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3 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Shijiang Wei
ea4a06740b abstract the string slice struct to stringutils package
Signed-off-by: Shijiang Wei <mountkin@gmail.com>
2015-08-29 01:08:40 +08:00
Doug Davis
12b6083c8f Remove panic in nat package on invalid hostport
Closes #14621

This one grew to be much more than I expected so here's the story... :-)
- when a bad port string (e.g. xxx80) is passed into container.create()
  via the API it wasn't being checked until we tried to start the container.
- While starting the container we trid to parse 'xxx80' in nat.Int()
  and would panic on the strconv.ParseUint().  We should (almost) never panic.
- In trying to remove the panic I decided to make it so that we, instead,
  checked the string during the NewPort() constructor.  This means that
  I had to change all casts from 'string' to 'Port' to use NewPort() instead.
  Which is a good thing anyway, people shouldn't assume they know the
  internal format of types like that, in general.
- This meant I had to go and add error checks on all calls to NewPort().
  To avoid changing the testcases too much I create newPortNoError() **JUST**
  for the testcase uses where we know the port string is ok.
- After all of that I then went back and added a check during container.create()
  to check the port string so we'll report the error as soon as we get the
  data.
- If, somehow, the bad string does get into the metadata we will generate
  an error during container.start() but I can't test for that because
  the container.create() catches it now.  But I did add a testcase for that.

Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
2015-07-17 13:02:54 -07:00
Vincent Demeester
d4aec5f0a6 Refactor test and add coverage to runconfig
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
2015-07-01 10:16:36 +02:00