* Add support for GSSAPI/Kerberos to urls.py
* Test out changes with the latest test container
* Get remote hosts working
* Fix up httptester_krb5_password reader
* Fix tests for opensuse and macOS
* Hopefully last lot of testing changes
* Dont do CBT on macOS
* Fixes from review
Change:
- podman > 2 && < 2.2 does not support "images --format {{json .}}"
- podman also now outputs images JSON differently than docker
- Work around both of the above.
Test Plan:
- Tested with podman 2.0.6 in Fedora 31.
Signed-off-by: Rick Elrod <rick@elrod.me>
Co-authored-by: Sviatoslav Sydorenko <wk.cvs.github@sydorenko.org.ua>
* Validate removal versions.
* Validate that removal collection versions and version_added collection versions conform to semver spec.
* Validate removal version numbers in meta/runtime.yml.
* Stricter validation for isodates (f.ex. YYYY-M-D is not allowed).
* Improve error reporting.
* Validate removal collection versions.
Co-authored-by: Andrew Klychkov <aaklychkov@mail.ru>
* DOCS: updates intersphinx references for docs links
* TESTS: Raise the number of bytes scanned to determine if a file is binary. The newest ansible-2.10.inv file has its first null byte at position 2261. 4096 is still a cheap chunksize to read so it still makes sense to raise this.
Co-authored-by: Alicia Cozine <acozine@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Toshio Kuratomi <a.badger@gmail.com>
On some systems (tested with official Debian Buster-based Python 3.6
docker image), setting the LC_ALL environment variable to en_US.UTF-8
will trigger Python into switching its preferred encoding to ASCII.
If any python process tries to read a non-ASCII file in this scenario,
it will terminate with an error.
And this is exactly what happens to pytest when it tries to load its
configuration that ansible-test supplies because the configuration
contains an em dash.
In order to bypass this issue, we replaced the em dash with a regular
dash and things started working again.
An alternative solution would be to replace the en_US.UTF-8 locale with
something safer, but unfortunately, the en_US.UTF-8 is probably as safe
as it gets.
* Start of alpine testing
* More updates
* Add forgotten file
* remove debug
* Add alpine3
* equal
* group 4
* group 4
* group 5
* Try to decrease test length
* libuser only available in testing
* Remove debug
* Make loops target work on hosts without gnu date
* Enable alpine testing
* ci_complete
* Don't specify uid for creating test user
* ci_complete
* Re-sort docker completion
* use newer container image
* ci_complete
* fix indentation
Co-authored-by: Matt Clay <matt@mystile.com>
Co-authored-by: Matt Clay <matt@mystile.com>
Changes to sanity and unit tests now trigger the ansible-test self-test integration tests.
No changelog entry since this only affects tests for ansible itself and not collections.
There are links from the scenario guides to collections but collections
docs aren't built in testing or locally when we're on the devel branch.
Due to that we need to make sure those references resolve to the
production docsite. We can use intersphinx to make sure that happens.
* The test for binary files wasn't reading enough of the file.
Checking for null bytes in the first 1024 bytes failed to diagnose the
ansible_2_10.inv file as binary
* Also validate top-level version_added.
* Fix error code.
* Produce same version_added validation error in schema than in code (and stop returning it twice).
* Return correct error codes for invalid version_added for options and return values.
* Add changelog.
* Fix forgotten closing braket.
* Accept 'historical' for some top-level version_added.
* Fix ansible-test error in community.aws
* Add changelog entry for fix
* Change check from None to string_types
* Update changelogs/fragments/70507-validate-null-author.yaml
clarify wording "or a list of strings"
Co-authored-by: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>
* Update test/lib/ansible_test/_data/sanity/validate-modules/validate_modules/schema.py
clarify wording - single string or not specified valid
Co-authored-by: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>
* Do not fail but return None when given outside list
Co-authored-by: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>
* Test against galaxy_ng
* Switch container image
* Remove redundant |default
* Re-enable
* Update image
* Update wording
* Don't use pulp as the container name
* ansible-test - do not validate blacklisted ps modules
* Update changelogs/fragments/validate-modules-ps-doc-blacklist.yaml
Co-authored-by: Matt Clay <matt@mystile.com>
Co-authored-by: Matt Clay <matt@mystile.com>
The `packaging` and `pyparsing` packages are now installed by `ansible-test` during provisioning of RHEL instances to match the downstream vendored versions.
* Disable too-many-ancestors pylint check.
This check was only enabled for ansible-test code.
In some cases this check counts 1 more ancestor in python 3.7+ than under python 3.6, making the check inconsistent and unsuitable for use in ansible-test.
* Disable additional pylint checks:
- import-error
- no-name-in-module
These checks were only enabled for ansible-test code.
These checks provide inconsistent results since they are dependent on available imports, which vary between environments.
It may be practical to enable these checks in the future if changes are made to ensure a consistent test environment for pylint.
* Test galaxy cli against pulp
* linting fix
* Renames and small fixes
* Better handling for resetting pulp
* Clean up some things, add a comment
* I can't spell
* Bump fallaxy, use alternate pulp image
* Only reset pulp when we're are executing against pulp
* Update for updated pulp container
* Update some comments with correct URLs and typos
* Linting fix
* Pin pulp-fedora31 to a digest
* Address review comments for documentation
The current author line wants to match a github author id. But
some people, including the OpenStack project, do not use github,
and additionally do not claim individual ownership but instead
group ownership.
Since there are already a couple of hard-coded examples in the
regex, just add one more. Alternately we could come up with some
mechanism to indicate that the author is purposely not listing
a github id, but that seems a bit heavywight.
The upcoming pyparsing 3 release will require Python 3.5 or later, see:
https://github.com/pypa/packaging/issues/313
Unfortunately pip 8.x and earlier versions do not support python version requirements, which is why this constraint is needed.