The recently introduced failure handling in ExpectNoError depends on error
wrapping: if an error prefix gets added with `fmt.Errorf("foo: %v", err)`, then
ExpectNoError cannot detect that the root cause is an assertion failure and
then will add another useless "unexpected error" prefix and will not dump the
additional failure information (currently the backtrace inside the E2E
framework).
Instead of manually deciding on a case-by-case basis where %w is needed, all
error wrapping was updated automatically with
sed -i "s/fmt.Errorf\(.*\): '*\(%s\|%v\)'*\",\(.* err)\)/fmt.Errorf\1: %w\",\3/" $(git grep -l 'fmt.Errorf' test/e2e*)
This may be unnecessary in some cases, but it's not wrong.
The recently introduced failure handling in ExpectNoError depends on error
wrapping: if an error prefix gets added with `fmt.Errorf("foo: %v", err)`, then
ExpectNoError cannot detect that the root cause is an assertion failure and
then will add another useless "unexpected error" prefix and will not dump the
additional failure information (currently the backtrace inside the E2E
framework).
Instead of manually deciding on a case-by-case basis where %w is needed, all
error wrapping was updated automatically with
sed -i "s/fmt.Errorf\(.*\): '*\(%s\|%v\)'*\",\(.* err)\)/fmt.Errorf\1: %w\",\3/" $(git grep -l 'fmt.Errorf' test/e2e*)
This may be unnecessary in some cases, but it's not wrong.
All code must use the context from Ginkgo when doing API calls or polling for a
change, otherwise the code would not return immediately when the test gets
aborted.
Every ginkgo callback should return immediately when a timeout occurs or the
test run manually gets aborted with CTRL-C. To do that, they must take a ctx
parameter and pass it through to all code which might block.
This is a first automated step towards that: the additional parameter got added
with
sed -i 's/\(framework.ConformanceIt\|ginkgo.It\)\(.*\)func() {$/\1\2func(ctx context.Context) {/' \
$(git grep -l -e framework.ConformanceIt -e ginkgo.It )
$GOPATH/bin/goimports -w $(git status | grep modified: | sed -e 's/.* //')
log_test.go was left unchanged.
- Run hack/update-codegen.sh
- Run hack/update-generated-device-plugin.sh
- Run hack/update-generated-protobuf.sh
- Run hack/update-generated-runtime.sh
- Run hack/update-generated-swagger-docs.sh
- Run hack/update-openapi-spec.sh
- Run hack/update-gofmt.sh
Signed-off-by: Davanum Srinivas <davanum@gmail.com>
- update all the import statements
- run hack/pin-dependency.sh to change pinned dependency versions
- run hack/update-vendor.sh to update go.mod files and the vendor directory
- update the method signatures for custom reporters
Signed-off-by: Dave Chen <dave.chen@arm.com>
Remove the "OrDie" from the name (since it doesn't "or die") and add
an extra check that there is at least 1 node available, since many
callers already did that themselves, and many others should have.
Skips IPv6 tests on Windows.
Skips sysctl tests on Windows.
Skips network policy tests on Windows.
Skips RunAsUser / FSGroup / file permissions related tests, as those are
not supported on Windows.
Skips the test "should preserve source pod IP for traffic thru service cluster IP"
on Windows, as it creates a Pod with HostNetwork=true, which is unsupported.
What works and what doesn't work on Windows has been documented here:
https://github.com/kubernetes/community/blob/master/contributors/devel/sig-architecture/conformance-tests.md#windows--linux-considerations
Quite a few images are only used a few times in a few tests. Thus,
the images are being centralized into the agnhost image, reducing
the number of images that have to be pulled and used.
This PR replaces the usage of the following images with agnhost:
- audit-proxy
- crd-conversion-webhook
- entrypoint-tester
- inclusterclient
- iperf
- porter
- serve-hostname
This is part of the transition to using framework/log instead
of the Logf inside the framework package. This will help with
import size/cycles when importing the framework or subpackages.
The e2e iPerf test case currently only runs in IPv4 mode.
This change add an option to run an iPerf test in IPv6 mode (i.e. by running
iPerf with a "-V" command line flag), so that the test can be run on
IPv6-only clusters.