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I was tracking another regression where we seem to have lost
`/usr/etc` contents which manifested as `Labeling with... (null)`
which was clearly wrong.
Now this change actually impacts the test suite - we now (again IMO
correctly) error out if `selinux: true`. The `no-selinux-tag` test
no longer makes sense, so delete it.
We do need more "real" tests that use selinux on and off.
Pull request: #243
Approved by: jlebon
When running the tests by hand, I wanted to be able to source
`libtest.sh` from a running shell. Make this slightly easier by
allowing one to set `SRCDIR`, since `$0` won't work.
The libtest.sh script is aware of whether a tmpdir needs to be created
or not for the test. Make use of this in setup-session.sh so that we're
sure we're in the right directory before creating the sysroot dir.
Running `make check` would fail because test-ucontainer.sh uses
test-repo, which points directly to the installed_testdir, where it is
not installed yet.
We make another processed version of test-repo.repo.in which instead
points to the repo in the srcdir and make use of that in
test-ucontainer.sh.
There are probably other ways of solving this, but this is the one that
jumped out at me.
For the same reasons as described in GNOME/ostree#187. In summary: we
want to make it easy for testers to clean up after we're done by not
setting the immutable flag.
Note that I had to also add it to setup-session.sh so that the daemon
inherited the env var. The libtest.sh hunk is redundant in that case,
but still necessary if the tests are run directly.
The assert[_not]_file_has_content functions used grep to check the
pattern against the content. This meant that the '.' characters are
interpreted as "any char". Yesterday, the date was 20150910 and thus the
otheros' tree's version was labelled as such. This date also happens to
match the 1.0.10 pattern, and thus caused the test to fail.
This patch makes sure this doesn't happen again by escaping all the dots
to make them literal.
Unfortunately RHEL 7 has an older version of dbus, and I use it as a
workstation. It's not a lot of code and only used for tests. We can
make it build time conditional down the line or something.
This is a *third* implementation of rpm database diffs in the code,
but it is now a public introspectable shared library API.
Further commits will change the command line tools to use this, and
then after that we'll further deduplicate the `db diff` from this
code.
The `QueryResult` class ended up being too awkward; having NEVRA
strings meant for example that clients would have to parse them. It
would be harder to present something like the current `rpm-ostree
upgrade` package diff output.
Now...I debated quite a while before doing this patch. The thing
that's really awful about creating this library is there are *SO MANY*
layers. rpm-ostree → libhif → hawkey → libsolv → librpm. It's enough
to make one question whether one is actually accomplishing anything or
just contributing to a collective insanity...
Let's pretend for now it's the former.
Closes: https://github.com/projectatomic/rpm-ostree/pull/136
This will help build release engineering and other types of tools;
for example, rather than parsing the output of `db diff`, one
should be able to call an API.
Initially, this adds the generic infrastructure for a public shared
library, with a new function call to do the equivalent of `rpm -qa` on
a particular OSTree commit.
Closes: https://github.com/projectatomic/rpm-ostree/issues/117
Closes: https://github.com/projectatomic/rpm-ostree/pull/124
A local yum repository, which contains a dummy .rpm package adding
support for programs needed by the post-process phase, is created as
part of the test.
Since no libc is present, the empty.c program (which is a no-op)
directly invokes the interrupt 0x80 to exit.
The test works only on x86_64, it is skipped on other architectures.
Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Scrivano <gscrivan@redhat.com>