If a profile has a data files directory that looks like this:
```
files/platforms/one/data.json
files/platforms/two/data.json
files/platforms/three/data.json
```
... the source reader will return the directories in the list of files but with
nil contents. This causes an issue when Inspec::Profile tries to create a sha256
checksum of the profile contents only to try to cast nil to a string when
building the null-delimited profile contents string.
Files that are empty will have an empty string as its contents, so it's safe to
assume that file entries with nil contents are actually a directory and have no
affect on the profile's checksum. Therefore, this change will eliminate any file
entries in responses from the source readers where the contents are nil.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
* Remove any "All Rights Reserved" references
InSpec is licensed and released under the Apache 2.0 license. This
change removes all reference to legacy code files that still had
any Copyright or License lines referring to "All Rights Reserved".
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
* fix functional tests
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hartmann <chris@lollyrock.com>
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>
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>
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>
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.