This subtle bug keeps lurking in because error checking for `Mkdir()`
and `MkdirAll()` is slightly different wrt to `EEXIST`/`IsExist`:
- for `Mkdir()`, `IsExist` error should (usually) be ignored
(unless you want to make sure directory was not there before)
as it means "the destination directory was already there"
- for `MkdirAll()`, `IsExist` error should NEVER be ignored.
Mostly, this commit just removes ignoring the IsExist error, as it
should not be ignored.
Also, there are a couple of cases then IsExist is handled as
"directory already exist" which is wrong. As a result, some code
that never worked as intended is now removed.
NOTE that `idtools.MkdirAndChown()` behaves like `os.MkdirAll()`
rather than `os.Mkdir()` -- so its description is amended accordingly,
and its usage is handled as such (i.e. IsExist error is not ignored).
For more details, a quote from my runc commit 6f82d4b (July 2015):
TL;DR: check for IsExist(err) after a failed MkdirAll() is both
redundant and wrong -- so two reasons to remove it.
Quoting MkdirAll documentation:
> MkdirAll creates a directory named path, along with any necessary
> parents, and returns nil, or else returns an error. If path
> is already a directory, MkdirAll does nothing and returns nil.
This means two things:
1. If a directory to be created already exists, no error is
returned.
2. If the error returned is IsExist (EEXIST), it means there exists
a non-directory with the same name as MkdirAll need to use for
directory. Example: we want to MkdirAll("a/b"), but file "a"
(or "a/b") already exists, so MkdirAll fails.
The above is a theory, based on quoted documentation and my UNIX
knowledge.
3. In practice, though, current MkdirAll implementation [1] returns
ENOTDIR in most of cases described in #2, with the exception when
there is a race between MkdirAll and someone else creating the
last component of MkdirAll argument as a file. In this very case
MkdirAll() will indeed return EEXIST.
Because of #1, IsExist check after MkdirAll is not needed.
Because of #2 and #3, ignoring IsExist error is just plain wrong,
as directory we require is not created. It's cleaner to report
the error now.
Note this error is all over the tree, I guess due to copy-paste,
or trying to follow the same usage pattern as for Mkdir(),
or some not quite correct examples on the Internet.
[1] https://github.com/golang/go/blob/f9ed2f75/src/os/path.go
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 516010e92d56cfcd6d1e343bdc02b6f04bc43039
Component: engine
83c2152de503012195bd26069fd8fbd2dea4b32f sets the kernel param for
fs.may_detach_mounts, but this is not neccessary for the daemon to
operate. Instead of erroring out (and thus aborting startup) just log
the error.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: c6a2044497e0e1ff61350859c8572a2c31c17ced
Component: engine
This is kernel config available in RHEL7.4 based kernels that enables
mountpoint removal where the mountpoint exists in other namespaces.
In particular this is important for making this pattern work:
```
umount -l /some/path
rm -r /some/path
```
Where `/some/path` exists in another mount namespace.
Setting this value will prevent `device or resource busy` errors when
attempting to the removal of `/some/path` in the example.
This setting is the default, and non-configurable, on upstream kernels
since 3.15.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 83c2152de503012195bd26069fd8fbd2dea4b32f
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
This also update:
- runc to 3f2f8b84a77f73d38244dd690525642a72156c64
- runtime-specs to v1.0.0
Signed-off-by: Kenfe-Mickael Laventure <mickael.laventure@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 45d85c99139bbd16004bbedb7d5bac6a60264538
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
Since the commit d88fe447df0e8 ("Add support for sharing /dev/shm/ and
/dev/mqueue between containers") container's /dev/shm is mounted on the
host first, then bind-mounted inside the container. This is done that
way in order to be able to share this container's IPC namespace
(and the /dev/shm mount point) with another container.
Unfortunately, this functionality breaks container checkpoint/restore
(even if IPC is not shared). Since /dev/shm is an external mount, its
contents is not saved by `criu checkpoint`, and so upon restore any
application that tries to access data under /dev/shm is severily
disappointed (which usually results in a fatal crash).
This commit solves the issue by introducing new IPC modes for containers
(in addition to 'host' and 'container:ID'). The new modes are:
- 'shareable': enables sharing this container's IPC with others
(this used to be the implicit default);
- 'private': disables sharing this container's IPC.
In 'private' mode, container's /dev/shm is truly mounted inside the
container, without any bind-mounting from the host, which solves the
issue.
While at it, let's also implement 'none' mode. The motivation, as
eloquently put by Justin Cormack, is:
> I wondered a while back about having a none shm mode, as currently it is
> not possible to have a totally unwriteable container as there is always
> a /dev/shm writeable mount. It is a bit of a niche case (and clearly
> should never be allowed to be daemon default) but it would be trivial to
> add now so maybe we should...
...so here's yet yet another mode:
- 'none': no /dev/shm mount inside the container (though it still
has its own private IPC namespace).
Now, to ultimately solve the abovementioned checkpoint/restore issue, we'd
need to make 'private' the default mode, but unfortunately it breaks the
backward compatibility. So, let's make the default container IPC mode
per-daemon configurable (with the built-in default set to 'shareable'
for now). The default can be changed either via a daemon CLI option
(--default-shm-mode) or a daemon.json configuration file parameter
of the same name.
Note one can only set either 'shareable' or 'private' IPC modes as a
daemon default (i.e. in this context 'host', 'container', or 'none'
do not make much sense).
Some other changes this patch introduces are:
1. A mount for /dev/shm is added to default OCI Linux spec.
2. IpcMode.Valid() is simplified to remove duplicated code that parsed
'container:ID' form. Note the old version used to check that ID does
not contain a semicolon -- this is no longer the case (tests are
modified accordingly). The motivation is we should either do a
proper check for container ID validity, or don't check it at all
(since it is checked in other places anyway). I chose the latter.
3. IpcMode.Container() is modified to not return container ID if the
mode value does not start with "container:", unifying the check to
be the same as in IpcMode.IsContainer().
3. IPC mode unit tests (runconfig/hostconfig_test.go) are modified
to add checks for newly added values.
[v2: addressed review at https://github.com/moby/moby/pull/34087#pullrequestreview-51345997]
[v3: addressed review at https://github.com/moby/moby/pull/34087#pullrequestreview-53902833]
[v4: addressed the case of upgrading from older daemon, in this case
container.HostConfig.IpcMode is unset and this is valid]
[v5: document old and new IpcMode values in api/swagger.yaml]
[v6: add the 'none' mode, changelog entry to docs/api/version-history.md]
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 7120976d74195a60334c688a061270a4d95f9aeb
Component: engine
Switch some more usage of the Stat function and the Stat_t type from the
syscall package to golang.org/x/sys. Those were missing in PR #33399.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
Upstream-commit: 01f70b028e9597ef207509e8124e120688dae185
Component: engine
If we get "container not found" error from containerd, it's possibly
because that this container has already been stopped. It will be ok to
ignore this error and just return an empty stats.
Signed-off-by: Yuanhong Peng <pengyuanhong@huawei.com>
Upstream-commit: 4a6cbf9bcb78d38c48ef963f585f0fadf733e101
Component: engine
Do not set a default value for swappiness as the default value should be
`nil`
Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <crosbymichael@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 9d87e6e0fb799d6ef3bb9a97bc523f8d343b5fb3
Component: engine
Add mount point to cgroup root when initializing cgroup paths for cpu.rt_runtime
Upstream-commit: b0235fd515eb25eebb9395f87044fbd11b864b75
Component: engine
If a caller specifies an SELinux type or MCS Label and still wants to
share an IPC Namespace or the host namespace, we should allow them.
Currently we are ignoring the label specification if ipcmod=container
or pidmode=host.
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
Upstream-commit: 881e20ee0be4bf048fb3b7e7f4c12b076a1607bb
Component: engine
cpu.rt_runtime
PR https://github.com/docker/docker/pull/23430 introduced a couple more
flags including `--cpu-rt-runtime` to the docker daemon. It appears
recent changes or merge issues may have broken this. It currently does
not take the cgroup mount point into account when determining the cgroup
files to write values to. This breaks docker setting its own
`cpu.rt_runtime` for the daemon. This also means containers aren't able
to set theirs.
Also, the cgroups.FindCgroupMountpointAndRoot returns back a mount point
that includes the cgroup of the currently running container when docker
is run inside a docker container. this breaks the `--cpu-rt-runtime`
flag when running docker in docker. A fix has been placed here, but
potentially could be pulled up into libcontainer if this is a better
place for it.
Signed-off-by: Erik St. Martin <alakriti@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 40e075532ab4d01b4ceb36f145b95e2d3a5d951f
Component: engine
This also moves some cli specific in `cmd/dockerd` as it does not
really belong to the `daemon/config` package.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Upstream-commit: db63f9370e26d725357c703cbaf9ab63cc7b6d0a
Component: engine
This fix fixes issue raised in 29492 where it was not
possible to specify a default `--default-shm-size` in daemon
configuration for each `docker run``.
The flag `--default-shm-size` which is reloadable, has been
added to the daemon configuation.
Related docs has been updated.
This fix fixes 29492.
Signed-off-by: Yong Tang <yong.tang.github@outlook.com>
Upstream-commit: db575ef626e8b2660750cbede6b19e951a3b4341
Component: engine
There was no validation for `docker run --tmpfs foo`.
In this PR, only two obvious rules are implemented:
- path must be absolute
- path must not be "/"
We should add more rules carefully.
Signed-off-by: Akihiro Suda <suda.akihiro@lab.ntt.co.jp>
Upstream-commit: 4a8799dc0a000a74eae49a01b054ae687bc18f73
Component: engine
This patch fixed below 4 types of code line
1. Remove unnecessary variable assignment
2. Use variables declaration instead of explicit initial zero value
3. Change variable name to underbar when variable not used
4. Add erro check and return for ignored error
Signed-off-by: Daehyeok Mun <daehyeok@gmail.com>
Upstream-commit: 6306019d0bad9c4e60ee437e93f2450dfb0b68c0
Component: engine
commit 56f77d5ade945b3b8816a6c8acb328b7c6dce9a7
added support for cpu-rt-period and cpu-rt-runtime,
but always initialized the cgroup path, even if not
used.
As a result, containers failed to start on a
read-only filesystem.
This patch only creates the cgroup path if
one of these options is set.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Upstream-commit: f285d5b3e8eeea7d85e143d845e85a4d4e4c936a
Component: engine
… or could be in `opts` package. Having `runconfig/opts` and `opts`
doesn't really make sense and make it difficult to know where to put
some code.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Upstream-commit: c424be21b7aa732681ed019b5e547a99fdc2afa5
Component: engine
Move plugins to shared distribution stack with images.
Create immutable plugin config that matches schema2 requirements.
Ensure data being pushed is same as pulled/created.
Store distribution artifacts in a blobstore.
Run init layer setup for every plugin start.
Fix breakouts from unsafe file accesses.
Add support for `docker plugin install --alias`
Uses normalized references for default names to avoid collisions when using default hosts/tags.
Some refactoring of the plugin manager to support the change, like removing the singleton manager and adding manager config struct.
Signed-off-by: Tonis Tiigi <tonistiigi@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net>
Upstream-commit: 3d86b0c79b16334ce5836c0315e4c310b84c2e17
Component: engine
Upon each container create I'm seeing these warning **every** time in the
daemon output:
```
WARN[0002] Your kernel does not support swap memory limit
WARN[0002] Your kernel does not support cgroup rt period
WARN[0002] Your kernel does not support cgroup rt runtime
```
Showing them for each container.create() fills up the logs and encourages
people to ignore the output being generated - which means its less likely
they'll see real issues when they happen. In short, I don't think we
need to show these warnings more than once, so let's only show these
warnings at daemon start-up time.
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
Upstream-commit: ff42a2eb41a86217a440a1c4b2afd3c4cd1d48ac
Component: engine