Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sebastiaan van Stijn 67458f710d
cli/command: remove redundant capturing of loop vars in tests (copyloopvar)
go1.22 and up now produce a unique variable in loops, tehrefore no longer
requiring to capture the variable manually;

    service/logs/parse_logs_test.go:50:3: The copy of the 'for' variable "tc" can be deleted (Go 1.22+) (copyloopvar)
            tc := tc
            ^

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-11-05 10:14:30 +01:00
Sebastiaan van Stijn bca2090061
cli: make cli.StatusError slightly prettier
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>
2024-07-04 22:08:18 +02:00
Sebastiaan van Stijn ab230240ad
test spring-cleaning
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>
2024-07-04 01:35:12 +02:00
Sebastiaan van Stijn 23148220ec
vendor: github.com/docker/docker c6aaabc9fc82 (master / v27.0.0-dev)
- api: move more network-related types to api/types/network

full diff: cd3804655a...c6aaabc9fc

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-06-05 16:29:55 +02:00
Sebastiaan van Stijn e2fc6bd771
vendor: github.com/docker/docker e622cea55698 (master / v27.0.0-dev)
full diff: 06e3a49d66...e622cea556

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-05-31 17:39:37 +02:00
Alano Terblanche 7c722c08d0
feat: standardize error for prompt
Signed-off-by: Alano Terblanche <18033717+Benehiko@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-03-26 14:11:55 +01:00
Alano Terblanche 10bf91a02d
fix: cli prompt termination exit code
Signed-off-by: Alano Terblanche <18033717+Benehiko@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-03-04 15:26:17 +01:00
Sebastiaan van Stijn 9c0c49a5f2
golangci-lint: revive: enable empty-lines
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2023-11-20 19:52:45 +01:00
Conner Crosby 0ea587b0d7
Add --force option to network rm subcommand
The code is similar to that used by the volume rm subcommand, however,
one difference I noticed was VolumeRemove takes the force flag/option
was a parameter. This isn't the case for NetworkRemove.

To get NetworkRemove to take a similar parameter, this would require
modifying the Docker daemon. For now this isn't a route I wish to take
when the code can be arrange to mimic the same behavior.

Co-authored-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Signed-off-by: Conner Crosby <conner@cavcrosby.tech>
2022-04-29 13:56:33 +02:00