Avoid creating a global context object that will be used while the daemon is running.
Not only this object won't ever be garbage collected, but it won't ever be used for anything else than creating other contexts in each request. I think it's a bad practive to have something like this sprawling aroud the code.
This change removes that global object and initializes a context in the cases we don't have already one, like shutting down the server.
This also removes a bunch of context arguments from functions that did nothing with it.
Signed-off-by: David Calavera <david.calavera@gmail.com>
This PR adds a "request ID" to each event generated, the 'docker events'
stream now looks like this:
```
2015-09-10T15:02:50.000000000-07:00 [reqid: c01e3534ddca] de7c5d4ca927253cf4e978ee9c4545161e406e9b5a14617efb52c658b249174a: (from ubuntu) create
```
Note the `[reqID: c01e3534ddca]` part, that's new.
Each HTTP request will generate its own unique ID. So, if you do a
`docker build` you'll see a series of events all with the same reqID.
This allow for log processing tools to determine which events are all related
to the same http request.
I didn't propigate the context to all possible funcs in the daemon,
I decided to just do the ones that needed it in order to get the reqID
into the events. I'd like to have people review this direction first, and
if we're ok with it then I'll make sure we're consistent about when
we pass around the context - IOW, make sure that all funcs at the same level
have a context passed in even if they don't call the log funcs - this will
ensure we're consistent w/o passing it around for all calls unnecessarily.
ping @icecrime @calavera @crosbymichael
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
- The build-time variables are passed as environment-context for command(s)
run as part of the RUN primitve. These variables are not persisted in environment of
intermediate and final images when passed as context for RUN. The build environment
is prepended to the intermediate continer's command string for aiding cache lookups.
It also helps with build traceability. But this also makes the feature less secure from
point of view of passing build time secrets.
- The build-time variables also get used to expand the symbols used in certain
Dockerfile primitves like ADD, COPY, USER etc, without an explicit prior definiton using a
ENV primitive. These variables get persisted in the intermediate and final images
whenever they are expanded.
- The build-time variables are only expanded or passed to the RUN primtive if they
are defined in Dockerfile using the ARG primitive or belong to list of built-in variables.
HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, http_proxy, https_proxy, FTP_PROXY and NO_PROXY are built-in
variables that needn't be explicitly defined in Dockerfile to use this feature.
Signed-off-by: Madhav Puri <madhav.puri@gmail.com>
This is the first step in converting out static strings into well-defined
error types. This shows just a few examples of it to get a feel for how things
will look. Once we agree on the basic outline we can then work on converting
the rest of the code over.
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
In particular I want to make sure that calling getEnv() when the same
var name appears more than once in the env list that we only pick up
the first one. PR #15182 counts on this
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan J. Wernli <swernli@microsoft.com>
Windows: add support for images stored in alternate location.
Signed-off-by: Stefan J. Wernli <swernli@microsoft.com>
Some structures use int for sizes and UNIX timestamps. On some
platforms, int is 32 bits, so this can lead to the year 2038 issues and
overflows when dealing with large containers or layers.
Consistently use int64 to store sizes and UNIX timestamps in
api/types/types.go. Update related to code accordingly (i.e.
strconv.FormatInt instead of strconv.Itoa).
Use int64 in progressreader package to avoid integer overflow when
dealing with large quantities. Update related code accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
If there's an error while unpacking the build context then we weren't erasing
the tmp dir created to persist the context.
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
It was missing some variants and 'maintainer' isn't actually supported.
Also sorted the list of allowed cmds in the code just to make it easier
to diff with the docs.
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>