Multiple changes were made to pass linting. Some Go built-in names
are being used for variables (e.g., min). This happens in the Go
source itself including the Go standard library and is not always
a bad practice.
To handle allowing some built-in names to be used the linter config
is updated to allow (via opt-in) some names to pass. This allows us
to still check for re-use of Go built-in names and opt-in to any
new uses.
There were also several cases where a value was checked for nil
before checking its length when this is already handled by len()
or the types default value. These were cleaned up.
The license validation was updated because it was checking everything
in the .git directory including all remote content that was local.
The previous vendor directory was from a time prior to Go modules
when Helm handled dependencies differently. It was no longer needed.
Signed-off-by: Matt Farina <matt.farina@suse.com>
<https://github.com/helm/helm/pull/8371>
This covers:
- `tpl` text can `include` a `define` provided in a partial file
- `tpl` text can `include` a `define` provided in its text
- `tpl` text can be loaded via `.Files.Get`
Signed-off-by: Graham Reed <greed@7deadly.org>
- Use a clone of the current Template instead of re-creating everything from scratch
- Needs to inject `include` so any defines in the tpl text can be seen.
Signed-off-by: Graham Reed <greed@7deadly.org>
This is a regression accidently introduced in #9957.
A delete call had been used on the Template key of vals. This caused
a condition where Template was not available when rendering via tpl.
The delete happened after ExecuteTemplate so the issue is surpsising.
It may possibly be a race condition. Existing tests did not catch it.
I tried to create a test that directly tested the issue and was
unable to replicate the error seen with real charts. This leads me
to believe it is a race condition in the underlying Go template
package.
The delete call was not there before #9957. It should be safe to
remove and keep that information.
Closes#10082
Signed-off-by: Matt Farina <matt.farina@suse.com>
The templating engine handles errors originating from the `required` and
`fail` template functions specially, cleaning up the error messages to
be more presentable to users. Go's text/template package unfortunately
does not make this straightforward to implement. Despite
template.ExecError implementing Unwrap, the error value returned from
the template function cannot be retrieved using errors.As. The wrapped
error in ExecError is a pre-formatted error string with the template
function's error string interpolated in with the original error value
erased. Helm works around this limitation by delimiting the
template-supplied message and extracting the message out of the
ExecError string with a regex.
Fix the parsing of `required` and `fail` error messages containing
newlines by setting the regex flag to make `.` match newline characters.
Signed-off-by: Cory Snider <csnider@mirantis.com>
Since Tiller is no longer part of Helm v3, internal documentation
language about Tiller can be removed
Signed-off-by: Matt Farina <matt@mattfarina.com>