Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
5b866e7f54 Adds container health support to docker ps filter
Signed-off-by: Josh Horwitz <horwitzja@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 1a149a0ea59b6653e0ba14599476bfe19c4c33f3
Component: engine
2016-10-28 15:43:04 -04:00
45ddc4bfcb Add engine-api types to docker
This moves the types for the `engine-api` repo to the existing types
package.

Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <crosbymichael@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 91e197d614547f0202e6ae9b8a24d88ee131d950
Component: engine
2016-09-07 11:05:58 -07:00
22f7fc770f Fix exec form of HEALTHCHECK CMD
We attached the JSON flag to the wrong AST node, causing Docker to treat
the exec form ["binary", "arg"] as if the shell form "binary arg" had
been used. This failed if "ls" was not present.

Added a test to detect this.

Fixes #26174

Signed-off-by: Thomas Leonard <thomas.leonard@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: e95b6b51daed868094c7b66113381d5088e831b4
Component: engine
2016-08-31 17:50:12 +01:00
9233ed872e Ignore 'not a swarm error' when inspecting a task.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: fab2a3dc826ec05e7fb0dc66748b235fb4a43df6
Component: engine
2016-08-03 12:22:07 -04:00
c4c90efda6 Remove out-of-date health test
The test was waiting for the container to exit after failing its
healthcheck. However, we no longer automatically terminate containers,
so this waited instead for the container to time-out by itself.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Leonard <thomas.leonard@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: 18a59bb8691c6f6f6a7a86f56bbcfc5418509ed8
Component: engine
2016-06-16 13:09:57 +01:00
4524589dc5 Add support for user-defined healthchecks
This PR adds support for user-defined health-check probes for Docker
containers. It adds a `HEALTHCHECK` instruction to the Dockerfile syntax plus
some corresponding "docker run" options. It can be used with a restart policy
to automatically restart a container if the check fails.

The `HEALTHCHECK` instruction has two forms:

* `HEALTHCHECK [OPTIONS] CMD command` (check container health by running a command inside the container)
* `HEALTHCHECK NONE` (disable any healthcheck inherited from the base image)

The `HEALTHCHECK` instruction tells Docker how to test a container to check that
it is still working. This can detect cases such as a web server that is stuck in
an infinite loop and unable to handle new connections, even though the server
process is still running.

When a container has a healthcheck specified, it has a _health status_ in
addition to its normal status. This status is initially `starting`. Whenever a
health check passes, it becomes `healthy` (whatever state it was previously in).
After a certain number of consecutive failures, it becomes `unhealthy`.

The options that can appear before `CMD` are:

* `--interval=DURATION` (default: `30s`)
* `--timeout=DURATION` (default: `30s`)
* `--retries=N` (default: `1`)

The health check will first run **interval** seconds after the container is
started, and then again **interval** seconds after each previous check completes.

If a single run of the check takes longer than **timeout** seconds then the check
is considered to have failed.

It takes **retries** consecutive failures of the health check for the container
to be considered `unhealthy`.

There can only be one `HEALTHCHECK` instruction in a Dockerfile. If you list
more than one then only the last `HEALTHCHECK` will take effect.

The command after the `CMD` keyword can be either a shell command (e.g. `HEALTHCHECK
CMD /bin/check-running`) or an _exec_ array (as with other Dockerfile commands;
see e.g. `ENTRYPOINT` for details).

The command's exit status indicates the health status of the container.
The possible values are:

- 0: success - the container is healthy and ready for use
- 1: unhealthy - the container is not working correctly
- 2: starting - the container is not ready for use yet, but is working correctly

If the probe returns 2 ("starting") when the container has already moved out of the
"starting" state then it is treated as "unhealthy" instead.

For example, to check every five minutes or so that a web-server is able to
serve the site's main page within three seconds:

    HEALTHCHECK --interval=5m --timeout=3s \
      CMD curl -f http://localhost/ || exit 1

To help debug failing probes, any output text (UTF-8 encoded) that the command writes
on stdout or stderr will be stored in the health status and can be queried with
`docker inspect`. Such output should be kept short (only the first 4096 bytes
are stored currently).

When the health status of a container changes, a `health_status` event is
generated with the new status. The health status is also displayed in the
`docker ps` output.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Leonard <thomas.leonard@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Upstream-commit: b6c7becbfe1d76b1250f6d8e991e645e13808a9c
Component: engine
2016-06-02 23:58:34 +02:00