This handles the case where a route is requested, but without a required
parameter. So, /blueprints/info is requested instead of
/blueprints/info/http-server. It accomplishes this via a decorator, so
a lot of these route-related functions now have quite a few decorators
attached to them.
Typo'd URLs (/blueprints/nfo for instance) will still return a 404. I
think this is a reasonable thing to do.
Unfortunately, this isn't very useful if /modules/info is provided with
multiple modules. yum doesn't traceback when doPackageLists is given
something that doesn't exist. It just returns an empty list. If
/modules/info is given just one module and yum gives us an empty list,
it's easy to say what happened. If /modules/info is given several
modules and just one does not exist, we will not be able to detect that.
Fixing this would require doing more yum operations, which is likely to
slow things down and isn't the direction I want to be going.
This is responsible for writing out a new times.toml file, containing
important timestamps in the life of a compose. This seems a little more
reliable than attempting to infer things from the filesystem, especially
in light of the fact that we can't ever really know when a file was
created.
We need to be root to read the certificates that give access to the
package repos. Right now, the alternative seems to be changing
permissions on the certs themselves, which seems less good. We're
running anaconda as root anyway.
This adds empty __init__.py to tests so that a lib.py library of helper
functions can be imported from the tests.
Add captured_output to use with composer-cli tests to capture stdout/err
output from the functions.
Some results have errors and no status, others have status and errors.
Update the function to return the final rc to exit with, and a bool
indicating whether or not to continue processing the other fields.
Add a bunch of tests for the new function to make sure I have the logic
correct.
This will cause systemd to delete the lock file when the service
terminates. This does not do anything if lorax-composer is started on
the command line, however.
A bad system repo can cause lorax-composer to fail to start. Instead of
a traceback log the error and exit.
(note that the exit still results in an OSError traceback due to part of
it running as root, this needs to be addressed in another commit).
This adds a new argument to projects_depsolve and
projects_depsolve_with_size that contains the group list, unfortunately.
I would have prefered adding a function that just returns a list of all
the contents of a group and then add that to what was being passed into
projects_depsolve. However, there does not appear to be any good way to
do that in yum aside from a lot of grubbing around in the comps object,
which I am unwilling to do.
Depsolve the packages included in the templates and report any errors
using the /api/status 'msgs' field. This should help narrow down
problems with package sources not being setup correctly.
Previously it was impossible to know which package in a blueprint caused
a failure, if it was just one of them, or all of them, etc. This catches
the error when calling yb.install and lists all the failures in the
error message that is raised.
This updates the documentation to include composer-cli instead of curl,
warnings about SELinux and needing the RHEL 7 Optional package repo, as
well as other documentation improvements from the master branch.
This is the same as the output at the top level, just trimmed down to
only the options for a single subcommand. It's trigged by providing
"help" or "--help" as a subcommand option.
This isn't a real subcommand like the others. The option processing
just intercepts it and prints the output. Given that we're subcommand
based, it makes sense to support this in addition to --help.
Normally tmpfiles.d will handle this at boot time, but if you install
lorax-composer without rebooting it was ending up with root:root
ownership instead of root:weldr