Manually updating the indirect dependency to force go.etcd.io/etcd/server/v3
to v3.5.5 or up, which is now compatible with go.opentelemetry.io/otel v1.0.0.
With this, we can remove the replace rule for this module.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
no significant changes in vendored code, other than updating build-tags
for go1.17, but removes some dependencies from the module, which can
help with future updates;
full diff: 3f7ff695ad...abb19827d3
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- Make the package-level configMergeTests local to the test itself.
- Rename fields to better describe intent
- Remove some redundant variables
- Reverse "expected" and "actual" fields for consistency
- Use assert.Check() to not fail early
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Various fixes:
- Don't capitalize error messages
- Rename variables that collided with imports or types
- Prefer assert.Check over assert.Assert to prevent tests covering multiple
cases from failing early
- Fix inconsistent order of expected <--> actual, which made it difficult to
check which output was the expected output.
- Fix formatting of some comments
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The test used `gopkg.in/yaml.v2` to verify the TextMarshaller implementation,
which was implemented to allow printing the errors in JSON formatted output;
> This exists primarily to implement encoding.TextMarshaller such that
> rendering a plugin as JSON (e.g. for `docker info -f '{{json .CLIPlugins}}'`)
> renders the Err field as a useful string and not just `{}`.
Given that both yaml.Marshal and json.Marshal use this, we may as well use
Go's stdlib.
While updating, also changed some of the assertions to checks, so that we don't
fail the test early.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
When marshaling the type with `gopkg.in/yaml.v3`, unmarshaling would
recursively call the type's `MarshalYAML()` function, which ultimately
resulted in a crash:
runtime: goroutine stack exceeds 1000000000-byte limit
runtime: sp=0x140202e0430 stack=[0x140202e0000, 0x140402e0000]
fatal error: stack overflow
This applies a similar fix as was implemented in e7788d6f9a
for the `MarshalJSON()` implementation. An alternative would be to use
a type alias (to remove the `MarshalYAML()`), but keeping it simple.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The version was originally added in 570ee9cb54,
at the time the `expected` config did not have a `version:` field. A later
refactor in 0cf2e6353a updated the `expected`
config to have a `version:` included. However, the test was not updated,
which now resulted in the test using a compose file with a duplicate version
field:
version: '3.10'
version: "3.10"
services:
foo:
build:
This issue was masked by `yaml.Unmarshal()` from `gopkg.in/yaml.v2` which
silently ignores the duplicate, taking the value of the last occurrence. When
upgrading to `gopkg.in/yaml.v3`, the duplicate value resulted in an error:
yaml: unmarshal errors:
line 2: mapping key "version" already defined at line 1
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
On Windows, syscall.StartProcess and os/exec.Cmd did not properly
check for invalid environment variable values. A malicious
environment variable value could exploit this behavior to set a
value for a different environment variable. For example, the
environment variable string "A=B\x00C=D" set the variables "A=B" and
"C=D".
Thanks to RyotaK (https://twitter.com/ryotkak) for reporting this
issue.
This is CVE-2022-41716 and Go issue https://go.dev/issue/56284.
This Go release also fixes https://github.com/golang/go/issues/56309, a
runtime bug which can cause random memory corruption when a goroutine
exits with runtime.LockOSThread() set. This fix is necessary to unblock
work to replace certain uses of pkg/reexec with unshared OS threads.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>