We were depending on alpine's package repository to install compose,
but for debian we used compose's GitHub releases. Depending on distro
packages means that we don't know when updates will happen, and versions
may diverge because of that; for example, alpine 3.18 updated to compose
v2;
On alpine 3.17:
make -f docker.Makefile build-e2e-image
docker run --rm docker-cli-e2e docker-compose --version
docker-compose version 1.29.2, build unknown
On alpine 3.18:
make -f docker.Makefile build-e2e-image
docker run --rm docker-cli-e2e docker-compose --version
Docker Compose version v2.17.3
This caused our e2e script to fail, as it made assumptions about the name
format created by compose, which changed from underscores to hyphens in v2;
Container cliendtoendsuite-engine-1 Running
Error: No such object: cliendtoendsuite_engine_1
This patch:
- updates the Dockerfile to install compose from the compose-bin image
- adjusts the e2e script for the new naming scheme format
- removes the version field from the compose-files used in e2e, as they
are no longer used by compose.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
(cherry picked from commit 9e424af5da)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The docker-in-docker image now enables TLS by default (added in
docker-library/docker#166), which complicates testing in our
environment, and isn't needed for the tests we're running.
This patch sets the `DOCKER_TLS_CERTDIR` to an empty value to
disable TLS.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- Build image that contains everything needed to run e2e tests
- Add ability to run e2e tests against an endpoint
Signed-off-by: Christopher Crone <christopher.crone@docker.com>