This seems to be be a more natural separation of concerns--the knowledge
of which config fields map to which parts of a Step belong to the Step,
not to the Plan.
These comments were a reasonable attempt at ensuring the documentation
matched reality, but the checkbox in the pull request template is much
more likely to produce results.
It's a little tricky to find a balance between "brittle" and "thorough"
in this test--I'd like to verify that e.g. the certificate is in
clusters[0].cluster.certificate-authority-data, not at the root. On the
other hand, we can't actually show that it's a valid kubeconfig file
without actually *using* it, so there's a hard upper limit on the
strength of the assertions. I've settled on verifying that all the
settings make it into the file and the file is syntactically-valid yaml.
Helm3 renamed its delete command to uninstall. We should still accept
helm_command=delete for drone-helm compatibility, but the internals
should use Helm's preferred name.
The tests need to allow calls to Stdout/Stderr so they don't get
"Unexpected call" errors from gomock, but these tests aren't meant to
assert that the calls actually happened. Using .AnyTimes allows 0 or
more calls.
This change revealed more about how the system needs to work, so there
are some supporting changes:
* helm.upgrade and helm.help are now vars rather than raw functions.
This allows unit tests to target the "which step should we run"
logic directly by comparing function pointers, rather than having to
configure/prepare a fully-valid Plan and then infer the logic’s
correctness based on the Plan’s state.
* configuration that's specific to kubeconfig initialization is now part
of the InitKube struct rather than run.Config, since other steps
shouldn’t need access to those settings (particularly the secrets).
* Step.Execute now receives a run.Config so it can log debug output.
I'm vacillating about the choice to have separate Config structs in the
`helm` and `run` packages. I can't tell whether it's "good separation of
concerns" or "cumbersome and over-engineered." It seems appropriate at
the moment, though.