Commit Graph

117 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
670f81803f cmd/docker: add tests for flag-completions, and refactor
Remove the registerCompletionFuncForGlobalFlags for now, as
the error it returned was ignored, so it didn't add much
benefit, other than abstracting things.

Split the underlying completion-functions to separate
functions, and add some basic tests for them.

Remove the completions helper, as it now didn't add much,
and it saved having the dependency on the package.

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-10-18 11:23:55 +02:00
1355d7e9f8 telemetry: fix early meterprovider shutdown
In 4b5a196fee, we changed the CLI global
meter provider shutdown in order to handle any error returned by the
metric export.

Unfortunately, we dropped a `defer` during the fix, which
causes the meter provider to be immediately shutdown after being created
and metrics to not be collected/exporter.

Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
2024-09-20 01:29:19 +01:00
b1956f5073 telemetry: pass otel errors to the otel handler for shutdown and force flush
Signed-off-by: Jonathan A. Sternberg <jonathan.sternberg@docker.com>
2024-09-17 10:47:04 -05:00
42b68a3ed7 cmd/docker: fix completion for --context
registerCompletionFuncForGlobalFlags was called from newDockerCommand,
at which time no context-store is initialized yet, so it would return
a nil value, probably resulting in `store.Names` to panic, but these
errors are not shown when running the completion. As a result, the flag
completion would fall back to completing from filenames.

This patch changes the function to dynamically get the context-store;
this fixes the problem mentioned above, because at the time the completion
function is _invoked_, the CLI is fully initialized, and does have a
context-store available.

A (non-exported) interface is defined to allow the function to accept
alternative implementations (not requiring a full command.DockerCLI).

Before this patch:

    docker context create one
    docker context create two

    docker --context <TAB>
    .DS_Store                   .idea/                      Makefile
    .dockerignore               .mailmap                    build/
    ...

With this patch:

    docker context create one
    docker context create two

    docker --context <TAB>
    default  one      two

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-07-17 01:25:33 +02:00
ce4469a696 Merge pull request #5234 from thaJeztah/nicer_missing_commands
cli: improve output and consistency for unknown (sub)commands
2024-07-17 01:22:03 +02:00
eae75092a0 cmd/docker: split handling exit-code to a separate utility
This allows dockerMain() to return an error "as usual", and puts the
responsibility for turning that into an appropriate exit-code in
main() (which also sets the exit-code when terminating).

We could consider putting this utility in the cli package and exporting
it if would be useful for doing a similar handling in plugins.

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-07-05 11:02:22 +02:00
3dd6fc365d cmd/docker: don't discard cli.StatusError errors without custom message
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-07-05 10:59:27 +02:00
a6e96c758e cli: improve output and consistency for unknown (sub)commands
Before this patch, output for invalid top-level and sub-commands differed.
For top-level commands, the CLI would print an error-message and a suggestion
to use `--help`. For missing *subcommands*, we would hit a different code-path,
and different output, which includes full "usage" / "help" output.

While it is a common convention to show usage output, and may have been
a nice gesture when docker was still young and only had a few commands
and options ("you did something wrong; here's an overview of what you
can use"), that's no longer the case, and many commands have a _very_
long output.

The result of this is that the error message, which is the relevant
information in this case - "You mis-typed something" - is lost in the
output, and hard to find (sometimes even requiring scrolling back).

The output is also confusing, because it _looks_ like something ran
successfully (most of the output is not about the error!).

Even further; the suggested resolution (try `--help` to see the correct
options) is rather redundant, because running teh command with `--help`
produces _exactly_ the same output as was just showh, baring the error
message. As a fun fact, due to the usage output being printed, the
output even contains not one, but _two_ "call to actions";

- `See 'docker volume --help'.` (under the erro message)
- `Run 'docker volume COMMAND --help' for more information on a command.`
  (under the usage output)

In short; the output is too verbose, confusing, and doesn't provide
a good UX. Let's reduce the output produced so that the focus is on the
important information.

This patch:

- Changes the usage to the short-usage.
- Changes the error-message to mention the _full_ command instead of only
  the command after `docker` (so `docker no-such-command` instead of
  `no-such-command`).
- Prefixes the error message with the binary / root-command name
  (usually `docker:`); this is something we can still decide on, but
  it's a pattern we already use in some places. The motivation for this
  is that `docker` commands can often produce output that's a combination
  of output from the CLI itself, output from the daemon, and even output
  from the container. The `docker:` prefix helps to distinguish where
  the message originated from (the `docker` CLI in this case).
- Adds an empty line between the error-message and the "call to action"
  (`Run 'docker volume --help'...` in the example below). This helps
  separating the error message ("unkown flag") from the call-to-action.

Before this patch:

Unknown top-level command:

    docker nosuchcommand foo
    docker: 'nosuchcommand' is not a docker command.
    See 'docker --help'

Unknown sub-command:

    docker volume nosuchcommand foo

    Usage:  docker volume COMMAND

    Manage volumes

    Commands:
      create      Create a volume
      inspect     Display detailed information on one or more volumes
      ls          List volumes
      prune       Remove unused local volumes
      rm          Remove one or more volumes
      update      Update a volume (cluster volumes only)

    Run 'docker volume COMMAND --help' for more information on a command.

After this patch:

Unknown top-level command:

    docker nosuchcommand foo
    docker: unknown command: docker nosuchcommand

    Run 'docker --help' for more information

Unknown sub-command:

    docker volume nosuchcommand foo
    docker: unknown command: 'docker volume nosuchcommand'

    Usage:  docker volume COMMAND

    Run 'docker volume --help' for more information

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-07-05 02:28:11 +02:00
617eb5271a cli: make initializing the global meter- and tracing providers optional
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-06-24 15:44:20 +02:00
1322f585fe test: cli force exit signal handler
Signed-off-by: Alano Terblanche <18033717+Benehiko@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-06-20 14:32:38 +02:00
a4bfd8c744 feat: add a global sigint/sigterm handler as a fallback to ctx cancellation
Signed-off-by: Alano Terblanche <18033717+Benehiko@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-06-18 15:42:34 +02:00
3dcc653533 plugins: cleanup sockets when done
Since 509123f935, we've been leaking sockets
in the filesystem on platforms where abstract sockets aren't supported.

That change relied on Go to cleanup our sockets for us, which Go will happily
do as long as we make sure to close the listener, which we weren't previously
doing unless to signal the plugin to terminate.

This change adds a deferred call to `PluginServer.Close()`, which makes sure we
close the plugin server at the end of the plugin execution, so that we never exit
without cleaning up.

Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
2024-06-12 11:16:10 +01:00
3f0d90a2a9 feat: global signal handling with context cancellation
Signed-off-by: Alano Terblanche <18033717+Benehiko@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-06-07 16:56:34 +02:00
f07834d185 OTel: add command.time metric to plugin commands
Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
2024-05-15 00:05:30 +01:00
02537eac59 Use funcs on DockerCli to return Meter/TracerProviders, not initialize them. Initialize them during DockerCli struct init
Signed-off-by: Christopher Petito <chrisjpetito@gmail.com>
2024-05-14 15:23:49 +00:00
1d666b4105 feat: wire ctx into plugin hooks
Signed-off-by: Alano Terblanche <18033717+Benehiko@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-04-26 13:03:56 +02:00
86162f7816 feat: use main func ctx for cobra and use ctx in tests
Explicitly create the context and set it on the CLI, instead of depending on
NewDockerCli() to instance a default context.

Co-authored-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Co-authored-by: Alano Terblanche <18033717+Benehiko@users.noreply.github.com>

Signed-off-by: Alano Terblanche <18033717+Benehiko@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-04-25 12:00:31 +02:00
43cb06e1ae hooks: pass command execution error to plugins
Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
2024-04-22 17:12:53 +01:00
9d8320de9d hooks: include full configured command
Before, for plugin commands, only the plugin name (such as `buildx`)
would be both included as `RootCmd` when passed to the hook plugin,
which isn't enough information for a plugin to decide whether to execute
a hook or not since plugins implement multiple varied commands (`buildx
build`, `buildx prune`, etc.).

This commit changes the hook logic to account for this situation, so
that the the entire configured hook is passed, i.e., if a user has a
hook configured for `buildx imagetools inspect` and the command
`docker buildx imagetools inspect alpine` is called, then the plugin
hooks will be passed `buildx imagetools inspect`.

This logic works for aliased commands too, so whether `docker build ...`
or `docker buildx build` is executed (unless Buildx is disabled) the
hook will be invoked with `buildx build`.

Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>

hooks: include full match when invoking plugins

Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
2024-04-22 13:16:26 +01:00
c449c1a49d plugins/hooks: run hooks when exit code != 0
Particularly for cases such as `docker exec -it`, it's relevant that the CLI
still executes hooks even if the exec exited with a non-zero exit code,
since this is can be part of a normal `docker exec` invocation depending on
how the user exits.

In the future, this might also be interesting to allow plugins to run
hooks after an error so they can offer error-state recovery suggestions,
although this would require additional work to give the plugin more
information about the failed execution.

Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
2024-04-17 15:21:08 +01:00
10b9810989 Merge pull request #4978 from laurazard/otel-add-tty
otel: capture whether process was invoked from a terminal
2024-04-04 06:09:48 -06:00
204b324291 Merge pull request #4975 from jsternberg/otel-error-handler
command: include default otel error handler for the cli
2024-04-04 03:56:41 +01:00
ee1b2836af otel: capture whether process was invoked from a terminal
This commit adds a "terminal" attribute to `BaseMetricAttributes`
that allows us to discern whether an invocation was from an interactive
terminal or not.

Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
2024-04-04 03:28:17 +01:00
8f45f1495c command: include default otel error handler for the cli
This adds a default otel error handler for the cli in the debug package.
It uses logrus to log the error on the debug level and should work out
of the box with the `--debug` flag and `DEBUG` environment variable.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan A. Sternberg <jonathan.sternberg@docker.com>
2024-04-03 12:01:28 -05:00
9ca30bd2ac Merge pull request #4939 from Benehiko/prompt-termination
feat: standardize error for prompt
2024-04-02 19:09:12 +02:00
efd82e1e31 Initial otel impl using our utils
Signed-off-by: Christopher Petito <chrisjpetito@gmail.com>
2024-03-28 16:23:01 +00:00
7c722c08d0 feat: standardize error for prompt
Signed-off-by: Alano Terblanche <18033717+Benehiko@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-03-26 14:11:55 +01:00
799bf52680 Merge pull request #4376 from laurazard/plugin-hooks
Introduce support for CLI plugin hooks
2024-03-22 14:34:14 -06:00
c5016c6d5b cli-plugins: Introduce support for hooks
Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
2024-03-22 17:30:18 +00:00
542e82caeb plugin: update/improve process lifecycle documentation
Signed-off-by: Bjorn Neergaard <bjorn.neergaard@docker.com>
2024-03-22 01:07:05 -06:00
d68cc0e8d0 plugin: closer-based plugin notification socket
This changes things to rely on a plugin server that manages all
connections made to the server.

An optional handler can be passed into the server when the caller wants
to do extra things with the connection.

It is the caller's responsibility to close the server.
When the server is closed, first all existing connections are closed
(and new connections are prevented).

Now the signal loop only needs to close the server and not deal with
`net.Conn`'s directly (or double-indirects as the case was before this
change).

The socket, when present in the filesystem, is no longer unlinked
eagerly, as reconnections require it to be present for the lifecycle of
the plugin server.

Co-authored-by: Bjorn Neergaard <bjorn.neergaard@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Bjorn Neergaard <bjorn.neergaard@docker.com>
2024-03-21 15:08:19 -06:00
508346ef61 plugins: fix plugin socket being closed before use
Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
2024-01-15 15:48:57 +00:00
5f6c55a724 plugins: don't handle signal/notify if TTY
In order to solve the "double notification" issue (see:
ef5e5fa03f)
without running the plugin process under a new pgid (see:
https://github.com/moby/moby/issues/47073) we instead check if we're
attached to a TTY, and if so skip signalling the plugin process since it
will already be signalled.

Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
2024-01-15 13:30:17 +00:00
26560ff93c Revert "plugins: run plugin with new process group ID"
This reverts commit ef5e5fa03f.

Running new plugins under a new pgid isn't a viable solution due to
it causing issues with plugin processes attempting to read from the
TTY (see: https://github.com/moby/moby/issues/47073).

Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
2024-01-15 13:30:01 +00:00
688de6db16 Merge pull request #4769 from laurazard/signal-handling-fix-tty
plugins: run plugin with new process group ID
2024-01-12 22:06:23 +01:00
ef5e5fa03f plugins: run plugin with new process group ID
Changes were made in 1554ac3b5f to provide
a mechanism for the CLI to notify running plugin processes that they
should exit, in order to improve the general CLI/plugin UX. The current
implementation boils down to:
1. The CLI creates a socket
2. The CLI executes the plugin
3. The plugin connects to the socket
4. (When) the CLI receives a termination signal, it uses the socket to
   notify the plugin that it should exit
5. The plugin's gets notified via the socket, and cancels it's `cmd.Context`,
   which then gets handled appropriately

This change works in most cases and fixes the issue it sets out to solve
(see: https://github.com/docker/compose/pull/11292) however, in the case
where the user has a TTY attached and the plugin is not already handling
received signals, steps 4+ changes:
4. (When) the CLI receives a termination signal, before it can use the
   socket to notify the plugin that it should exit, the plugin process
   also receives a signal due to sharing the pgid with the CLI

Since we now have a proper "job control" mechanism, we can simplify the
scenarios by executing the plugins with their own process group id,
thereby removing the "double notification" issue and making it so that
plugins can handle the same whether attached to a TTY or not.

In order to make this change "plugin-binary" backwards-compatible, in
the case that a plugin does not connect to the socket, the CLI passes
the signal to the plugin process.

Co-authored-by: Bjorn Neergaard <bjorn.neergaard@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
Signed-off-by: Bjorn Neergaard <bjorn.neergaard@docker.com>
2024-01-12 13:53:28 -07:00
dbf992f91f cli-plugins: move socket code into common package
Signed-off-by: Bjorn Neergaard <bjorn.neergaard@docker.com>
2024-01-12 11:49:25 -07:00
859154b94c Merge pull request #4778 from thaJeztah/cmd_docker_smaller_interface
cmd/docker: registerCompletionFuncForGlobalFlags: take store.Store as argument
2024-01-11 22:50:47 +01:00
0e37dd49f0 cmd/docker: registerCompletionFuncForGlobalFlags: take store.Store as argument
Update this function to accept a smaller interface, as it doesn't need
all of "CLI". Also return errors encountered during its operation (although
the caller currently has no error return on its own).

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-01-11 22:31:17 +01:00
11b2e871bc cmd/docker: move main() to the top
It was hidden half-way the file; let's move it to the top, where I'd expect
to find it.

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-01-11 22:19:17 +01:00
7d92573852 Merge pull request #4599 from laurazard/plugin-signal-handling
cli-plugins: terminate plugin when CLI exits
2023-12-12 14:58:04 +01:00
1554ac3b5f cli-plugins: terminate plugin when CLI exits
Previously, long lived CLI plugin processes weren't
properly handled
(see: https://github.com/docker/cli/issues/4402)
resulting in plugin processes being left behind
running, after the CLI process exits.

This commit changes the plugin handling code to open
an abstract unix socket before running the plugin and
passing it to the plugin process, and changes the
signal handling on the CLI side to close this socket
which tells the plugin that it should exit.

This implementation makes use of sockets instead of
simply setting PDEATHSIG on the plugin process
so that it will work on both BSDs, assorted UNIXes
and Windows.

Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
2023-12-12 13:54:30 +00:00
8e9aec6904 golangci-lint: revive: enable import-shadowing
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2023-11-20 19:52:41 +01:00
febb37a38e remove buildkit as dependency
This copies the github.com/moby/buildkit/util/appcontext
package as an internal package. The appcontext package from
BuildKit was the only remaining dependency on BuildKit, and
while we may need some of its functionality, the implementation
is not correct for how it's used in docker/cli (so would need
a rewrite).

Moving a copy of the code into the docker/cli (but as internal
package to prevent others from depending on it) is a first step
in that process, and removes the circular dependency between
BuildKit and the CLi.

We are only using these:

    tree vendor/github.com/moby/buildkit
    vendor/github.com/moby/buildkit
    ├── AUTHORS
    ├── LICENSE
    └── util
        └── appcontext
            ├── appcontext.go
            ├── appcontext_unix.go
            ├── appcontext_windows.go
            └── register.go

    3 directories, 6 files

Before this:

    go mod graph | grep ' github.com/docker/cli'
    github.com/moby/buildkit@v0.11.6 github.com/docker/cli@v23.0.0-rc.1+incompatible

After this:

    go mod graph | grep ' github.com/docker/cli'
    # (nothing)

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2023-09-28 00:04:51 +02:00
bb57783ab8 cmd/docker: areFlagsSupported: don't Ping if not needed
This is a similar fix as 006c946389, which
fixed this for detection of commands that were executed. Make sure we don't
call the "/_ping" endpoint if we don't need to.

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2023-08-22 09:34:09 +02:00
88f44ec159 cli: SetupRootCommand: remove redundant flags return
The flag-set that was returned is a pointer to the command's Flags(), which
is in itself passed by reference (as it is modified / set up).

This patch removes the flags return, to prevent assuming it's different than
the command's flags.

While SetupRootCommand is exported, a search showed that it's only used internally,
so changing the signature should not be a problem.

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2023-06-28 16:26:50 +02:00
c39c711a18 load plugin command stubs when required
We are currently loading plugin command stubs for every
invocation which still has a significant performance hit.
With this change we are doing this operation only if cobra
completion arg request is found.

- 20.10.23: `docker --version` takes ~15ms
- 23.0.1: `docker --version` takes ~93ms

With this change `docker --version` takes ~9ms

Signed-off-by: CrazyMax <crazy-max@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-03-28 06:16:55 +02:00
fc6be6ad30 cli: pass dockerCLI's in/out/err to cobra cmds
Both the DockerCLI and Cobra Commands provide accessors for Input, Output,
and Error streams (usually STDIN, STDOUT, STDERR). While we were already
passing DockerCLI's Output to Cobra, we were not doing so for the other
streams (and were passing none for plugin commands), potentially resulting
in DockerCLI output/input to mean something else than a Cobra Command's
intput/output/error.

This patch sets them to the same streams when constructing the Cobra
command.

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2023-01-15 13:44:33 +01:00
006c946389 cmd/docker: make feature detection lazy again
Commit 20ba591b7f fixed incorrect feature
detection in the CLI, but introduced a regression; previously the "ping"
would only be executed if needed (see b39739123b),
but by not inlining the call to `ServerInfo()` would now always be called.

This patch inlines the code again to only execute the "ping" conditionally,
which allows it to be executed lazily (and omitted for commands that don't
require a daemon connection).

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2022-12-06 10:17:50 +01:00
20ba591b7f Fix bug where incorrect response is returned
When server is unreachable and docker checkpoint (or any command that
needs to check the server type) is run, incorrect error was returned.

When checking if the daemon had the right OS, we compared the OSType
from the clients ServerInfo(). In situations where the client cannot
connect to the daemon, a "stub" Info is used for this, in which we
assume the daemon has experimental enabled, and is running the latest
API version.

However, we cannot fill in the correct OSType, so this field is empty
in this situation.

This patch only compares the OSType if the field is non-empty, otherwise
assumes the platform matches.

before this:

    docker -H unix:///no/such/socket.sock checkpoint create test test
    docker checkpoint create is only supported on a Docker daemon running on linux, but the Docker daemon is running on

with this patch:

    docker -H unix:///no/such/socket.sock checkpoint create test test
    Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at unix:///no/such/socket.sock. Is the docker daemon running?

Co-authored-by: Adyanth Hosavalike <ahosavalike@ucsd.edu>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2022-12-06 08:55:47 +01:00