## Changes
- Currently if you define [[Server]] block, you disable the default
server implementation. With this change [[Server]] block takes
precedence over default server but default server remains.
- Switched mux implementation to
[gorilla/mux](https://github.com/gorilla/mux) -- unlike built-in it does
not panic if you set two handlers on the same part (instead the earliest
one wins). It also does not have any dependencies.
- Move acceptance/selftest into acceptance/selftest/basic and added
acceptance/selftest/server that demoes server override.
- Rewrite server set up to ensure that env vars and replacements are set
up correctly. Previously replacements for DATABRICKS_HOST referred to
default server, not to the custom server.
- Avoid calling CurrentUser.Me() in the local case. This allows
overriding /api/2.0/preview/scim/v2/Me, which we use in some tests (e.g.
bundle/templates-machinery/helpers-error). Previously the test passed
because CurrentUser.Me() was calling default server which is incorrect
but it happened to make the tests pass.
- The default server is now available on DATABRICKS_DEFAULT_HOST env
var.
- Rewrite "not found" handler in local test to handle error better (do
not raise http500 when header is already written).
## Tests
New acceptance test selftest/server specifically tests that both custom
and default handlers are available in a single test.
## Changes
This PR fails the acceptance test when an unknown endpoint (i.e. not
stubbed) is used. We want to ensure that all API endpoints used in an
acceptance test are stubbed and do not otherwise silently fail with a
404.
The logs on failure output include a configuration that developers can
simply copy-paste to `test.toml` to stub the missing API endpoint. It'll
look something like:
```
[[Server]]
Pattern = "<method> <path>"
Response.Body = '''
<response body here>
'''
Response.StatusCode = <response status-code here>
```
## Tests
Manually:
output.txt when an endpoint is not found:
```
>>> [CLI] jobs create --json {"name":"abc"}
Error: No stub found for pattern: POST /api/2.1/jobs/create
```
How this renders in the test logs:
```
--- FAIL: TestAccept/workspace/jobs/create (0.03s)
server.go:46:
----------------------------------------
No stub found for pattern: POST /api/2.1/jobs/create
To stub a response for this request, you can add
the following to test.toml:
[[Server]]
Pattern = "POST /api/2.1/jobs/create"
Response.Body = '''
<response body here>
'''
Response.StatusCode = <response status-code here>
----------------------------------------
```
Manually checked that the debug mode still works.
## Changes
Extend testserver for bundle deployment:
- Allocate a new workspace per test case to isolate test cases from each
other
- Support jobs get/list/create
- Support creation and listing of workspace files
## Tests
Using existing acceptance tests
## Changes
The APIs at Databricks when returning a non `200` status code will
return a response body of the format:
```
{
"error_code": "Error code",
"message": "Human-readable error message."
}
```
This PR adds the ability to stub non-200 status codes in the test
server, allowing us to mock API errors from Databricks.
## Tests
New test
## Changes
This PR registers the `server.Close()` function to be run during test
cleanup in the server initialization function. This ensures that all
test servers are closed as soon as the test they are scoped to finish.
Motivated by https://github.com/databricks/cli/pull/2255/files where a
regression was introduced where we did not close the test server.
## Tests
N/A
## Changes
- If you pass -inprocess flag to acceptance tests, they will run in the
same process as test itself. This enables debugging.
- If you set singleTest variable on top of acceptance_test.go, you'll
only run that test and with inprocess mode. This is intended for
debugging in VSCode.
- (minor) Converted KeepTmp to flag -keeptmp from env var KEEP_TMP for
consistency with other flags.
## Tests
- I verified that acceptance tests pass with -inprocess mode: `go test
-inprocess < /dev/null | cat`
- I verified that debugging in VSCode works: set a test name in
singleTest variable, set breakpoints inside CLI and click "debug test"
in VSCode.