Prevents zero length error on Python 2.6
Fixes Zypper unit test
Enhances pkg.list_downloaded information of a package
Listing all patches instead of security ones only
Adapting Zypper test to new list_downloaded output
Fixes zypper test error after backporting
Pylint fixes
Adding support for installing patches in Zypper module
Adding list_downloaded function to Zypper module
Adding list_downloaded function to Yum module
Adding new pkg.downloaded state
Adding documentation for pkg.downloaded state
Adding pkg.patched and pkg.patch_downloaded states
Check targets for advisory patches installation
Adds support for listing advisory patches with Zypper
Adds support for listing advisory patches with Yum
Improving function naming
Moving advisory ids checks into pkg_resource.parse_targets
Fixes _find_download_targets to call _preflight_check
Fixes parse_targets when advisory id is passed as name
Pylint fixes
Enables pkg.downloaded to verify packages after package manager call.
Adding missing kwargs parameters to pkg.install call
Adding versionadded flags
Some refactoring and minor fixes
Adding unit tests for Zypper execution module
Adding more unit tests for Zypper module
Pylint fix
Adjust the test so it is using the right grain for SUSE systems
Bugfix: use correct grain constant for platform
Refactor with setup/teardown
Add UT for RedHat's set_zone
Fix doc for RH UT
Remove unnecessary mock patch
Doc fix
Add UT for set_zone on SUSE series
Adjust UT to use correct grain for SUSE series
Bugfix: use correct os_family grain value for SUSE series
Add UT for gentoo on set_zone
Add UT for Debian on set_zone
Remove duplicate code
Add UT for get_hwclock on UTC/localtime
Remove dead code
Add UT for get_hwclock on SUSE platform
Bugfix: use correct grain for SUSE and RedHat platform
Add UT for RedHat/SUSE platforms on get_hwclock
Add UT for Debian on get_hwclock
Add UT on Solaris
Add UT for AIX on get_hwclock
Add UT for set_hwclock on AIX
Fix docstrings
Add UT for set_hwclock on solaris
Add UT for set_hwclock on Arch
Add UT for set_hwclock on RedHat
Fix UT names
Add UT set_hwclock on SUSE
Bugfix: use correct grain name for SUSE platform
Add UT for set_hwclock on Debian
Add UT on set_hw_clock on Gentoo
Fix lint issues
Rewrite test case for using no patch decorators
Disable the test for a while
Do not use multiple variables in "with" statement as of lint issues
The automatic back-porting process did't work for this file since the
testing file has been renamed. I manually added the changes to
`timezone_test.py` that were present in PR #41615.
tls module: convert bytes to string
gzip util: use BytesIO for 'wb' file
django module: ignore arguments order in assert
pillar module: correctly test pillar merge
mock = MagicMock(return_value='') works for functions: here mock() will
return the value (empty string). But mock returns the MagicMock object.
Not sure why but it worked in Py2, but in Py3 os.path.join(mock,
'something'), for instance, returns an error.
Fixed the issues by avoiding of using mocks where we can use simple
strings.
When adding the cp.get_file function, we need to add it into the list of
mock functions in the unit test along with get_template or the unit
tests will fail.
The "latest" keyword was only implemented when both "name" and "version"
were used, and not for "pkgs". But mod_aggregate puts all packages into
a single low chunk, within "pkgs". This means that using aggregation in
conjuntion with the "latest" keyword no longer resolves the latest
version and thus breaks these states.
This fixes the problem by moving the logic for resolving the "latest"
keyword into _find_install_targets(). It also makes some improvements to
the logic we use to ensure only one package DB refresh is performed per
Salt run, by making the pkg.refresh_db functions handle removing the
rtag file, instead of requiring a call to a helper function everywhere
in the pkg state where we might be calling a function that refreshes the
package DB.
he pip junos-eznc package, when installed with PyOpenSSL version 0.14 causes
this test failure. If you either remove junos-eznc, or upgrade PyOpenSSL
(current is 0.17) the test is happy. So, we need to handle this case in the test.
This commit changes how we handle Docker authentication. We no longer
try to auth when pushing/pulling images. This was initially done based
on a misunderstanding of how authentication was handled in docker-py.
docker-py will automagically use the base64-encoded username/password
combination stored in config.json if present, so we don't need to auth
at all for push or pull, docker-py will handle all of that. We just need
to make sure that we get the auth info into the config.json. To do this
I have added a login() function to the execution module, which uses the
Docker CLI to authenticate (with output_loglevel set to "quiet" to
suppress any logging of the credentials). The CLI is used in this
instance because docker-py provides no interface by which to persist a
login in the config.json; it can read from the file, but is not designed
to *write* to it. Rather than trying to write to this file ourselves,
and potentially breaking it when (not *if*) Docker decides to change the
internal format of the JSON data structure, using the CLI is a way of
future-proofing the authentication logic.
Context caching of the docker-py client instance has also been removed.
Context caching was used based on the same incorrect understanding of
how docker-py handles authentication, and sought to avoid repeated login
attempts. As that is no longer a concern, there is no need to cache the
client instance in the context dunder because we don't really gain a
performance benefit from it.
The _image_wrapper() function has been removed, as it no longer serves
any purpose, and the image-specific code in it that was still needed
has been absorbed into the _client_wrapper() helper. The functions which
used the _image_wrapper() helper (like push() and pull()) now use
_client_wrapper().
Additionally, the decorators used to enforce a minimum Docker version
(or Docker API version) have been removed. These are not necessary since
docker-py handles raising exceptions when a given feature is not
supported by the effective API version. The _client_wrapper() helper
function now checks for miscellaneous docker exceptions by catching the
docker.errors.DockerException class, which is the base class for the
custom exceptions raised by docker-py, and by doing so catches exceptions
raised due to API version incompatibility (and more).
The list of functions in the top-level docstring has been removed as it
is very out-of-date, and is somewhat superfluous anyway given that we
have for some time now had a list of the functions on the right side of
the page in the documentation.
Other changes:
- Fixed a bug I introduced when I overhauled the
docker_container.running state, in which a container with no changes
to be made, which was not running, would be started by the state even
when test=True was passed.
- Custom registry image names are now properly identified. The colon in
the hostname of the custom registry was previously causing incorrect
identification of the image name and tag, when no explicit tag was
being passed (e.g. localhost:5000/myimage).
- When configuring credentials, the creds for the Docker Hub can be
configured under a registry named ``hub``. This keeps the user from
having to figure out the registry URL and configure it in their Pillar
data, and thus makes using this module easier.
- Removes the email address from the documentation for credential
configuration. This was probably initially added because docker-py
accepts it as an argument, but it is entirely ignored for purposes of
authentication (even by docker-py) and is thus unnecessary. Relic of
an earlier time in Docker's history, perhaps?
- Fixed RST references to functions which weren't caught when this
module was renamed to dockermod.py
- Allow filter arguments in docker.networks to be passed as a
comma-separated list as well as a Python list, in keeping with general
usage elsewhere in Salt.
* Add Ingest pipeline methods to Elasticsearch execution module
* Refactor Elasticsearch execution module and properly handle exceptions
* Throw CommandExecutionError in methods applicable for different Elasticsearch versions
* Refactor Elasticsearch states to reflect execution module changes
* Add state for managing Elasticsearch pipelines
* Fix few typos in Elasticsearch module, return None when deleted document doesn't exist
* Implements stats and health methods for Elasticsearch
* Add Elasticsearch methods to open/close index, manage search templates and repositories
* Merge existing Elasticsearch states into single one, add Search Template handling
* Add index alias state for Elasticsearch, fix documentation
* Catch all global exceptions in Elasticsearch states, unit test all of them
* Implement few Unit tests for Elasticsearch execution module, merge fixes into deprecated elastic states
* Implement additional unit tests for Elasticsearch execution module
* Finalize Elasticsearch module documentation
The existing fix did not work if the profile name itself had a dash `-`.
For example - `virtual-guest`. This commit fixes that by using `split('- ')`
rather than `split('-')`. This commit also provides two simple tests for the
`list_()` function to emulate behaviour of both old and new tuned-adm versions
Fixes#39692
When we hit that attribute error, we need to set the docker version
variable to a tuple starting with 0 so we can use it in other test
comparisons. If docker is installed, but at a lower version, we will
see this attribute error.
Fixes the test failure on the 2016.11 branch on CentOS 6 VMs.
This test module was updated for both the 2016.11 and develop
branches in different ways. This commits removes some of the
changes that were merged-forward from the 2016.11 branch and
restores the develop branch tests functionality.
Now that we are not caching these in the context dunder, we should pass
them into this function so that we don't repeat gathering the systemd
services inside _get_sysv_services().
Also, this fixes an incorrect change to the mocking that was apparently
made at some point to the get_all unit test.
With the merging of #39996, salt/modules/docker.py now imports
salt.utils.docker. However, our loader appends the module dir (in
this case salt/modules/) to sys.path temporarily for the length of the
loading process. So, as the docker execution module tries to import
salt.utils.docker, when salt.utils.docker attempts to do an "import
docker", and docker-py is *not* installed, this results in
salt/modules/docker.py (the docker execution module) being loaded in its
place, which results in tracebacks in the minion log.
Renaming the docker execution module keeps this import shadowing from
occurring. Note that we don't need to do this for the placeholder
salt/states/docker.py as it does not import salt.utils.docker.
The tests pass fine when run independently, but when the full unit test suite
runs, the dockerng state tests are setting global values. This change makes the
module tests avoid those problem by relying on its own mocks.
The rabbitmq module was using `__context__` to store paths of
rabbitmq executables. `__context__` may be cleared but the module
still could remain in use, in which case it would fail to work
correctly. Move the paths of the rabbitmq executables to their own
global variables so that they are not affected by the lifespan of
`__context__`.
Signed-off-by: Sergey Kizunov <sergey.kizunov@ni.com>
This does the following:
- Splits states for container/volume/image/network management into four
separate state modules.
- Preserves backward compatibility by making ``docker.image_present``
invoke ``docker_image.present``, etc.
- Changes how Salt detects that a container needs to be replaced.
Instead of comparing each passed argument to the named container's
configuration, it creates a temporary container, and compares that
container to the named container. If the two differ, then the older
container is removed, and the new one is renamed and started, becoming
the named container.
- Removes the unit tests for container management and replaces them with
integration tests.
- Adds unit tests for the new salt.utils.docker
http://bugs.python.org/issue1322
python 3.7 is deprecating the platform.{linux_distribution,dist}
functions. They are being moved to the `distro` module on pypi. This
adds support for using the distro module if platform does not have the
needed functions.