This failure occurred because our tests use canned data to exercise
the directory state functionality, and the canned consensus has
suddenly become very expired.
There are better fixes possible, but this is a minimal one that
should get CI working on main again.
This makes our layout more similar to our other crates, and
successfully informs our grcov exclusion pattern that these tests
are indeed tests.
Doing this knocks down the reported coverage for the tor-rtcompat
crate, but that's okay: we hadn't earned it.
I hereby promise that this commit is only code-movement.
Shellcheck doesn't like it when you do `rm -r "$A/$B"` : it worries
that the path might accidentally expand to /.
That shouldn't actually be possible in this case, but let's avoid
being the people who accidentally remove somebody's filesystem.
Previously it didn't enable any TLS provider, since we made
native-tls optional a few commits ago. Now it enables rustls,
so that rustls also gets a quick check along with async-std.
I've also switched this test to use "cargo clippy" in place of
"cargo test" because it's a strict superset.
This took some refactoring, so that I wouldn't need to define 9
different versions of the function. It also required that we change
the behavior of test_with_all_runtimes slightly, so that it asserts
on _any_ failure rather than asserting on most but returning Err()
for others. That in turn required changes to a few of its callers.
There's probably a better way to do all of this macro business, but
this is the best I could find.
This commit puts the native-tls crate behind a feature. The feature
is off-by-default in the tor-rtcompat crate, but can be enabled
either from arti or arti-client.
There is an included script that I used to test that tor-rtcompat
could build and run its tests with all subsets of its features.
Closes#300
Having separate types here doesn't justify the (very limited)
benefit of distinguishing between the case where we have created an
executor that we own and the case where we have a handle to an
already-running tokio executor.
Part of #301.
This is based on @janimo's approach in !74, but diverges in a few
important ways.
1. It assumes that something like !251 will merge, so that we can
have separate implementations for native_tls and rustls compiled
at the same time.
2. It assumes that we can implement this for the futures::io traits
only with no real penalty.
3. It uses the `x509-signature` crate to work around the pickiness of
the `webpki` crate. If webpki eventually solves their
[bug 219](https://github.com/briansmith/webpki/issues/219), we
can remove a lot of that workaround.
Closes#86.