This is based on the example, but modified so that it can work as a test.
It is slightly less convenient running services as tests as the output is
sent to log files, so we have an `onshutdown` container that checks to see
if the test passed.
Signed-off-by: Justin Cormack <justin.cormack@docker.com>
- xfsprogs is required for mkfs.xfs for some tests.
- mount persistent disk on /var/lib instead of /var.
- include host /dev (for loop devices) in mounts.
- /tmp need not be exec.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
In order to update these tests it required first running df -h to obtain
the new disk size and then adding that value to check.sh
This commit replaces the hardcoded values with a regex that checks that
the filesystem is somewhere between 400-599MB in size. Before being
extended this would have been somewhere in the region of 200-300MB.
Signed-off-by: Dave Tucker <dt@docker.com>
This commit removes the dependency on Docker by using raw disks and
appending from /dev/zero to extend them once initially formatted.
Additionally, the tests now use unique ${NAME} variables
Signed-off-by: Dave Tucker <dt@docker.com>
Mounting a directory inside a read only container requires that to be
created in advance, but `runc` worked around that if the rootfs was not
originally read only.
You cannot even bind mount a file that does not exist into a
read only container.
The containerd test is given a disk, as running on an overlay does
not work; however it is also disabled as one of the parts of the test
is failing, needs investigation.
Signed-off-by: Justin Cormack <justin.cormack@docker.com>
The newest tests actually run containerd and therefore have some additional
requirements:
- containerd + shim + runc binaries are needed. We bind these in from the host.
The test code should, by design, be from matching containerd source, assuming
we remember to update test/pkg/container/Dockerfile when we bump
CONTAINERD_COMMIT. 5217b9973b added a reminder
to do so.
- the tests need networking (to pull images). So add dhcp to onboot and bind
/etc/resolv.conf into the test container.
- running containers requires a writeable cgroup mount.
- containerd wants /etc/localtime, so install the UTC one (as we do in
pkg/containerd).
The test image already has `net: host` and `capabilities: all`.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
with cwd of test this was done with:
for i in pkg/* ; do make --no-print-directory -C $i show-tag; done | ( IFS=: ; while read image hash ; do ../scripts/update-component-sha.sh --image $image $hash ; done )
Note that `linuxkit/test-virtsock` (built by `test/pkg/virtsock`) does not
appear to be referenced anywhere.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>