This was omitted when these tests were added.
Adding this means that the tests now see the `$DOCKER_HOST` configured (via
`$TEST_DOCKER_HOST`) where they didn't before. In some cases (specifically the
`test-e2e-connhelper-ssh` case) this results in additional output on stderr
when `-D` (debug) is used:
time="2019-04-03T11:10:27Z" level=debug msg="commandconn: starting ssh with [-l penguin 172.20.0.2 -- docker system dial-stdio]"
Address this by switching the affected test cases to use `-l info` instead of
`-D`, they all just require some option not specifically `-D`. Note that `info`
is the default log level so this is effectively a nop (which is good).
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
In the initial implementation I thought it would be good to not pass on the
deprecation to plugins (since they are new). However it turns out this causes
`docker helloworld -h` to print a spurious "pflag: help requested" line:
$ docker helloworld -h
pflag: help requested
See 'docker helloworld --help'.
Usage: docker helloworld [OPTIONS] COMMAND
A basic Hello World plugin for tests
...
Compared with:
$ docker ps -h
Flag shorthand -h has been deprecated, please use --help
Usage: docker ps [OPTIONS]
This is in essence because having the flag undefined hits a different path
within cobra, causing `c.execute()` to return early due to getting an error
(`flag.ErrHelp`) from `c.ParseFlags`, which launders the error through our
`FlagErrorFunc` which wraps it in a `StatusError` which in turn defeats an `if
err == flag.ErrHelp` check further up the call chain. If the flag is defined we
instead hit a path which returns a bare `flag.ErrHelp` without wrapping it.
I considered updating our `FlagErrorFunc` to not wrap `flag.ErrHelp` (and then
following the chain to the next thing) however while doing that I realised that
the code for `-h` (and `--help`) is deeply embedded into cobra (and its flags
library) such that actually using `-h` as a plugin argument meaning something
other than `help` is basically impossible/impractical. Therefore we may as well
have plugins behave identically to the monolithic CLI and support (deprecated)
the `-h` argument.
With this changed the help related blocks of `SetupRootCommand` and
`SetupPluginRootCommand` are now identical, so consolidate into
`setupCommonRootCommand`.
Tests are updated to check `-h` in a variety of scenarios, including the happy
case here.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
In some cases this means switching to `icmd.Expected` rather than
`icmd.Success`, but this improves readability overall.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
I regressed this in d4ced2ef77 ("allow plugins to have argument which match a
top-level flag.") by unconditionally overwriting any `PersistentRunE` that the
user may have supplied.
We need to ensure two things:
1. That the user can use `PersistentRunE` (or `PersistentRun`) for their own
purposes.
2. That our initialisation always runs, even if the user has used
`PersistentRun*`, since that will shadow the root.
To do this add a `PersistentRunE` to the helloworld plugin which logs (covers 1
above) and then use it when calling the `apiversion` subcommand (which covers 2
since that uses the client)
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
This allows passing argument to plugins, otherwise they are caught by the parse
loop, since cobra does not know about each plugin at this stage (to avoid
having to always scan for all plugins) this means that e.g. `docker plugin
--foo` would accumulate `plugin` as an arg to the `docker` command, then choke
on the unknown `--foo`.
This allows unknown global args only, unknown arguments on subcommands (e.g.
`docker ps --foo`) are still correctly caught.
Add an e2e test covering this case.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
Previously a plugin which used these hooks would overwrite the top-level plugin
command's use of this hook, resulting in the dockerCli object not being fully
initialised.
Provide a function which plugins can use to chain to the required behaviour.
This required some fairly ugly arrangements to preserve state (which was
previously in-scope in `newPluginCOmmand`) to be used by the new function.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
To achieve this we hook in at the beginning of our custom `HelpFunc` and detect
the plugin case by adding stub commands.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
To help with this add a bad plugin which produces invalid metadata and arrange
for it to be built in the e2e container.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>