This error didn't do a great job at formatting. If a StatusError was
produced without a Status message, it would print a very non-informative
error, with information missing.
Let's update the output:
- If a status-message is provided; print just that (after all the
status code is something that can be found from the shell, e.g.
through `echo $?` in Bash).
- If no status-message is provided: print a message more similar to
Go's `exec.ExecError`, which uses `os.rocessState.String()` (see [1]).
Before this patch, an error without custom status would print:
Status: , Code: 2
After this patch:
exit status 2
In situations where a custom error-message is provided, the error-message
is print as-is, whereas before this patch, the message got combined with
the `Status:` and `Code:`, which resulted in some odd output.
Before this patch:
docker volume --no-such-flag
Status: unknown flag: --no-such-flag
See 'docker volume --help'.
Usage: docker volume COMMAND
Manage volumes
Commands:
create Create a volume
inspect Display detailed information on one or more volumes
ls List volumes
prune Remove unused local volumes
rm Remove one or more volumes
update Update a volume (cluster volumes only)
Run 'docker volume COMMAND --help' for more information on a command.
, Code: 125
With this patch, the error is shown as-is;
docker volume --no-such-flag
unknown flag: --no-such-flag
See 'docker volume --help'.
Usage: docker volume COMMAND
Manage volumes
Commands:
create Create a volume
inspect Display detailed information on one or more volumes
ls List volumes
prune Remove unused local volumes
rm Remove one or more volumes
update Update a volume (cluster volumes only)
Run 'docker volume COMMAND --help' for more information on a command.
While the exit-code is no longer printed, it's still properly handled;
echo $?
125
[1]: 82c14346d8/src/os/exec_posix.go (L107-L135)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Trying to make the logic slightly clearer, and adding a custom
message for the skip,
Before this:
=== RUN TestSplitCpArg/absolute_path_with_drive
cp_test.go:184: tc.os == "windows" && runtime.GOOS != "windows" || tc.os == "linux" && runtime.GOOS == "windows"
After this:
=== RUN TestSplitCpArg/absolute_path_with_drive
cp_test.go:184: skipping windows test on non-windows platform
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Introduce a (non-exported) ipamOptions that collects all options for
creating a network.IPAM, so that this utility is more atomic (potentially
even could be moved to a separate package and exported).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This makes a quick pass through our tests;
Discard output/err
----------------------------------------------
Many tests were testing for error-conditions, but didn't discard output.
This produced a lot of noise when running the tests, and made it hard
to discover if there were actual failures, or if the output was expected.
For example:
=== RUN TestConfigCreateErrors
Error: "create" requires exactly 2 arguments.
See 'create --help'.
Usage: create [OPTIONS] CONFIG file|- [flags]
Create a config from a file or STDIN
Error: "create" requires exactly 2 arguments.
See 'create --help'.
Usage: create [OPTIONS] CONFIG file|- [flags]
Create a config from a file or STDIN
Error: error creating config
--- PASS: TestConfigCreateErrors (0.00s)
And after discarding output:
=== RUN TestConfigCreateErrors
--- PASS: TestConfigCreateErrors (0.00s)
Use sub-tests where possible
----------------------------------------------
Some tests were already set-up to use test-tables, and even had a usable
name (or in some cases "error" to check for). Change them to actual sub-
tests. Same test as above, but now with sub-tests and output discarded:
=== RUN TestConfigCreateErrors
=== RUN TestConfigCreateErrors/requires_exactly_2_arguments
=== RUN TestConfigCreateErrors/requires_exactly_2_arguments#01
=== RUN TestConfigCreateErrors/error_creating_config
--- PASS: TestConfigCreateErrors (0.00s)
--- PASS: TestConfigCreateErrors/requires_exactly_2_arguments (0.00s)
--- PASS: TestConfigCreateErrors/requires_exactly_2_arguments#01 (0.00s)
--- PASS: TestConfigCreateErrors/error_creating_config (0.00s)
PASS
It's not perfect in all cases (in the above, there's duplicate "expected"
errors, but Go conveniently adds "#01" for the duplicate). There's probably
also various tests I missed that could still use the same changes applied;
we can improve these in follow-ups.
Set cmd.Args to prevent test-failures
----------------------------------------------
When running tests from my IDE, it compiles the tests before running,
then executes the compiled binary to run the tests. Cobra doesn't like
that, because in that situation `os.Args` is taken as argument for the
command that's executed. The command that's tested now sees the test-
flags as arguments (`-test.v -test.run ..`), which causes various tests
to fail ("Command XYZ does not accept arguments").
# compile the tests:
go test -c -o foo.test
# execute the test:
./foo.test -test.v -test.run TestFoo
=== RUN TestFoo
Error: "foo" accepts no arguments.
The Cobra maintainers ran into the same situation, and for their own
use have added a special case to ignore `os.Args` in these cases;
https://github.com/spf13/cobra/blob/v1.8.1/command.go#L1078-L1083
args := c.args
// Workaround FAIL with "go test -v" or "cobra.test -test.v", see #155
if c.args == nil && filepath.Base(os.Args[0]) != "cobra.test" {
args = os.Args[1:]
}
Unfortunately, that exception is too specific (only checks for `cobra.test`),
so doesn't automatically fix the issue for other test-binaries. They did
provide a `cmd.SetArgs()` utility for this purpose
https://github.com/spf13/cobra/blob/v1.8.1/command.go#L276-L280
// SetArgs sets arguments for the command. It is set to os.Args[1:] by default, if desired, can be overridden
// particularly useful when testing.
func (c *Command) SetArgs(a []string) {
c.args = a
}
And the fix is to explicitly set the command's args to an empty slice to
prevent Cobra from falling back to using `os.Args[1:]` as arguments.
cmd := newSomeThingCommand()
cmd.SetArgs([]string{})
Some tests already take this issue into account, and I updated some tests
for this, but there's likely many other ones that can use the same treatment.
Perhaps the Cobra maintainers would accept a contribution to make their
condition less specific and to look for binaries ending with a `.test`
suffix (which is what compiled binaries usually are named as).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.21.12+label%3ACherryPickApproved
- full diff: https://github.com/golang/go/compare/go1.21.11...go1.21.12
These minor releases include 1 security fixes following the security policy:
net/http: denial of service due to improper 100-continue handling
The net/http HTTP/1.1 client mishandled the case where a server responds to a request with an "Expect: 100-continue" header with a non-informational (200 or higher) status. This mishandling could leave a client connection in an invalid state, where the next request sent on the connection will fail.
An attacker sending a request to a net/http/httputil.ReverseProxy proxy can exploit this mishandling to cause a denial of service by sending "Expect: 100-continue" requests which elicit a non-informational response from the backend. Each such request leaves the proxy with an invalid connection, and causes one subsequent request using that connection to fail.
Thanks to Geoff Franks for reporting this issue.
This is CVE-2024-24791 and Go issue https://go.dev/issue/67555.
View the release notes for more information:
https://go.dev/doc/devel/release#go1.21.12
**- Description for the changelog**
```markdown changelog
Update Go runtime to 1.21.12
```
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
Move common flag descriptions to the buildx build reference, and make
that page the canonical page in docs. Also rewrite some content in
image_build to make clear that this page is only for the legacy builder.
Signed-off-by: David Karlsson <35727626+dvdksn@users.noreply.github.com>
This code was updated in 7b9580df51, which
removed support for using kubernetes as orchestrator, but in doing so
made this `sort.Slice` (probably) not do what it was expected to do ':)
index 412cc2e5ee86..861ae1be2fb9 100644
@@ -75,8 +54,7 @@ func format(dockerCli command.Cli, opts options.List, orchestrator command.Orche
}
sort.Slice(stacks, func(i, j int) bool {
return sortorder.NaturalLess(stacks[i].Name, stacks[j].Name) ||
- !sortorder.NaturalLess(stacks[j].Name, stacks[i].Name) &&
- sortorder.NaturalLess(stacks[j].Namespace, stacks[i].Namespace)
+ !sortorder.NaturalLess(stacks[j].Name, stacks[i].Name)
})
return formatter.StackWrite(stackCtx, stacks)
}
The extra condition was added in 84241cc393
to support multiple namespaces. This patch removes it, bringing it back to
the state it was before that commit.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- Add a case-folding version of Natural sort order
This can be used to perform case-insensitive comparisons and sorting.
It's been placed in a separate sub-package because it requires the Unicode
tables in the standard library, which can add significantly to binary size.
full diff: https://github.com/fvbommel/sortorder/compare/v1.0.2...v1.1.0
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>