--group-add was used for specifying groups for both service create
and service update. For create it was confusing since we don't have
an existing set of groups. Instead I added --group to create, and
moved --group-add to service update only, like --group-rm
This deals with issue 27646
Signed-off-by: Lily Guo <lily.guo@docker.com>
Update flag documentation
Specify that --group, --group-add and --groupd-rm refers to
supplementary user groups
Signed-off-by: Lily Guo <lily.guo@docker.com>
Fix docs for groups and update completion scripts
Signed-off-by: Lily Guo <lily.guo@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: 2f58494ae6e796325329f849cf547bcf94bb68e3
Component: engine
A HealthConfig entry was added to the ContainerSpec associated with the
service being created or updated.
Signed-off-by: Cezar Sa Espinola <cezarsa@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 7bd2611789e6898576f7229255c238f7c1129293
Component: engine
The --name flag was inadvertently added to
docker service update, but is not supported,
as it has various side-effects (e.g., existing
tasks are not renamed).
This removes the flag from the service update
command.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Upstream-commit: 047e44eeb186a8bde41765a44c5966a150fa84f3
Component: engine
Currently, there's no way to restart the tasks of a service without
making an actual change to the service. This leads to us giving awkward
workarounds as in
https://github.com/docker/docker.github.io/pull/178/files, where we tell
people to scale a service up and down to restore balance, or make
unnecessary changes to trigger a restart.
This change adds a --force option to "docker service update", which
forces the service to be updated even if no changes require that.
Since rolling update parameters are respected, the user can use
"docker service --force" to do a rolling restart. For example, the
following is supported:
docker service update --force --update-parallelism 2 \
--update-delay 5s myservice
Since the default value of --update-parallelism is 1, the default
behavior is to restart the service one task at a time.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: c9fdf9abf8d6443598808809b900d96e04adfcb1
Component: engine
This adds support for two enhancements to swarm service rolling updates:
- Failure thresholds: In Docker 1.12, a service update could be set up
to either pause or continue after a single failure occurs. This adds
an --update-max-failure-ratio flag that controls how many tasks need to
fail to update for the update as a whole to be considered a failure. A
counterpart flag, --update-monitor, controls how long to monitor each
task for a failure after starting it during the update.
- Rollback flag: service update --rollback reverts the service to its
previous version. If a service update encounters task failures, or
fails to function properly for some other reason, the user can roll back
the update.
SwarmKit also has the ability to roll back updates automatically after
hitting the failure thresholds, but we've decided not to expose this in
the Docker API/CLI for now, favoring a workflow where the decision to
roll back is always made by an admin. Depending on user feedback, we may
add a "rollback" option to --update-failure-action in the future.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
Upstream-commit: 6d4b527699b3e95d21d79f6b327252a6cdaca5b0
Component: engine