also required making some hardcoded values into more generic
functionality, which is generally a good thing. I verified that each
test function that I modified still passed.:
This code is copyright 2014 Akamai Technologies, Inc. <opensource@akamai.com>
Client works for RPC; will honor CONSUL_RPC_ADDR. HTTP works via consul/api;
honors CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR.
The format of a Unix socket in configuration data is:
"unix://[/path/to/socket];[username or uid];[gid];[mode]"
Obviously, the user must have appropriate permissions to create the socket
file in the given path and assign the requested uid/gid. Also note that Go does
not support gid lookups from group name, so gid must be numeric. See
https://codereview.appspot.com/101310044
When connecting from the client, the format is just the first part of the
above line:
"unix://[/path/to/socket]"
This code is copyright 2014 Akamai Technologies, Inc. <opensource@akamai.com>
This is necessary as consul-api's tests require a real consul instance
to be running. We can't directly import an agent to fire up an instance,
due to the way this would create an import cycle. These tests instead
will start a consul instance using the binary in $PATH (if it exists).