[As discussed in Mattermost](https://opensource.eff.org/eff-open-source/pl/yhtp4qu4zpfczm5wxmzxhndrto), our Apache test farm tests are failing because the CA certificate in the old version of boulder we have pinned expired over the weekend. This PR fixes that by running a local Pebble instance instead of an external boulder instance.
* switch from external boulder to local pebble
* add --http-01-port to run_acme_server
* Edit certs -> certificates in user-facing text.
To reduce confusion, we should consistently use the full term.
* Edit certs->certificates in more user-facing text.
* fix failing lint (line too long)
* fix typo
Co-authored-by: Jacob Hoffman-Andrews <github@hoffman-andrews.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Zorin <alex@zorin.id.au>
In 96a05d9, mypy testing was added to certbot-ci, but introduced an
undeclared dependency on acme.magic_typing, resulting in a crash when
run under the integration-external tox environment.
This change uses the typing module in certbot-ci in place of
acme.magic_typing. It is already provided via dev_constraints.
Fixes https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues/8495.
To further explain the problem here, `modify_kwargs_for_default_detection` as called in `add` is simplistic and doesn't always work. See https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues/6164 for one other example.
In this case, were bitten by the code d1e7404358/certbot/certbot/_internal/cli/helpful.py (L393-L395)
The action used for deprecated arguments isn't in `ZERO_ARG_ACTIONS` so it assumes that all deprecated flags take one parameter.
Rather than trying to fix this function (which I think can only realistically be fixed by https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues/4493), I took the approach that was previously used in `HelpfulArgumentParser.add_deprecated_argument` of bypassing this extra logic entirely. I adapted that function to now call `HelpfulArgumentParser.add` as well for consistency and to make testing easier.
* Rename deprecated arg action class
* Skip extra parsing for deprecated arguments
* Add back test of --manual-public-ip-logging-ok
* Add changelog entry
* nginx: fix py2 unicode sandwich
The nginx parser would crash when saving configuraitons containing
Unicode, because py2's `str` type does not support Unicode.
This change fixes that crash by ensuring that a string type supporting
Unicode is used in both Python 2 and Python 3.
* nginx: add unicode to the integration test config
* update CHANGELOG
Fixes https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues/8134.
* Test on Python 3.9.
* Mention Python 3.9 support in changelog.
* s/\( *'Pro.*3\.\)8\(',\)/\18\2\n\19\2/
* undo changes to tox.ini
* Move more tests to Python 3.9
* Update PyYAML and packages which pinned it back
* Upgrade typed-ast
* Use <= to "pin" dnspython
* Fix lint by telling pylint it cannot be trusted
* Disable mypy on RFC plugin
* add comment about <= support
* tests: add certbot-dns-rfc2136 integration tests
* dont use 'with' form of socket.socket
fixes py2 crash
* address some feedback:
- conftest: make DNS server a global resource
- conftest: add dns_xdist parameter into node config
- conftest: add --dns-server=bind flag
- conftest: if configured, point the ACME server to the DNS server
- dnsserver: make it sort-of compatible with xdist (future-proofing)
- context: parameterize dns-rfc2136 credentials file (future proofing)
- context: reduce dns-rfc2136 propagation time to speed up tests
- tox: add a integration-dns-rfc2136 target
- rfc2136: add a test/zone for subdelegation
- rfc2136: skip tests if no DNS server is configured
* try add integration-dns-rfc2136 to CI
* mock recursive dns via RPZ
* update --dns-server args and tox.ini args
* address more feedback:
- dns_server: rename rfc2136 creds file to .tpl
- dns_server: dont vary dns server port, instead we will vary zone names (#8455)
- dns_server: log error if bind9 fails to stop cleanly
- dns_server: replace assert with raise
- context: remove redundant _worker_id
- context: remove redundant cleanup override
- context: fix seek/flush in credentials context manager
- context: rename skip_if_no_server -> ...bind_server
- context: add newline EOF
* conftest: document _setup_primary_node sideeffects
* ci: rfc2136-integration from standard->nightly
* fix _stop_bind (function was renamed to stop)
* ignore errors from shutil.rmtree during cleanup
* dns_server: check for crash while polling
* remove --dry-run from rfc2136 test
Fixes#7717
This PR adds a `--dns-server` option to the `run_acme_server` test tool, in order to provide an arbitrary DNS server to Pebble or Boulder for the integration tests.
I also take this occasion to make `run_acme_server` a real CLI tool using argparse, and set the `--server-type` (default `pebble`) option as well.
* Set --dns-server flag in run_acme_server
* Default to pebble
* Add documentation
* Configure also Boulder
Fixes#8365
This PR adds a control when `certbot certonly` or `certbot run` are called for a certificate that already exists and would eventually be replaced. As described in #8365, this control is here to ensure that the user will not modify the key type of their certificate (eg. ECDSA to RSA) without an explicit approval (set explicitly `--cert-name` and `--key-type`), since RSA is the default if not specified.
* Handle unexpected key type migration.
* Update certbot-ci/certbot_integration_tests/certbot_tests/test_main.py
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
Thanks to @pahrohfit and @Tomoyuki-GH for previous efforts to implement
suport for this.
Co-Authored-By: Robert Dailey <rob@wargam.es>
Co-Authored-By: Tomoyuki-GH <55397638+Tomoyuki-GH@users.noreply.github.com>
Fixes#7863.
Connect command is `sudo snap connect certbot-dns-dnsimple:certbot-metadata certbot:certbot-metadata`
Logs are `cat /var/snap/certbot-dns-dnsimple/current/debuglog`
Echos in hook are only printed to terminal when it exits 0; otherwise, check logs in `debuglog` mentioned above.
Manual tests include all iterations of connected, unconnected, installed for the first, second time, etc, with passing and failing version checks.
* Make dnsimple not update if certbot is too old
* create an interface to read cb version
* add missing newline
* fix syntax
* trying to figure out the consumer syntax
* trying to figure out the consumer syntax, again
* only check post first install
* valid setting name
* test for first install differently
* snapctl doesn't error if it fails I guess
* time to do some print debugging
* continue playing with syntax
* once again, fooled by bash int vs string comparisons!
* debugging
* if we use post and pre together we can do this
* is this how content interface syntax works
* it's a directory?
* more debug
* what's that error message again?
* try other syntax
* if it's not documented just guess at syntax
* actually, I think this is the syntax
* oops didn't set for new hook
* test passing information along connection
* interface attributes can only be set during the execution of prepare hooks
* just do it with main connection
* undo last few test changes
* Add some printing to make sure we understand what's going on
* create empty directory to bind to
* put mkdir in the correct part
* let's inspect the environment
* it can't run bash directly.
* perhaps only directories can be shared via the contente interface
* update name of folder
* echo to debug log to understand what's going on exactly. we have file access though!
* update grep for new file
* more printing
* echo to the debug log
* ok NOW all print statements are going to the log
* why does echo need two >s
* remove unnecessary extra check, just check if the init file is available
* check if certbot version will be available post-refresh after all
* pre-refresh hook is not necessary to get certbot version
* update mkdir so we don't have to clean each time
* try comparing version numbers in python
* it's python3
* we need different prints for if we succeed or if we fail.
* improve bash syntax
* remove some debugging code
* Remove debug script
* remove spaces for clarity
* consolidate parts and remove more test code
* s/certbot-version/certbot-metadata/g
* use sys.exit instead of exit
* find and save certbot version on the certbot side
* change presence test to new file
* switch to using packaging.version.parse instead of LooseVersion
* switch to requiring certbot version >= plugin version
* add plugin snap changes to generate script
* Add comment to generation file saying not to edit generated files manually
* Create post-refresh hook for all plugins with script
* generate files using new script
* update snapcraft.yaml files for plugins
* bin/sh comes first
* Add packaging to install_requires
* Check that refresh is allowed in integration test
* switch plug and slot names in integration test
* Update tools/generate_dnsplugins_postrefreshhook.sh
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* small bash fixes
* Update snap readme with new instructions
* Run tools/generate_dnsplugins_postrefreshhook.sh
* Update tools/snap/generate_dnsplugins_postrefreshhook.sh
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
Snapcraft has a feature name `remote-build`. It allows to compile snaps using the Canonical dedicated build architecture for several architectures. Compared to the QEMU-enabled Docker approach used currently, the remote build has several advantages:
* the builds are done on the native architecture, making them basically faster than what can be achieved on QEMU
* it avoids to depend on `adferrand/snapcraft` (which could be otherwise be fixed with the merge of https://github.com/snapcore/snapcraft/pull/3144, but this will not happen in the short term)
* when everything is good, all snaps build can be run in parallel and then can be orchestrated by one single Azure Pipeline job, since the heavy tasks are done remotely.
This PR makes the necessary ajustements to use the remote build feature instead of the QEMU-enabled docker approach.
One complex task was to be able to compile the `certbot` snap on `arm64` and `armhf`. Indeed on these architectures the pre-compiled wheel for `cffi` is not available. So it needs to be compiled during the snap build. Sadly, the current version of the python plugin in snapcraft is limited by the fact that `wheels` is not installed in the virtual environment set up to build the python packages, and there is no easy way to change that except by overridding the whole build process.
In the long term, I think I will open a PR on `snapcraft` Git repository to provide a consistent solution. But for the short term, I used the possibility to provide arguments to the `venv` module, to add the flag `--system-site-packages`. With it, the virtual environment can use the system site package, where `wheel` is available.
The other significant additions are in `tools/snap/build_remote.py` script. If invoking the remote build on a local machine is quite straight-forward, it is another story on the CI because we need build auditability and resiliency during these non-interactive actions. In particular we should avoid as possible inconsistent results on the nightly pipeline and the release pipeline.
So this script wraps the `snapcraft` call into a retry logic, and improves its logs in the context of parallel builds.
For the minor modifications, it is mainly about ensuring that plugins can be built (some of them also need `cffi` for instance), and simplify the Azure Pipeline since all snaps are retrieved in one go.
Please note that the `test-` branches still run only the `amd64` architecture. Indeed I noticed that builds on `arm64` and `armhf` are tending to be very slow to start (up to 40 min) while the `amd64` ones wait at max 10 mins, and usually 30 seconds only when the overall load on Canonical side is low.
To work on `certbot/certbot` repository, one secured file needs to be added, because `snapcraft` needs to be authenticated against Launchpad with credentials allowing remote builds. To do so, from a local machine that have this capability, one can extract the existing file at `$HOME/.local/share/snapcraft/provider/launchpad/credentials`, and register it as a secured file in Azure Pipeline with the name `snapcraftRemoteBuildCredentials`.
* Define scripts
* Setup pipeline to use remote builds
* Focus on packaging builds
* Set credentials
* Setup git
* Launch all builds in parallel
* Add dev dependencies to build cffi and cryptography
* Convert to a python logic
* Reorganize the pipeline
* Handle the fact that snap builds may be taken from cache
* Generate constraints
* Exit code
* Check existence
* Try to handle better non zero exit code
* Add --system-site-packages to get wheel in the venv
* Add executable permissions
* Troubleshoot
* Dynamic display, take the maximum timeout for snap build job
* Allow retries if the remote build does not start
* Trigger only amd64 builds for test branches
* Exit properly
* Update snapcraft.yaml
* Fix snap run
* Set secured file name
* Update .azure-pipelines/templates/jobs/packaging-jobs.yml
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update .azure-pipelines/templates/jobs/packaging-jobs.yml
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update .azure-pipelines/templates/jobs/packaging-jobs.yml
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Move order in deps
* Reactivate all builds
* Use Manager() as a context manager
* Use Pool as a context manager
* Some nice refactorings
* Check snapcraft execution interruption with exit codes
* Use f-string and format expressions
* Start log
* Consistent use of single/double quotes
* Better loop to extract lines
* Retry on build failures
* Few optimizations
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
Fixes#8041
This PR makes Azure Pipeline build the DNS plugins snaps for the 3 architectures during the CI.
It leverages the existing logic for building the Certbot snap in order to deploy a QEMU environment with Docker, and leverages the local PyPI index to speed up the build when installing `cffi` and `cryptography`.
All DNS plugins snaps are constructed in one unique docker container, in order to save the time required to install the system dependencies upon first start of `snapcraft`, and so speed up significantly the build.
Finally, all `amd64` DNS plugins snaps are built within 6 minutes. For `arm64` and `armhf`, it is around 40 mins: this is quite fast in fact, considering that 14 DNS plugins snaps are built.
However, this is still an extremely heavy task to make the full 3 architectures builds, even for Azure Pipelines and its 10 parallel jobs capability. That is why I make the `arm64` and `armhf` builds be skipped for the `full-test-suite`, and let them run only for `nightly` and `release`. This means however that these builds will not be done for the release branches. If this is a problem, I can put a more elaborate suspend condition to triggers the builds in this case.
All snaps are stored in the pipeline artifacts storage, making them available for publication during a `release` pipeline.
The PR is set as Draft for now, because I use temporarily `pr_test-suite` to validate the packaging jobs when commits are pushed. Once the PR is ready, I will revert it back to the normal configuration (run the standard tests).
* Configure a script to build DNS snaps
* Focus on packaging
* Trigger all architectures
* Add extra index
* Prepare conditional suspend
* Set final suspend logic
* Set final suspend value
* Loop for publication
* Use python3
* Clean before build
* Add a test
* Add test job in Azure
* Preserve env
* Apply normal config for pipelines
* Skip QEMU jobs only for test branches
* Makes snap run tests depends also on the Certbot snap build
* Update .azure-pipelines/templates/jobs/packaging-jobs.yml
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update .azure-pipelines/templates/stages/deploy-stage.yml
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* More accurate way to get the plugin snap name
* Integrate DNS snap tests into certbot-ci
* Fixes
* Update certbot-ci/snap_integration_tests/conftest.py
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update certbot-ci/snap_integration_tests/conftest.py
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Clean an _init_.py file
Co-authored-by: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* acme: add support for alternative cert. chains
* certbot: add --preferred-chain
* remove support for issuer SKI matching
* show --preferred-chain in "run" help
* warn if no chain matched and it's not a dry-run
* fix existing failing tests
* add unit, integration tests
* bump acme dependency to dev version
* simplify test to avoid py2.7 recursion bug
* add preferred_chain to STR_CONFIG_ITEMS
* reduce preferred_chain warning to info level
* acme: fix some docstrings in .messages
* certbot: fix docstring in crypto_util
* try to fix certbot-nginx acme dep problem
According to `distutils/version.py`, StrictVersion is pretty strict in
what version numbers to accept:
> A version number consists of two or three dot-separated numeric
> components, with an optional "pre-release" tag on the end. The
> pre-release tag consists of the letter 'a' or 'b' followed by a number.
This assumption already fails for some pretty basic python libraries
itself, like setuptools, also available in `46.1.3.post20200610`, a
completely valid version number according to
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0440/#post-releases.
There doesn't seem to be a particular reason on why StrictVersion has
been used here, so let's use LooseVersion, to be compatible with these
versions.
Co-authored-by: Adrien Ferrand <adferrand@users.noreply.github.com>
Fixes#7713.
As discussed in #7713, providing a Powershell script as hook for Certbot is not working currently. This is because hooks are run in a `cmd` environment, that recognizes only `.bat` files as valid scripts that can be run from their bare name on command line.
On the other hand, the Powershell both `.bat` and `.ps1` scripts as valid scripts.
This PR makes hooks command be executed by Powershell, instead of `cmd` as `Popen` does by default when `shell=true` is used. It also modifies the tests to handle this new environment, in particular in term of encoding (UTF-16-LE is the default one in Powershell).
* Run hooks in powershell on Windows
* Fix hook test
* Fallback to unittest.mock
* In fact, shell_cmd as a list of str could not work. Declare only str as acceptable input for shell_cmd.
* Added changelog
* Fix dangerous default argument
* Remove unused imports
* Remove unnecessary comprehension
* Use literal syntax to create data structure
* Use literal syntax instead of function calls to create data structure
Co-authored-by: deepsource-autofix[bot] <62050782+deepsource-autofix[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
This PR is an alternative to #7125.
Instead of disabling the strict mode on Pebble, this PR fixes the JWS payloads regarding RFC 8555 to be compliant, and allow certbot to work with Pebble v2.1.0+.
* Fix acme compliance to RFC 8555.
* Working mixin
* Activate back pebble strict mode
* Use mixin for type
* Update dependencies
* Fix also in fields_to_partial_json
* Update pebble
* Add changelog
Fixes#1028.
Doing this now because of https://community.letsencrypt.org/t/revoking-certain-certificates-on-march-4/.
The new `ocsp_revoked_by_paths` function is taken from https://github.com/certbot/certbot/pull/7649 with the optional argument removed for now because it is unused.
This function was added in this PR because `storage.py` uses `self.latest_common_version()` to determine which certificate should be looked at for determining renewal status at 9f8e4507ad/certbot/certbot/_internal/storage.py (L939-L947)
I think this is unnecessary and you can just look at the currently linked certificate, but I don't think we should be changing the logic that code has always had now.
* Check OCSP status as part of determining to renew
* add integration tests
* add ocsp_revoked_by_paths
As discussed in #7539, we need proper tests of the Windows installer itself in order to variety that all the logic contained in a production-grade runtime of Certbot on Windows is correctly setup by each version of the installer, and so for a variety of Windows OSes.
This PR handles this requirement. The new `windows_installer_integration_tests` module in `certbot-ci` will:
* run the given Windows installer
* check that Certbot is properly installed and working
* check that the scheduled renew task is set up
* check that the scheduled task actually launch the Certbot renew logic
The Windows nightly tests are updated accordingly, in order to have the tests run on Windows Server 2012R2, 2016 and 2019.
These tests will evolve as we add more logic on the installer.
* Configure an integration test testing the windows installer
* Write the test module
* Configurable installer path, prepare azure pipelines
* Fix option
* Update test_main.py
* Add confirmation for this destructive test
* Use regex to validate certbot --version output
* Explicit dependency on a log output
* Use an exception to ask confirmation
* Use --allow-persistent-changes
Fixes#7110
This PR declares docker-compose as a requirement for certbot-ci. This way, a recent version of docker-compose is installed in the standard virtual environment set up by `tools/venv.py` and `tools/venv3.py`, and so is available to pytest integration tests from `tox` or in the virtual environment enabled.
* Add docker-compose as a dev dependency and declares it in certbot-ci requirements
* Update docker-compose 1.25.0
Part of #5775.
* Create _internal folder certbot-nginx
* Move configurator.py to _internal
* Move constants.py to _internal
* Move display_ops.py to _internal
* Move http_01.py to _internal
* Move nginxparser.py to _internal
* Move obj.py to _internal
* Move parser_obj.py to _internal
* Move parser.py to _internal
* Update location and references for tls_configs
* exclude parser_obj from coverage
* acme: re-populate uri in deactivate_authorization
* Use fresh authorizations in dry runs
--dry-run now deactivates 'valid' authorizations if it encounters them
when creating a new order.
Resolves#5116.
* remove unused code
* typo in local-oldest-requirements
* better error handling
* certbot-ci: AUTHREUSE to 100 + unskip dry-run test
* improve test coverage for error cases
* restore newline to local-oldest-requirements.txt
Fixes#7368.
When updating the changelog, I replaced the line about running tests on Python 3.8 because I personally think that support for Python 3.8 is the most relevant information for our users/packagers about our changes in this area.
* List support for Python 3.8.
* Update changelog.
* Get integration tests working on python 3.8
* Run unit tests on py38
* Update coveragercs to use coverage 4.5+ format
* remove line added to tox.ini
* update changelog
* xenial is the new travis default; no need to specify in .travis.yml
This PR supersedes #7353.
It fixes the execution of nginx oldest tests when these tests are executed on top of the modifications made in #7337. This execution failure revealed the fact that in some cases, the wrong version of certbot logic was used during integration tests (namely the logic lying in the codebase of the branch built, instead of the logic from the version of certbot declared by certbot-nginx for instance).
I let you appreciate my inline comment for the explanation and the workaround.
Thanks a lot to @bmw who found this python/pytest madness.
You can see the oldest tests succeeding with the logic of #7337 + this PR here: https://travis-ci.com/certbot/certbot/builds/124816254
* Remove certbot root from PYTHONPATH during integration tests
* Add a biiiiig comment.
* Fix account_tests
* Fix hook executable test
* Remove the temporary decorator @broken_on_windows
* Fix util_test
* No broken unit test on Windows anymore
* More elegant mock
* Fix context manager
* Fix lint
* Fix mypy
* Adapt coverage
* Corrections
* Fix lint
* Adapt coverage
* Update certbot/tests/compat/filesystem_test.py
Co-Authored-By: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update util_test.py
* Fix pylint
* Forbid os.access
* Update os_test.py
* Update os.py
* Fix lint
* Update filesystem.py
* Update filesystem.py
* Update filesystem.py
* Update os.py
* Start fixing tests
* Platform independent hooks
* Fix probe fd close
* Add broken_on_windows for integration tests
* Fix a lot of tests
* Use a python hook script, to prepare cross-platform
* New approach to be compliant with Linux and Windows on hook scripts
* New tests fixed
* Test for permissions on Windows
* Permissions comparison for Windows
* No broken tests in certbot core anymore
* Change mode
* Specific config for appveyor
* Use forked pebble for now
* Various fixes
* Assert file permissions for world on private keys
* Clean code
* Fix several things
* Add integration target
* Optimize integration env
* Re-enable all AppVeyor envs
* Use again official pebble
* Update pebble_artifacts.py
* Set PYTEST_ADDOPTS silently
* Update appveyor.yml
* Pin pywin32 for tests, give a minimal requirement for certbot.
* Remove injection of nginx in PATH
* Clean debug code
* Various cleanup, ensure to remove workspace after tests
* Update tox target
* Improve assertions. Control the keyword echoed in hooks
* Fix for virtualenv on Python 3.7.4 for Windows
* Update certbot-ci/certbot_integration_tests/certbot_tests/assertions.py
Co-Authored-By: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Add conditionally pywin in certbot-ci like in certbot
* Implement a logic, miss the private key of pebble
* Complete process
* Fix nginx cert path
* Check conditionnally docker
* Update gitignore, fix apacheconftest
* Full object
* Carriage return
* Work in progress
* Move to official v2.1.0 of pebble
* Fix name
* Update acme_server.py
* Link things together with new version of pebble
* Plug the logic to tests
* Update config
* Reinitiate config
* Add OCSP config to pebble
* Working.
* Simplify logic
* Clean code
* Use forked pebble for now
# Conflicts:
# certbot-ci/certbot_integration_tests/utils/pebble_artifacts.py
* Move full logic of mock at the acme server config
* Continue work
* Finish fixing the date parsing
* Update module name
* Use again official pebble
* Activate mock OCSP server
* Clean code
* Update pebble_artifacts.py
* Remove OCSP stale test
* Add executable permissions
* Clean code
* Update setup.py
* Simplify code
* On-demand import of pebble_ocsp_server
* Revert "Remove OCSP stale test"
This reverts commit 2e4c985b42.
# Conflicts:
# certbot-ci/certbot_integration_tests/utils/misc.py
* Fix for virtualenv on Python 3.7.4 for Windows
* Update acme_server.py
This PR is a part of the actions necessary to make Certbot-CI work on Windows, in order to execute the integration tests on this platform.
Following #7156, this PR changes how the integration tests are setup against Pebble to not need Docker anymore.
As a reminder, one can check #7156 and letsencrypt/pebble#240 to see the rationale about why using Docker is a problem to run the integration tests on Windows.
Basically, this PR executes directly Pebble using its executable, since it is build using Go, and Go produces self-contained executable that can run without any installation on Linux and on Windows. During the integration tests setup, Certbot-CI will get the Pebble (and Challtestsrv) executables for the defined target version on the GitHub releases. The binaries are persisted on the filesystem, so it is not needed to download them again on the second integration tests execution. Nonetheless, we are talking about 20MB of executables.
Since the setup needs to hold a state, I also took this occasion to refactor the acme_server, in order to use on object oriented approach and improve the readability/maintainability.
Once this PR and #7156 are merged, Docker will not be needed anymore for the main integration tests usecase, that is to use Pebble.
* Complete process
* Fix nginx cert path
* Check conditionnally docker
* Update gitignore, fix apacheconftest
* Full object
* Carriage return
* Move to official v2.1.0 of pebble
* Fix name
* Update acme_server.py
* Relaunch CI
* Update certbot-ci/certbot_integration_tests/utils/acme_server.py
Co-Authored-By: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update certbot-ci/certbot_integration_tests/utils/acme_server.py
Co-Authored-By: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update docstring
* Update documentation
* Configure a stdout to ACMEServer
* Map all process through defined stdout
* Remove unused variable
* Handle using signals
* Use failsafe entering context
* Remove failsafe rmtree, that is not needed anymore
Since Pebble v2.1.0, new controls have been added on ACME specs compliance on Pebble with strict mode enabled. These controls are described here: letsencrypt/pebble@3a2ce1c
Currently Certbot is not compliant enough to pass these new controls. One part of the work to do is described here: #7171
As a consequence, our CI is currently broken, both on PR builds and nightly builds.
This PR disables the strict mode during integration tests, fixing temporarily our CI. This will give us some time to fix theses deviations, and add back the strict mode in a future PR once it is merged.
* Remove -strict mode on Pebble for now.
* Refer to relevant Certbot PR
* Clean code
This PR is a part of the actions necessary to make Certbot-CI work on Windows, in order to execute the integration tests on this platform.
I initially used the fully-fledged HTTP proxy [Traefik](https://docs.traefik.io/) to distribute HTTP challenges among several pytest nodes, and so parallelize the integration tests. Traefik for this purpose is overkill. We just want to redirect the ACME server to a pytest node depending on the `Host` header, and we use here a production-grade HTTP proxy for that.
However it was not a problem on Linux, as soon as you can have Docker, because this instance is deployed through it.
But this becomes a problem for Windows, where Docker is not available everywhere, very compelling on its setup, and limited by the implemented network drivers. See my comments here https://github.com/letsencrypt/pebble/pull/240 for more details.
Hopefully Python ships with everything needed to implement a simple HTTP proxy, with strictly what we need for the parallelization of integration tests.
This PR implements this kind of HTTP proxy, and remove the coupling to Traefik.
This PR has been tested successfully with integration tests on Pebble under Linux for Python 2.x and Python 3.x, and the proxy alone has been also tested successfully on Windows (no integration tests can be run for now on this platform).
* Create a python proxy
* Refactor proxy config
* Working logic
* Resolve from the path
* Give proxy process to the ACMEServer context manager