When we use the engine/env object we can run into a situation where
a string is passed in as the value but later on when we json serialize
the name/value pairs, because the string is made up of just numbers
it appears as an integer and not a string - meaning no quotes. This
can cause parsing issues for clients.
I tried to find all spots where we call env.Set() and the type of the
name being set might end up having a value that could look like an int
(like author). In those cases I switched it to use env.SetJson() instead
because that will wrap it in quotes.
One interesting thing to note about the testcase that I modified is that
the escaped quotes should have been there all along and we were incorrectly
letting it thru. If you look at the metadata stored for that resource you
can see the quotes were escaped and we lost them during the serialization
steps because of the env.Set() stuff. The use of env is probably not the
best way to do all of this.
Closes: #9602
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
Upstream-commit: d942c59b696d16def85f6b65ae65c176f66a5562
Component: engine
Note - only support the non-detached mode of exec right now.
Another PR will add -d support.
Closes#8703
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
Upstream-commit: 90928eb1140fc0394e2a79d5e9a91dbc0f02484c
Component: engine
It fixes some race conditions
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexandr Morozov <lk4d4math@gmail.com> (github: LK4D4)
Upstream-commit: 947405a90951e4715a8399410b67f4f644415d59
Component: engine