This driver uses protobuf to store log messages and has better defaults
for log file handling (e.g. compression and file rotation enabled by
default).
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: a351b38e7217af059eb2f8fc3dba14dc03836a45
Component: engine
This implements chown support on Windows. Built-in accounts as well
as accounts included in the SAM database of the container are supported.
NOTE: IDPair is now named Identity and IDMappings is now named
IdentityMapping.
The following are valid examples:
ADD --chown=Guest . <some directory>
COPY --chown=Administrator . <some directory>
COPY --chown=Guests . <some directory>
COPY --chown=ContainerUser . <some directory>
On Windows an owner is only granted the permission to read the security
descriptor and read/write the discretionary access control list. This
fix also grants read/write and execute permissions to the owner.
Signed-off-by: Salahuddin Khan <salah@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: 763d8392612942ff5c32a35f8bdafd7ae93d3321
Component: engine
These network operations really don't have anything to do with the
container but rather are setting up the networking.
Ideally these wouldn't get shoved into the daemon package, but doing
something else (e.g. extract a network service into a new package) but
there's a lot more work to do in that regard.
In reality, this probably simplifies some of that work as it moves all
the network operations to the same place.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: cc8f358c23d307d19b06cd5e7d039d8fad01a947
Component: engine
Since Go 1.7, context is a standard package. Since Go 1.9, everything
that is provided by "x/net/context" is a couple of type aliases to
types in "context".
Many vendored packages still use x/net/context, so vendor entry remains
for now.
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 7d62e40f7e4f3c17d229a7687d6fcca5448de813
Component: engine
This moves the platform specific stuff in a separate package and keeps
the `volume` package and the defined interfaces light to import.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 6a70fd222b95643a8a6b88e2634d5f085ae4122a
Component: engine
Commit 7a7357dae1bccc ("LCOW: Implemented support for docker cp + build")
changed `container.BaseFS` from being a string (that could be empty but
can't lead to nil pointer dereference) to containerfs.ContainerFS,
which could be be `nil` and so nil dereference is at least theoretically
possible, which leads to panic (i.e. engine crashes).
Such a panic can be avoided by carefully analysing the source code in all
the places that dereference a variable, to make the variable can't be nil.
Practically, this analisys are impossible as code is constantly
evolving.
Still, we need to avoid panics and crashes. A good way to do so is to
explicitly check that a variable is non-nil, returning an error
otherwise. Even in case such a check looks absolutely redundant,
further changes to the code might make it useful, and having an
extra check is not a big price to pay to avoid a panic.
This commit adds such checks for all the places where it is not obvious
that container.BaseFS is not nil (which in this case means we do not
call daemon.Mount() a few lines earlier).
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: d6ea46cedaca0098c15843c5254a337d087f5cd6
Component: engine
This fixes an issue where the container LogPath was empty when the
non-blocking logging mode was enabled. This change sets the LogPath on
the container as soon as the path is generated, instead of setting the
LogPath on a logger struct and then attempting to pull it off that
logger at a later point. That attempt to pull the LogPath off the logger
was error prone since it assumed that the logger would only ever be a
single type.
Prior to this change docker inspect returned an empty string for
LogPath. This caused issues with tools that rely on docker inspect
output to discover container logs, e.g. Kubernetes.
This commit also removes some LogPath methods that are now unnecessary
and are never invoked.
Signed-off-by: junzhe and mnussbaum <code@getbraintree.com>
Upstream-commit: 20ca612a59c45c0bd58c71c199a7ebd2a6bf1a9e
Component: engine
On unix, merge secrets/configs handling. This is important because
configs can contain secrets (via templating) and potentially a config
could just simply have secret information "by accident" from the user.
This just make sure that configs are as secure as secrets and de-dups a
lot of code.
Generally this makes everything simpler and configs more secure.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: c02171802b788fb2d4d48bebcee2a57c8eabeeaa
Component: engine
It's a common scenario for admins and/or monitoring applications to
mount in the daemon root dir into a container. When doing so all mounts
get coppied into the container, often with private references.
This can prevent removal of a container due to the various mounts that
must be configured before a container is started (for example, for
shared /dev/shm, or secrets) being leaked into another namespace,
usually with private references.
This is particularly problematic on older kernels (e.g. RHEL < 7.4)
where a mount may be active in another namespace and attempting to
remove a mountpoint which is active in another namespace fails.
This change moves all container resource mounts into a common directory
so that the directory can be made unbindable.
What this does is prevents sub-mounts of this new directory from leaking
into other namespaces when mounted with `rbind`... which is how all
binds are handled for containers.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: eaa5192856c1ad09614318e88030554b96bb6e81
Component: engine
The shutdown timeout for containers in insufficient on Windows. If the daemon is shutting down, and a container takes longer than expected to shut down, this can cause the container to remain in a bad state after restart, and never be able to start again. Increasing the timeout makes this less likely to occur.
Signed-off-by: Darren Stahl <darst@microsoft.com>
Upstream-commit: ed74ee127f42f32ee98be7b908e1562b1c0554d7
Component: engine
Signed-off-by: John Howard <jhoward@microsoft.com>
This PR has the API changes described in https://github.com/moby/moby/issues/34617.
Specifically, it adds an HTTP header "X-Requested-Platform" which is a JSON-encoded
OCI Image-spec `Platform` structure.
In addition, it renames (almost all) uses of a string variable platform (and associated)
methods/functions to os. This makes it much clearer to disambiguate with the swarm
"platform" which is really os/arch. This is a stepping stone to getting the daemon towards
fully multi-platform/arch-aware, and makes it clear when "operating system" is being
referred to rather than "platform" which is misleadingly used - sometimes in the swarm
meaning, but more often as just the operating system.
Upstream-commit: 0380fbff37922cadf294851b1546f4c212c7f364
Component: engine
This enables docker cp and ADD/COPY docker build support for LCOW.
Originally, the graphdriver.Get() interface returned a local path
to the container root filesystem. This does not work for LCOW, so
the Get() method now returns an interface that LCOW implements to
support copying to and from the container.
Signed-off-by: Akash Gupta <akagup@microsoft.com>
Upstream-commit: 7a7357dae1bcccb17e9b2d4c7c8f5c025fce56ca
Component: engine
Use strongly typed errors to set HTTP status codes.
Error interfaces are defined in the api/errors package and errors
returned from controllers are checked against these interfaces.
Errors can be wraeped in a pkg/errors.Causer, as long as somewhere in the
line of causes one of the interfaces is implemented. The special error
interfaces take precedence over Causer, meaning if both Causer and one
of the new error interfaces are implemented, the Causer is not
traversed.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: ebcb7d6b406fe50ea9a237c73004d75884184c33
Component: engine
Do not allow sharing of container network with hyperv containers
Signed-off-by: Madhan Raj Mookkandy <madhanm@microsoft.com>
Upstream-commit: 349913ce9fde34d8acd08fad5ce866401f4d135e
Component: engine
Reuse existing structures and rely on json serialization to deep copy
Container objects.
Also consolidate all "save" operations on container.CheckpointTo, which
now both saves a serialized json to disk, and replicates state to the
ACID in-memory store.
Signed-off-by: Fabio Kung <fabio.kung@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: edad52707c536116363031002e6633e3fec16af5
Component: engine
Also hide ViewDB behind an inteface.
Signed-off-by: Fabio Kung <fabio.kung@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: aacddda89df05b88a6d15fb33c42864760385ab2
Component: engine
The commit adds capability to accept csv parameters
for network option in service create/update commands.The change
includes name,alias driver options specific to the network.
With this the following will be supported
docker service create --name web --network name=docknet,alias=web1,driver-opt=field1=value1 nginx
docker service create --name web --network docknet nginx
docker service update web --network-add name=docknet,alias=web1,driver-opt=field1=value1
docker service update web --network-rm docknet
Signed-off-by: Abhinandan Prativadi <abhi@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: fe11de01772ec7c7501d3b679ce94d41bcc14060
Component: engine
This prevents targets with the same basename from colliding.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: 37ce91ddd60e50a8bcd7ac3a7ba858f94c28c51e
Component: engine
This adds support to specify custom container paths for secrets.
Signed-off-by: Evan Hazlett <ejhazlett@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 67d282a5c95ca1d25cd4e9c688e89191f662d448
Component: engine
This makes sure that multiple users of MountPoint pointer can
mount/unmount without affecting each other.
Before this PR, if you run a container (stay running), then do `docker
cp`, when the `docker cp` is done the MountPoint is mutated such that
when the container stops the volume driver will not get an Unmount
request. Effectively there would be two mounts with only one unmount.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: df0d317a64e4a74433359e826bc1d606e050a5ed
Component: engine
Signed-off-by: John Howard <jhoward@microsoft.com>
Working directory processing was handled differently for Hyper-V and Windows-Server containers, as annotated in the builder documentation (updated in this PR). For Hyper-V containers, the working directory set by WORKDIR was not created. This PR makes Hyper-V containers work the same as Windows Server containers (and the same as Linux).
Example (only applies to Hyper-V containers, so not reproducible under CI environment)
Dockerfile:
FROM microsoft/nanoserver
WORKDIR c:\installer
ENV GOROOT=c:\installer
ADD go.exe .
RUN go --help
Running on Windows Server 2016, using docker master without this change, but with daemon set to --exec-opt isolation=hyperv as it would be for Client operating systems.
PS E:\go\src\github.com\docker\docker> dockerd -g c:\control --exec-opt isolation=hyperv
time="2017-02-01T15:48:09.657286100-08:00" level=info msg="Windows default isolation mode: hyperv"
time="2017-02-01T15:48:09.662720900-08:00" level=info msg="[graphdriver] using prior storage driver: windowsfilter"
time="2017-02-01T15:48:10.011588000-08:00" level=info msg="Graph migration to content-addressability took 0.00 seconds"
time="2017-02-01T15:48:10.016655800-08:00" level=info msg="Loading containers: start."
time="2017-02-01T15:48:10.460820000-08:00" level=info msg="Loading containers: done."
time="2017-02-01T15:48:10.509859600-08:00" level=info msg="Daemon has completed initialization"
time="2017-02-01T15:48:10.509859600-08:00" level=info msg="Docker daemon" commit=3c64061 graphdriver=windowsfilter version=1.14.0-dev
First with no explicit isolation:
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir> docker build --no-cache .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 10.1 MB
Step 1/5 : FROM microsoft/nanoserver
---> 89b8556cb9ca
Step 2/5 : WORKDIR c:\installer
---> 7e0f41d08204
Removing intermediate container 236c7802042a
Step 3/5 : ENV GOROOT c:\installer
---> Running in 8ea5237183c1
---> 394b70435261
Removing intermediate container 8ea5237183c1
Step 4/5 : ADD go.exe .
---> e47401a1745c
Removing intermediate container 88dcc28e74b1
Step 5/5 : RUN go --help
---> Running in efe90e1b6b8b
container efe90e1b6b8b76586abc5c1dc0e2797b75adc26517c48733d90651e767c8463b encountered an error during CreateProcess: failure in a Windows system call: The directory name is invalid. (0x10b) extra info: {"ApplicationName":"","CommandLine":"cmd /S /C go --help","User":"","WorkingDirectory":"C:\\installer","Environment":{"GOROOT":"c:\\installer"},"EmulateConsole":false,"CreateStdInPipe":true,"CreateStdOutPipe":true,"CreateStdErrPipe":true,"ConsoleSize":[0,0]}
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir>
Then forcing process isolation:
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir> docker build --isolation=process --no-cache .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 10.1 MB
Step 1/5 : FROM microsoft/nanoserver
---> 89b8556cb9ca
Step 2/5 : WORKDIR c:\installer
---> 350c955980c8
Removing intermediate container 8339c1e9250c
Step 3/5 : ENV GOROOT c:\installer
---> Running in bde511c5e3e0
---> b8820063b5b6
Removing intermediate container bde511c5e3e0
Step 4/5 : ADD go.exe .
---> e4ac32f8902b
Removing intermediate container d586e8492eda
Step 5/5 : RUN go --help
---> Running in 9e1aa235af5f
Cannot mkdir: C:\installer is not a directory
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir>
Now compare the same results after this PR. Again, first with no explicit isolation (defaulting to Hyper-V containers as that's what the daemon it set to) - note it now succeeds 😄
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir> docker build --no-cache .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 10.1 MB
Step 1/5 : FROM microsoft/nanoserver
---> 89b8556cb9ca
Step 2/5 : WORKDIR c:\installer
---> 4f319f301c69
Removing intermediate container 61b9c0b1ff6f
Step 3/5 : ENV GOROOT c:\installer
---> Running in c464a1d612d8
---> 96a26ab9a7b5
Removing intermediate container c464a1d612d8
Step 4/5 : ADD go.exe .
---> 0290d61faf57
Removing intermediate container dc5a085fffe3
Step 5/5 : RUN go --help
---> Running in 60bd56042ff8
Go is a tool for managing Go source code.
Usage:
go command [arguments]
The commands are:
build compile packages and dependencies
clean remove object files
doc show documentation for package or symbol
env print Go environment information
fix run go tool fix on packages
fmt run gofmt on package sources
generate generate Go files by processing source
get download and install packages and dependencies
install compile and install packages and dependencies
list list packages
run compile and run Go program
test test packages
tool run specified go tool
version print Go version
vet run go tool vet on packages
Use "go help [command]" for more information about a command.
Additional help topics:
c calling between Go and C
buildmode description of build modes
filetype file types
gopath GOPATH environment variable
environment environment variables
importpath import path syntax
packages description of package lists
testflag description of testing flags
testfunc description of testing functions
Use "go help [topic]" for more information about that topic.
The command 'cmd /S /C go --help' returned a non-zero code: 2
And the same with forcing process isolation. Also works 😄
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir> docker build --isolation=process --no-cache .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 10.1 MB
Step 1/5 : FROM microsoft/nanoserver
---> 89b8556cb9ca
Step 2/5 : WORKDIR c:\installer
---> f423b9cc3e78
Removing intermediate container 41330c88893d
Step 3/5 : ENV GOROOT c:\installer
---> Running in 0b99a2d7bf19
---> e051144bf8ec
Removing intermediate container 0b99a2d7bf19
Step 4/5 : ADD go.exe .
---> 7072e32b7c37
Removing intermediate container a7a97aa37fd1
Step 5/5 : RUN go --help
---> Running in 7097438a54e5
Go is a tool for managing Go source code.
Usage:
go command [arguments]
The commands are:
build compile packages and dependencies
clean remove object files
doc show documentation for package or symbol
env print Go environment information
fix run go tool fix on packages
fmt run gofmt on package sources
generate generate Go files by processing source
get download and install packages and dependencies
install compile and install packages and dependencies
list list packages
run compile and run Go program
test test packages
tool run specified go tool
version print Go version
vet run go tool vet on packages
Use "go help [command]" for more information about a command.
Additional help topics:
c calling between Go and C
buildmode description of build modes
filetype file types
gopath GOPATH environment variable
environment environment variables
importpath import path syntax
packages description of package lists
testflag description of testing flags
testfunc description of testing functions
Use "go help [topic]" for more information about that topic.
The command 'cmd /S /C go --help' returned a non-zero code: 2
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir>
Upstream-commit: f42033ba9484ab31611bb1e4a0416beb3aa956da
Component: engine
This allows the user to set a logging mode to "blocking" (default), or
"non-blocking", which uses the ring buffer as a proxy to the real log
driver.
This allows a container to never be blocked on stdio at the cost of
dropping log messages.
Introduces 2 new log-opts that works for all drivers, `log-mode` and
`log-size`. `log-mode` takes a value of "blocking", or "non-blocking"
I chose not to implement this as a bool since it is difficult to
determine if the mode was set to false vs just not set... especially
difficult when merging the default daemon config with the container config.
`log-size` takes a size string, e.g. `2MB`, which sets the max size
of the ring buffer. When the max size is reached, it will start
dropping log messages.
```
BenchmarkRingLoggerThroughputNoReceiver-8 2000000000 36.2 ns/op 856.35 MB/s 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkRingLoggerThroughputWithReceiverDelay0-8 300000000 156 ns/op 198.48 MB/s 32 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkRingLoggerThroughputConsumeDelay1-8 2000000000 36.1 ns/op 857.80 MB/s 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkRingLoggerThroughputConsumeDelay10-8 1000000000 36.2 ns/op 856.53 MB/s 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkRingLoggerThroughputConsumeDelay50-8 2000000000 34.7 ns/op 894.65 MB/s 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkRingLoggerThroughputConsumeDelay100-8 2000000000 35.1 ns/op 883.91 MB/s 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkRingLoggerThroughputConsumeDelay300-8 1000000000 35.9 ns/op 863.90 MB/s 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkRingLoggerThroughputConsumeDelay500-8 2000000000 35.8 ns/op 866.88 MB/s 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
```
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 054abff3b67bb5d66323e5418a43c845a3eac8a1
Component: engine
This cleans up attach a little bit, and moves it out of the container
package.
Really `AttachStream` is a method on `*stream.Config`, so moved if from
a package level function to one bound to `Config`.
In addition, uses a config struct rather than passing around tons and
tons of arguments.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 2ddec97545f4c5834cfbc163c0168ce1d5826ba2
Component: engine