
* Add TCP reachability support on Linux for host resource
This enhances the `host` resource on Linux targets by using netcat
(if installed) to perform TCP reachability checks.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
* documentation updates
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
* Appease rubocop
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
Generated duplicate messages due to the way that examples are aggregated in RSpec. Make sure we never show any duplicate test result messages, as they offer not value to any user.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Richter <dominik.richter@gmail.com>
The Compliance::API.version method could potentially return
a hash containing no "version" key but would return an empty
hash upon any expected failure. Downstream callers of the
Compliance::API.version method were looking for a "version"
key to always be present when, in some cases, it would not be.
This change ensures that if a version is not available, there
is no "version" key in the hash, and downstream callers of this
method have been changed to check for nil instead of empty.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
* add bitbucket repo url handling
Signed-off-by: Mike Stevenson <Mike.Stevenson@us.logicalis.com>
* backout changes to .gitignore
* adding unit tests for bitbucket url transformers
Signed-off-by: Mike Stevenson <Mike.Stevenson@us.logicalis.com>
* fixing some indents
Signed-off-by: Mike Stevenson <Mike.Stevenson@us.logicalis.com>
* fix some indents
Signed-off-by: Mike Stevenson <Mike.Stevenson@us.logicalis.com>
Unsupported operating systems AND the mockloader when using inspec analysis tools may lead to powershell being called with the command being `nil`, because the resource skips during the initialize phase. Instead, propagate an empty string so that `command` has a valid input and then skip the resource.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Richter <dominik.richter@gmail.com>
When attempting to parse the profile out of the target URL, we
were not raising an exception if we failed to do so. Such a situation
could arise if a user's inspec config.json is incorrect either due to
manual editing or failure to re-login after an upgrade past Automate
0.8.0.
This change provides a clear exception if this occurs and also adds
tests for the compliance_profile_name method.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
The gem resource used to determine if a gem is installed based on the exit
status of the `gem` command, however that command will return zero
if the package was found or not. This patch checks to ensure that the
`gem list` command actually includes the gem name or is empty to
determine if the gem is in fact installed.
If the gem command returns something other than a `0` exit code, then
it'll skip the resource.
Signed-off-by: Keith Walters <keith.walters@cattywamp.us>
This adds supports for connecting to MS SQL instances using Window
authentication rather than SQL authentication. By leaving either the
user or password parameters blank causes the sqlcmd to leave off the -U
and -P params. This will cause sqlcmd to authenticate as the current
Windows user.
Signed-off-by: Nolan Davidson <ndavidson@chef.io>
Inspired by #1640, this change cleans up the logic used when
reading in secrets files, provides clearer warnings when the
secrets files can't be parsed, and adds tests for those methods.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
* When running integration tests with Rakefile use terraform environment based on environment variable INSPEC_TERRAFORM_ENV
** If INSPEC_TERRAFORM_ENV is not provided, a random string will be used
* Use terraform environment as a namespace for AWS artifacts
* Use attribute file for inspec to be aware of the terraform environment used
Signed-off-by: Miles Tjandrawidjaja <miles@tjandrawidjaja.com>
Switched the oracle_session resource to take an option hash and allow
for configuring hostname, DB_SID, and sqlplus binary path.
Added unit tests.
Signed-off-by: Nolan Davidson <ndavidson@chef.io>
The CLI formatter is not currently honoring the --no-color flag
when outputting CLI output. This change cleans up how we format
with color and properly support the flag for use cases where
color-encoding characters make the output difficult to use
(i.e. when someone redirects CLI output to a text file for
sharing with others).
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
Running `inspec exec` with --sudo locally produces unintended results
given that we cannot escalate local Ruby methods after we're already
running. --sudo is meant to only be used with remote targets. We do
not currently enforce that.
This change will print an error for the user if they attempt to use
--sudo with a local exec and exit non-zero.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
Signed-off-by: Viktor Yakovlyev <Viktor.Y@D2L.com>
check for unset password expiry
Signed-off-by: Viktor Yakovlyev <Viktor.Y@D2L.com>
pr changes
Signed-off-by: Viktor Yakovlyev <Viktor.Y@D2L.com>
A new `help matchers` command will provide helpful examples on a few
of the standard matchers: be, cmp, include, etc.
I also cleaned up the formatting of the resources list and provided
better feedback if a user requests help for an unknown resource.
Resolves#1684
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
Instead of my favorite shortcut of `os.inspec` just finally add it as a global keyword.
Preparation for https://github.com/chef/inspec/issues/1396
Signed-off-by: Dominik Richter <dominik.richter@gmail.com>
This is always bothersome when debugging code and drilling down objects, since it will just a return a two-layer anonymous class with no help at all.
Instead print a nice name and even give a bit of information on pretty-printing (which pry does naturally)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Richter <dominik.richter@gmail.com>
Unindent has been misbehaving for control `desc`riptions by completely removing newlines. This is now fixed and the unindentation mechanism improved to behave as expected.
Removing empty lines at the beginning and end of string remains unchanged.
Tabs are not treated as multi-space indentations; supporting them as 8-space chars would require additional effort (please comment if this is important to you)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Richter <dominik.richter@gmail.com>
I.e. instead of printing them as:
```
desc "hello\nworld"
```
it would instead do:
```
desc "hello
world"
```
Signed-off-by: Dominik Richter <dominik.richter@gmail.com>
RubyGems on windows comes with a batch file that wraps the `gem` command
so it executes correctly. This change uses that batch file for windows
for our `gem` resource, and also properly handles when we receive no output
from the command.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
Signed-off-by: Viktor Yakovlyev <Viktor.Y@D2L.com>
wire up mock resource twice
Signed-off-by: Viktor Yakovlyev <Viktor.Y@D2L.com>
cleaning up as per pr feedback
Signed-off-by: Viktor Yakovlyev <Viktor.Y@D2L.com>
style fixes
Signed-off-by: Viktor Yakovlyev <Viktor.Y@D2L.com>
fix indent in test
Signed-off-by: Viktor Yakovlyev <Viktor.Y@D2L.com>
remove unneeded line
Signed-off-by: Viktor Yakovlyev <Viktor.Y@D2L.com>
use minitest mock instead of object
Signed-off-by: Viktor Yakovlyev <Viktor.Y@D2L.com>
In #1454, we welcomed a newly-revamped JUnit formatter which has
a dependency on Nokogiri. Unfortunately, this had led us to problems
getting InSpec included in Chef omnibus builds (see chef/chef#5937)
because Chef is using Ruby 2.4.1 and the Nokogiri maintainers have
not yet released a windows binary gem that supports Ruby 2.4.x.
This has led to breaking builds in Chef's CI platform and would
block the acceptance of chef/chef#5937.
This change replaces Nokogiri use with REXML instead. While REXML
can be slower than Nokogiri, it does not require native extensions
and is supported on all Chef platforms.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
* Enable customization of supermarket_url
It looks like this was originally supposed to work, but at some point
the default value was put in the method body rather than in the method
parameters.
This change allows you to configure the supermarket_url in test kitchen
like so:
```
verifier:
inspec_tests:
- name: linux-hardening
supermarket: som3guy/apache-disa-stig
supermarket_url: https://my.supermarket.com
```
Signed-off-by: Ryan Larson <ryan.mango.larson@gmail.com>
If a repo did not exist, running matchers against it (such as `exist`)
were failing due to a bug in `#to_s` when fetching the repo name. The
`info` method would return nil and we'd still try to treat it as a hash.
This change ensures that info is always a hash, possibly empty if the
repo doesn't exist, and uses the repo name provided by the user rather
than shortening it to be consistent with our other resources which don't
manipulate the user input in the formatter.
Also added a method_missing to allow users to interrogate repo options,
such as baseurl or gpgcheck.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
The CLI output for the vendoring of profiles has been updated slightly
to be more clear, and the functional tests have been modified to match
as well.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
Per PR feedback, `Inspec::ProfileVendor` is created to centralize
the logic and data of vendoring profile dependencies. The `BaseCLI`
class and the `Habitat::Profile` class have been modified to use it
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
This change adds support in Habitat-packaged profiles for
profiles that depend on other profiles. When `inspec habitat
profile create` or `inspec habitat profile upload` is run,
it will see if the profile's dependencies have been vendored
yet, and if not, it will vendor them before creating the
habitat artifact.
For the git and URL fetchers, more explicit creation of the
target directories for the vendored profiles is done. This
is implicitly done via normal CLI interactions a user may
go through, but in our case, we want to ensure those directories
are there before the fetchers try to write out content.
By adding this support, we also fix a bug experienced in Habitat
where a profile that was packaged before an `inspec exec` was run
for the profile would cause a failure in Habitat. This is caused
by `inspec exec` doing a vendor of the dependencies if necessary
and generating the inspec.lock file. In Habitat, the package dir
is not writable by the hab user and InSpec would fail to run due
to an inability to write out an inspec.lock.
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>
* add tag object
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hartmann <chris@lollyrock.com>
* add tests for to_hash function in tag
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hartmann <chris@lollyrock.com>
When SimpleConfig parses a config file that has sections, such as a mysqld
config file, the values within that section are returned via a Hash. However,
we do not provide an easy way to write tests for those deep hash values:
```
describe mysql_conf('/tmp/my.cnf') do
its('mysqld.expire_logs_days') { should cmp 10 }
end
MySQL Configuration
∅ undefined method `expire_logs_days' for #<Hash:0x007fe463795a00>
```
This change provides a method-based accessor for Hashes that are built via
SimpleConfig.
```
describe mysql_conf('/tmp/my.cnf') do
its('mysqld.expire_logs_days') { should cmp 10 }
end
MySQL Configuration
✔ mysqld.expire_logs_days should cmp == 10
```
Fixes#1541 by changing the way the attributes are fetched.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
When attempting to access array values via the `json` resource:
```
describe json('/tmp/test.json') do
its(['array',0]) { should eq "zero" }
end
```
... the resulting data would be an array of the size of the original array
with all the values replaced with nils:
```
expected: "zero"
got: [nil, nil, nil]
```
This was due to a bug in the ObjectTraverser mixin that mapped array values
back through `extract_value` rather than properly handling the passed-in
key(s). This worked fine for the specific data format created by the `csv`
resource but did not work `json` or any other resource that subclassed the
`JsonConfig` resource.
This change fixes the logic when dealing with an array when it's encountered,
and fixes up the `csv` resource with its own `value` method.
This change also adds tests for ObjectTraverser.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
Currently, if the inspec.yml for a profile is invalid (such as including
an improperly-defined multi-line string), InSpec will throw an exception
from the YAML parser that does not given a clear indication that the
issue was encountered while parsing the inspec.yml file.
This change introduces a better exception message to clue the user into
where the problem actually lies.
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>
Two new commands have been created:
* inspec habitat profile create /path/to/profile
* inspec habitat profile upload /path/to/profile
The `create` command creates a Habitat artifact that contains the contents
of the Habitat profile found at the provided path. This will be used later
in some Habitat + InSpec integrations.
The `upload` command does the same create process but then uploads the
resulting artifact to the Habitat Depot.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
The following new resources have been added; however, they
presently only support FreeBSD and similar.
* `zfs_dataset`: tests if a named ZFS dataset is present
and/or has certain properties.
* `zfs_pool`: tests if a named ZFS pool is present and/or
has certain properties.
Additionally, the `mount` resource has been reworked to
include support for FreeBSD; while the existing class
was renamed to LinuxMountParser.
Unit-tests were added for all of the above.
Signed-off-by: Joseph Benden <joe@benden.us>
When in inspec shell, you need to type the `help` command to find out info
about your target system. This info would be super helpful right out of the
gate so users have confidence that they're targeting the correct system.
The target info is still available via the `help` command as it always has
been, as well.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
When running InSpec with multiple profiles, and two or more of the profiles
are read in using the "Flat" SourceReader (i.e. they are not actual profiles
with a metadata file like inspec.yml, but rather just a folder containing
.rb files with controls and tests in them), InSpec would throw a NilClass
error when building the necessary objects for the formatter.
The cause was in `#profile_contains_example` in the formatter code which
checks to see if the profile name is the same as the profile_id in the given
example. However, if both of those were nil, it would potentially match the
wrong Flat-read profile.
This change fixes this in two ways: refusing to match if the profile name
or example profile ID is nil, and adding a default name to a profile if
it doesn't have a title or name. This will solve the matching issue and also
clean up the formatter output so users can more easily tell what tests
are from which profile/path.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
The crontab resource parses a particular user's crontab file into
individual entries and allows the user to assert information about
each entry as needed.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
This pull request adds a packages resource so that we can check for pattern matches against all the packages on a system. This initially implements only dpkg support for debian-based platforms so we can cover this use case:
```ruby
describe packages(/^xserver-xorg.*/) do
its("list") { should be_empty }
end
```
This uses FilterTable so we can supply additional queries, too.
```ruby
describe packages(/vi.+/).where { status != 'installed' } do
its('statuses') { should be_empty }
end
```
Users can specify the name as a string or a regular expression. If it is a string, we will escape it and convert it to a regular expression to use in matching against the full returned list of packages. If it is a regular expression, we take that as is and use it to filter the results.
While some package management systems such as `dpkg` can take a shell glob argument to filter their results, we eschew this and require a regular expression to match multiple package names because we will need this to work across other platforms in the future. This means that the following:
```ruby
packages("vim")
```
Will return *all* the "vim" packages on the system. The `packages` resource will take `"vim"`, turn it into `/vim/`, and greedily match anything with "vim" in the name. To match only a single package named `vim`, it needs to be an anchored regular expression.
```ruby
packages(/^vim$/)
```
Signed-off-by: Joshua Timberman <joshua@chef.io>
Use entries instead of list
Added a few more tests and non installed package in output
Signed-off-by: Alex Pop <apop@chef.io>
fix lint
Signed-off-by: Alex Pop <apop@chef.io>
Signed-off-by: Joshua Timberman <joshua@chef.io>
* Fixes an issue when specifying no profile
* Fixes an issue when displaying a profile that has included/required profiels
* Fixes an issue when specifying profiles with only metadata
* Fixes formatting for spacing to ensure it adheres to previous alignment
* Fixes issue with the Control object and the rolling up of failed
and skipped examples.
Signed-off-by: Franklin Webber <franklin@chef.io>
Previous, require_controls was including all controls from the named
profile, despite the documented behavior being that it only includes
controls explicitly pulled in by the user. The cause was two-fold:
1) A previous refactor meant that we weren't removing the rule from the
correct context, and
2) We weren't descending down the dependency tree when filtering rules.
This commit fixes the require_controls DSL method and adds a test to
help prevent future regressions.
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
This commit threads through some state related to whether or not a
profile is "local", that is whether it is a directory on disk. If it
is, we then write out the lockfile to disk.
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
If a URL based source does not match the shasum recorded in the
lockfile, it likely means a new version has been pushed to the remote
source. In this case, we fail to help ensure that when using a lockfile
we always run the same code as when the lockfile was created.
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
All resources from deps are added into the control_eval_context used by
the current profile. However, if there is a name conflict, the last
loaded resource wins. The new `require_resource` dsl method allows the
user to do the following:
require_resource(profile: 'profile_name',
resource: 'other',
as: 'renamed')
describe renamed do
...
end
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
This is a regression introduced by the changes from string to symbol
keys in v0.34.0. It seems that our test cookbook that had a nested
dependency example wasn't actually wired up to run.
This adds a basic functional test and corrects the typo.
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
The recent changes to provide isolated views of the available resources
was not extended to Rspec::ExampleGroups. This ensures that
ExampleGroups have access to the same resources as the enclosing
Inspec::Rule.
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
This adds a new git fetcher. In doing so, it also refactors how the
fetchers work a bit to better support fetchers that need to resolve
user-provided sources to fully specified sources appropriate for a
lockfile.
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
Before this change, simplecov was reporting
1864 / 5198 LOC (35.86%) covered
After this change it is reporting
4131 / 5275 LOC (78.31%) covered.
Keeping the require at the top of the file ensure that simplecov is
loaded before any of our application code.
Previously, libraries were loaded by instance_eval'ing them against
the same execution context used for control files. All resources were
registered against a single global registry when the `name` dsl method
was invoked. To obtain seperation of resources, we would mutate the
instance variable holding the globale registry and then change it back
at the end.
Now, we instance_eval library files inside an anonymous class. This
class has its own version of `Inspec.resource` that returns another
class with the resource DSL method and the profile-specific resource
registry.
The goal of these changes is to ensure that the libraries from
dependencies are loaded even if their controls are never included. To
facilitate this, we break up the loading into seperate steps, and move
the loading code into the Profile which has acceess to the dependency
information.
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
Previously, all resources were loaded into a single resource registry.
Now, each profile context has a resource registry, when a profile's
library is loaded into the profile context, we update the
profile-context-specific resource registry. This local registry is
then used to populate the execution context that the rules are
evaluated in.
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
A few minor issues were causing 3 functional test failures on OS X.
These were not program errors but where rather the result of the
profiles under test assuming a linux environment.
Since many of the developers who will work on this project in the future
will be running OS X, let's ensure they can run the functional tests
easily.
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
The goal of this change is to provide an isolated view of the available
profiles when the user calls the include_controls or require_controls
APIs. Namely,
- A profile should only be able to reference profiles that are part of
its transitive dependency tree. That is, if the dependency tree for a
profile looks like the following:
A
|- B --> C
|
|- D --> E
Then profile B should only be able to see profile C and fail if it
tries to reference A, D, or E.
- The same profile should be include-able at different versions from
different parts of the tree without conflict. That is, if the
dependency tree for a profile looks like the following:
A
|- B --> C@1.0
|
|- D --> C@2.0
Then profile B should see the 1.0 version of C and profile D should
see the 2.0 profile C with respect to the included controls.
To achieve these goals we:
- Ensure that we construct ProfileContext objects with respect to the
correct dependencies in Inspec::DSL.
- Provide a method of accessing all transitively defined rules on a
ProfileContext without pushing all of the rules onto the same global
namespace.
This does not yet handle attributes or libraries.
This extends the dependency feature to include support for url-based
dependencies. It takes some deviations from the current support for
URLs that we'll likely want to make more consistent.
By default, we store downloaded archives in the cache rather than the
unpacked archive. However, to facilitate debugging, we will prefer the
unpacked archive if we find it in the cache.
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
This adds a new subcommand:
inspec env [SHELL]
which outputs a shell-appropriate completion script that the user can
source into their shell:
eval "$(inspec env SHELL)"
Currently, we provide completions for ZSH and Bash. The completion
scripts are generated from the data Thor collects.
If the user doesn't provide SHELL we attempt to detect what the user's
shell may be using a number of methods.
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
(1) The field is not yet optimal, the calculations are great!
(2) Changing this field should go together with all other breaking json changes, especially if https://github.com/chef/inspec/pull/811 results in a change.
Ruby's autoload feature is not threadsafe. We are hoping requiring the
docker plugin early will fix odd failures we have been seeing.
Signed-off-by: Steven Danna <steve@chef.io>
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>
In many linux distributions a link to /proc/kcore is placed at
`/dev/core`. In TravisCI we see it at `/dev/kcore`. To avoid tests
failing for some developers locally, we support either location.
Mixing types in an array without specifying what these fields point to is not just confusing, but also causes issues with endpoints that may consume this data and dont process mixed types. We strive to have a stable api for 1.0 and this is a sin that was left after the major overhaul. Time to fix it.
this happens when the profile is run (exec) and also interpreted (via profile.params). It will load 2 profile context calls (both via Runner) which in turn gets 2 rounds of interpreter+runner executions. This is an issue with auto-generated IDs, due to their random component, which changes in this case
Full rewrite of all formatters. Create a minimal JSON, a full JSON, and a fallback RSpec formatter. The latter is only needed for corner cases and should not really be used. The former 2 are for (1) running `inspec json` followed by `inspec exec` (`--format json`) and (2) running just `inspec exec --format fulljson`.
Instead of just removing all tests because of OS support, supports now acts by adding all tests to the execution context, but doesnt actually execute them. Instead tests are set to skip before they get to the actual execution context
instead of keeping them as flat variables, prefix all internals with `__` to create consistency. Also add accessors on the class-level to expose these values in all rules. This way we keep all variable-names in one location and get some safety on access.
In some instances, when running inspec shell, you dont get any resources inside of it. i.e. `inspec shell` and then `os` will lead to
```ruby
NameError: undefined local variable or method `os' for
from (pry):1:in `add_content'
```
This is because of instance_eval loading withing the given source/line
information and not attaching to the profile context which actually has
all the resources. Fix it by making sure that inspec shell always
attaches to the profile context with resources by providing nil for
source and line information.
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. :)
```
describe.one do
describe command("uname -r").stdout do
it { should_not match /x86_64/ }
end
describe test_sth_for_x64_processors do
...
end
end
```
This helps reduce any folder structures, weather on disk or in archives, to their relative root paths; i.e. ignore all file-prefixes that are given and go directly to the underlying files, relative to the common folders that contain it
Bugfix: there were services that would get matched because of the way the regex was constructed, i.e. if the user inserted `.` or `*` or anything regexy. Even if the service only had part of the name you were interested in, it would match (e.g. `sshd` would find `my_sshdaemon`).
Apart from this, runlevels are now detected for SystemV. This is exposed in `#info`
Basically make sure everyone understands these are only subcommands. we might consider adding plugins for options or existing commands instead of new subcommands. this just ensures everyone knows what registry is for
this makes it work (tested with default-ubuntu-1404), but doesn't
improve the error handling (i.e., the skip_resource doesn't really
prevent the failure)
I.e.: Prevent users from writing `supports: linux` and similar. These are deprecated and will be removed. Also improve the warning to indicate what the user should do instead. Finally add tests to make sure we get all these.
NB I've just added default duplicates to one instance (i.e., there's
only one `systemd_service`), since there's no os-specific magic in them.
Also these tests only verify that the default choice is equivalent to
`service` on the tested distribution.
Before introducing InSpec profiles in https://github.com/chef/inspec/pull/252 we had `metadata.rb` keep all information. This included an undisclosed field called `supports`. However, this field was never actually used in practice. So for legacy profiles, this means that `supports` was ignored. In order to keep old profiles running in exactly the way they were before, ignore this field when reading from metadata.rb
For reading the profiles metadata, we're using the train mock backend
through Inspec::Runner. The new `supports` feature never agrees with the
mock backend.
Now, it we figure out if this is a mock class and then just say that it
supports whatever we're asking for.
Tl;dr: there's probably a more beautiful solution to this.
Added a test case, but it fails -- while the command line interface
works fine.
Package release info (e.g. '19.el7') is often required to determine if
a system has been properly patched.
Lines like the following from rpm are messing up the version returned
by the package resource:
"...\nVersion : 1.8.6p3 Vendor: Red Hat, Inc.\n..."
Correcting this with a new conditional check.
Currently, #readable?, #writeable?, and #executable? will incorrectly
return true if the file does not exist.
In addition, I took the opportunity to refactor the File resource to
make it easier to write unit tests and supplied a full unit test
suite for this resource.
processes('bash').user does not actually make much sense for a resource
that is a list -- different entries can belong to different users.
Analogous for processes('bash').state.
The attributes 'users' and 'states' expose the unique values
corresponding to that property of entries in the process list.
Fixes#295.
before, the resource would throw an exception when include_files
returned nil (i.e., [].flatten!)
added basic unit tests capturing the include_files behaviour
CentOS 5.11 doesnt recognize minor #20 for the block device, but can connect #7. Make the adjustment so that reading content from block_device doesnt error out.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Richter <dominik.richter@gmail.com>
Reason: Tempering around older ubuntu distros to get their ruby to work just right is error-prone and wasteful. Just install chef from omnibus, grab its ruby to run the tests and use chef to bootstrap the nodes.
Take control of the rspec runner loop and make sure all of our concurrent tests are executed in one reporting chain. It goes: Start reporting, concurrently run container+test+kill, stop and publish reporting.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Richter <dominik.richter@gmail.com>
With just one more issue left: the formatter is going to report multiple time, including spitting out errors multiple times. Also need to remove some of the custom formatting around the current state of containers.
As a bonus: This further improved testing speed (30% on the current environment) and will allow us to grow the supported platforms for tests easily.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Richter <dominik.richter@gmail.com>
Instead of having RSpec re-run its world multiple times, run it only once with all tests.
Which leaves us with one more thing to solve: we want to start tests as soon as the container is up and they are set up. At the moment, the containers come up and are set up concurrently, including test registry, but the tests themselves are in simple sequence.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Richter <dominik.richter@gmail.com>
As a limitation right now: We cannot yet run all tests concurrently with the current backend. Until this is done, at least speed up container creation and teardown for testing.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Richter <dominik.richter@gmail.com>
mask & tmask returns non-zero values, if some bits fit the file-type. this leads to overlapping results. make sure the mask result has the full mask present, then use it.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Richter <dominik.richter@gmail.com>