Merge pull request #32943 from dsheets/docs-dockerd-fix-authz-chain

docs/dockerd: correct authz plugin chain semantics
This commit is contained in:
Sebastiaan van Stijn 2017-05-02 15:25:02 -07:00 committed by GitHub
commit ef20f027cc
2 changed files with 8 additions and 8 deletions

View file

@ -901,10 +901,10 @@ file. The plugin's implementation determines whether you can specify a name or
path. Consult with your Docker administrator to get information about the
plugins available to you.
Once a plugin is installed, requests made to the `daemon` through the command
line or Docker's Engine API are allowed or denied by the plugin. If you have
multiple plugins installed, at least one must allow the request for it to
complete.
Once a plugin is installed, requests made to the `daemon` through the
command line or Docker's Engine API are allowed or denied by the plugin.
If you have multiple plugins installed, each plugin, in order, must
allow the request for it to complete.
For information about how to create an authorization plugin, see [authorization
plugin](../../extend/plugins_authorization.md) section in the Docker extend section of this documentation.

View file

@ -701,10 +701,10 @@ specification file. The plugin's implementation determines whether you can
specify a name or path. Consult with your Docker administrator to get
information about the plugins available to you.
Once a plugin is installed, requests made to the `daemon` through the command
line or Docker's Engine API are allowed or denied by the plugin. If you have
multiple plugins installed, at least one must allow the request for it to
complete.
Once a plugin is installed, requests made to the `daemon` through the
command line or Docker's Engine API are allowed or denied by the plugin.
If you have multiple plugins installed, each plugin, in order, must
allow the request for it to complete.
For information about how to create an authorization plugin, see [authorization
plugin](https://docs.docker.com/engine/extend/authorization/) section in the