1.20 changes the output format of coverage checks slightly to include
a package name on each line, followed by `coverage:`, but the current
regex assumes that the line *starts* with `coverage:`.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Gonzalez <ryan.gonzalez@collabora.com>
The current regex runs in exponential time, which massively impacts the
runtime of the test suite, taking several seconds (~4s on my system)
just to perform a single match. By replacing the mix of re.findall + the
initial capture group with re.search + some string slicing, the time
spent matching the regex becomes nearly instant, e.g.:
$ make system-test TESTS='Config*'
goes from taking ~10s to ~1.5s.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Gonzalez <ryan.gonzalez@collabora.com>
This should fix some tests, as a lot of them are dependent on
deb.debian.org which no longer supports Debian 9 "Stretch".
Instead we use archive.debian.org which will continue to contain
"Stretch" packages for a long time.
While testing out Aptly, the `apt-get` client complains with the following error, since the `codename` was switched from the InRelease files that are baked out by Aptly:
```
E: Repository 'http://debianrepo.example.com/bionic testing InRelease' changed its 'Codename' value from '' to 'testing'
```
The ".../packages" endpoints for mirror, local repos and snapshots all
share the same syntax for querying. However the "/api/packages" endpoint
doesn't match this. Adjust that to allow for a bit more consistency and
allow querying the full package database.
The current endpoint functionality "/packages/:name" is kept intact and
can be used the same as now
Signed-off-by: Sjoerd Simons <sjoerd@collabora.com>
To capture the coverage also for the integration tests,
a test only executing the cmd.Run function is used.
The test always exits with code 0 and prints the
real exit code to stdout. Otherwise no coverage
report is generated.
Those changes enable a more accurate coverage report
for future contributions.
It may happen that aptly retries to download data during tests (maybe because
of a network issue), but our fixtures doesn't account for it. So, we strip
those irrelevant lines before comparison.
PublishRepo26Test fails to run because something in the CI environment forces
gpg to ask for the user's password. Try to require gpg1 for the test, which
seems to run fine in other environments.