The swarm scope network connected containers with autostart enabled
there was a dependency problem with the cluster to be initialized before
we can autostart them. With the current container restart code happening
before cluster init, these containers were not getting autostarted
properly. Added a fix to delay the container start of those containers
which has atleast one swarm scope endpoint to until after the cluster is
initialized.
Signed-off-by: Jana Radhakrishnan <mrjana@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: c9fb551d60584ac4ad01561e2f56b7b7cc9483b9
Component: engine
Support args to RunCommand
Fix docker help text test.
Fix for ipv6 tests.
Fix TLSverify option.
Fix TestDaemonDiscoveryBackendConfigReload
Use tempfile for another test.
Restore missing flag.
Fix tests for removal of shlex.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: 6e7405ebd4df360bc84f651c977ece31283eb3ee
Component: engine
Also consolidate the leftover packages under cli.
Remove pkg/mflag.
Make manpage generation work with new cobra layout.
Remove remaining mflag and fix tests after rebase with master.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: 14712f9ff0d20a3b64a60103608b8cc998909242
Component: engine
Cleanup cobra integration
Update windows files for cobra and pflags
Cleanup SetupRootcmd, and remove unnecessary SetFlagErrorFunc.
Use cobra command traversal
Signed-off-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: 31bf9ca0c8cf29c1ba6cdc044e81c574161a0392
Component: engine
Right now docker puts swarm's control socket into the docker root dir
(e.g. /var/lib/docker).
This can cause some nasty issues with path length being > 108
characters, especially in our CI environment.
Since we already have some other state going in the daemon's exec root
(libcontainerd and libnetwork), I think it makes sense to move the
control socket to this location, especially since there are other unix
sockets being created here by docker so it must always be at a path that
works.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 4d95ea319c4905827fb66fc8da09a6a8ac558004
Component: engine
Following #22729, enable to dynamically reload/remove the daemon
authorization plugins (via standard reloading mechanism).
https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/daemon/#daemon-
configuration-file
Daemon must store a reference to the authorization middleware to refresh
the plugin on configuration changes.
Signed-off-by: Liron Levin <liron@twistlock.com>
Upstream-commit: 4192fe9c06d150fadfe18f228a6f9c3875227b8a
Component: engine
There are currently problems with "swarm init" and "swarm join" when an
explicit --listen-addr flag is not provided. swarmkit defaults to
finding the IP address associated with the default route, and in cloud
setups this is often the wrong choice.
Introduce a notion of "advertised address", with the client flag
--advertise-addr, and the daemon flag --swarm-default-advertise-addr to
provide a default. The default listening address is now 0.0.0.0, but a
valid advertised address must be detected or specified.
If no explicit advertised address is specified, error out if there is
more than one usable candidate IP address on the system. This requires a
user to explicitly choose instead of letting swarmkit make the wrong
choice. For the purposes of this autodetection, we ignore certain
interfaces that are unlikely to be relevant (currently docker*).
The user is also required to choose a listen address on swarm init if
they specify an explicit advertise address that is a hostname or an IP
address that's not local to the system. This is a requirement for
overlay networking.
Also support specifying interface names to --listen-addr,
--advertise-addr, and the daemon flag --swarm-default-advertise-addr.
This will fail if the interface has multiple IP addresses (unless it has
a single IPv4 address and a single IPv6 address - then we resolve the
tie in favor of IPv4).
This change also exposes the node's externally-reachable address in
docker info, as requested by #24017.
Make corresponding API and CLI docs changes.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: a0ccd0d42fdb0dd2005f67604cb81a5a6b26787e
Component: engine
This fixes the hard coded restriction for non-linux platforms to v2 registries. Previously, the check was above the flag parsing, which would overwrite the hard coded value and prevent correct operation. This change also removes the related daemon flag from Windows to avoid confusion, as it has no meaning when the value is going to always be hard coded to true.
Signed-off-by: Stefan J. Wernli <swernli@microsoft.com>
Upstream-commit: adee28458c23581ac9afb163b7cce8c6bb1d2dee
Component: engine
This adds the `--live-restore` option to the documentation.
Also synched usage description in the documentation
with the actual description, and re-phrased some
flag descriptions to be a bit more consistent.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Upstream-commit: 64a8317a5a306dffd0ec080d9ec5b4ceb2479a01
Component: engine
Unix sockets are limited to 108 bytes. As a result, we need to be
careful in not using exec-root as the parent directory for pluginID
(which is already 64 bytes), since it can result in socket path names
longer than 108 bytes. Use /tmp instead. Before this change, setting:
- dockerd --exec-root=/go/src/github.com/do passes
- dockerd --exec-root=/go/src/github.com/doc fails
After this change, there's no failure.
Also, write a volume plugins test to verify that the plugins socket
responds.
Signed-off-by: Anusha Ragunathan <anusha@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: 21ecd5a93db34288c0c579d5738030716d7bef2d
Component: engine
This adds an `--oom-score-adjust` flag to the daemon so that the value
provided can be set for the docker daemon's process. The default value
for the flag is -500. This will allow the docker daemon to have a
less chance of being killed before containers do. The default value for
processes is 0 with a min/max of -1000/1000.
-500 is a good middle ground because it is less than the default for
most processes and still not -1000 which basically means never kill this
process in an OOM condition on the host machine. The only processes on
my machine that have a score less than -500 are dbus at -900 and sshd
and xfce( my window manager ) at -1000. I don't think docker should be
set lower, by default, than dbus or sshd so that is why I chose -500.
Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <crosbymichael@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: a894aec8d81de5484152a76d76b80809df9edd71
Component: engine
This ensures that:
- The in-memory plugin store is populated with all the plugins
- Plugins which were active before daemon restart are active after.
This utilizes the liverestore feature when available, otherwise it
manually starts the plugin.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: dfd91873056c172ffc061d882da0cd18204b521a
Component: engine
This patch introduces a new experimental engine-level plugin management
with a new API and command line. Plugins can be distributed via a Docker
registry, and their lifecycle is managed by the engine.
This makes plugins a first-class construct.
For more background, have a look at issue #20363.
Documentation is in a separate commit. If you want to understand how the
new plugin system works, you can start by reading the documentation.
Note: backwards compatibility with existing plugins is maintained,
albeit they won't benefit from the advantages of the new system.
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Anusha Ragunathan <anusha@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: f37117045c5398fd3dca8016ea8ca0cb47e7312b
Component: engine
As described in our ROADMAP.md, introduce new Swarm management API
endpoints relying on swarmkit to deploy services. It currently vendors
docker/engine-api changes.
This PR is fully backward compatible (joining a Swarm is an optional
feature of the Engine, and existing commands are not impacted).
Signed-off-by: Tonis Tiigi <tonistiigi@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Victor Vieux <vieux@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Jana Radhakrishnan <mrjana@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Madhu Venugopal <madhu@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: 534a90a99367af6f6bba1ddcc7eb07506e41f774
Component: engine
This flags enables full support of daemonless containers in docker. It
ensures that docker does not stop containers on shutdown or restore and
properly reconnects to the container when restarted.
This is not the default because of backwards compat but should be the
desired outcome for people running containers in prod.
Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <crosbymichael@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: d705dab1b1bd0a946d647374325d61fac57736db
Component: engine
This fix tries to fix logrus formatting by removing `f` from
`logrus.[Error|Warn|Debug|Fatal|Panic|Info]f` when formatting string
is not present.
This fix fixes#23459.
Signed-off-by: Yong Tang <yong.tang.github@outlook.com>
Upstream-commit: a72b45dbec3caeb3237d1af5aedd04adeb083571
Component: engine
This works around golang/go#15286 by explicitly loading shell32.dll at
load time, ensuring that syscall can load it dynamically during process
startup.
Signed-off-by: John Starks <jostarks@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Antonio Murdaca <runcom@redhat.com>
Upstream-commit: fa82c0aa10cfac8c6d5e2446876dc79b2b0c1bf9
Component: engine
Using golang 1.6, is it now possible to ignore SIGPIPE events on
stdout/stderr. Previous versions of the golang library cached 10
events and then killed the process receiving the events.
systemd-journald sends SIGPIPE events when jounald is restarted and
the target of the unit file writes to stdout/stderr. Docker logs to stdout/stderr.
This patch silently ignores all SIGPIPE events.
Signed-off-by: Jhon Honce <jhonce@redhat.com>
Upstream-commit: 55a367d2fe2feecf7b95fbddcdcb3ed179c197fe
Component: engine
Move all flags into cli/flags
Move usage help into cli/usage.go
Signed-off-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: 33c9edaf6c5401fc1891713d1ad8d861e6cea51f
Component: engine
This adds support for Windows dockerd to run as a Windows service, managed
by the service control manager. The log is written to the Windows event
log (and can be viewed in the event viewer or in PowerShell). If there is
a Go panic, the stack is written to a file panic.log in the Docker root.
Signed-off-by: John Starks <jostarks@microsoft.com>
Upstream-commit: 57aef3b49025aac6bb084491478eb461b14b9109
Component: engine