Implement similar logic as is used in httputils.ReadJSON(). Before
this patch, endpoints using the ContainerDecoder would incorrectly
return a 500 (internal server error) status.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Implement a ReadJSON() utility to help reduce some code-duplication,
and to make sure we handle JSON requests consistently (e.g. always
check for the content-type).
Differences compared to current handling:
- prevent possible panic if request.Body is nil ("should never happen")
- always require Content-Type to be "application/json"
- be stricter about additional content after JSON (previously ignored)
- but, allow the body to be empty (an empty body is not invalid);
update TestContainerInvalidJSON accordingly, which was testing the
wrong expectation.
- close body after reading (some code did this)
We should consider to add a "max body size" on this function, similar to
7b9275c0da/api/server/middleware/debug.go (L27-L40)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Arbitrary here does not include '', best to catch that one early as it's
almost certainly a mistake (possibly an attempt to pass a POSIX path
through this API)
Signed-off-by: Paul "TBBle" Hampson <Paul.Hampson@Pobox.com>
Since this function is about to get more complicated, and change
behaviour, this establishes tests for the existing implementation.
Signed-off-by: Paul "TBBle" Hampson <Paul.Hampson@Pobox.com>
The wrapResponseError() utility converted some specific errors, but in
doing so, could hide the actual error message returned by the daemon.
In addition, starting with 38e6d474af,
HTTP status codes were already mapped to their corresponding errdefs
types on the client-side, making this conversion redundant.
This patch removes the wrapResponseError() utility; it's worth noting
that some error-messages will change slightly (as they now return the
error as returned by the daemon), but may cointain more details as
before, and in some cases prevents hiding the actual error.
Before this change:
docker container rm nosuchcontainer
Error: No such container: nosuchcontainer
docker container cp mycontainer:/no/such/path .
Error: No such container:path: mycontainer:/no/such/path
docker container cp ./Dockerfile mycontainer:/no/such/path
Error: No such container:path: mycontainer:/no/such
docker image rm nosuchimage
Error: No such image: nosuchimage
docker network rm nosuchnetwork
Error: No such network: nosuchnetwork
docker volume rm nosuchvolume
Error: No such volume: nosuchvolume
docker plugin rm nosuchplugin
Error: No such plugin: nosuchplugin
docker checkpoint rm nosuchcontainer nosuchcheckpoint
Error response from daemon: No such container: nosuchcontainer
docker checkpoint rm mycontainer nosuchcheckpoint
Error response from daemon: checkpoint nosuchcheckpoint does not exist for container mycontainer
docker service rm nosuchservice
Error: No such service: nosuchservice
docker node rm nosuchnode
Error: No such node: nosuchnode
docker config rm nosuschconfig
Error: No such config: nosuschconfig
docker secret rm nosuchsecret
Error: No such secret: nosuchsecret
After this change:
docker container rm nosuchcontainer
Error response from daemon: No such container: nosuchcontainer
docker container cp mycontainer:/no/such/path .
Error response from daemon: Could not find the file /no/such/path in container mycontainer
docker container cp ./Dockerfile mycontainer:/no/such/path
Error response from daemon: Could not find the file /no/such in container mycontainer
docker image rm nosuchimage
Error response from daemon: No such image: nosuchimage:latest
docker network rm nosuchnetwork
Error response from daemon: network nosuchnetwork not found
docker volume rm nosuchvolume
Error response from daemon: get nosuchvolume: no such volume
docker plugin rm nosuchplugin
Error response from daemon: plugin "nosuchplugin" not found
docker checkpoint rm nosuchcontainer nosuchcheckpoint
Error response from daemon: No such container: nosuchcontainer
docker checkpoint rm mycontainer nosuchcheckpoint
Error response from daemon: checkpoint nosuchcheckpoint does not exist for container mycontainer
docker service rm nosuchservice
Error response from daemon: service nosuchservice not found
docker node rm nosuchnode
Error response from daemon: node nosuchnode not found
docker config rm nosuchconfig
Error response from daemon: config nosuchconfig not found
docker secret rm nosuchsecret
Error response from daemon: secret nosuchsecret not found
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Before this change if you assume that things work the way the test
expects them to (it does not, but lets assume for now) we aren't really
testing anything because we are testing that a container is healthy
before and after we send a signal. This will give false positives even
if there is a bug in the underlying code. Sending a signal can take any
amount of time to cause a container to exit or to trigger healthchecks
to stop or whatever.
Now lets remove the assumption that things are working as expected,
because they are not.
In this case, `top` (which is what is running in the container) is
actually exiting when it receives `USR1`.
This totally invalidates the test.
We need more control and knowledge as to what is happening in the
container to properly test this.
This change introduces a custom script which traps `USR1` and flips the
health status each time the signal is received.
We then send the signal twice so that we know the change has occurred
and check that the value has flipped so that we know the change has
actually occurred.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Commit dae652e2e5 added support for non-privileged
containers to use ICMP_PROTO (used for `ping`). This option cannot be set for
containers that have user-namespaces enabled.
However, the detection looks to be incorrect; HostConfig.UsernsMode was added
in 6993e891d1 / ee2183881b,
and the property only has meaning if the daemon is running with user namespaces
enabled. In other situations, the property has no meaning.
As a result of the above, the sysctl would only be set for containers running
with UsernsMode=host on a daemon running with user-namespaces enabled.
This patch adds a check if the daemon has user-namespaces enabled (RemappedRoot
having a non-empty value), or if the daemon is running inside a user namespace
(e.g. rootless mode) to fix the detection.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The io/ioutil package has been deprecated in Go 1.16. This commit
replaces the existing io/ioutil functions with their new definitions in
io and os packages.
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
`/containers/<name>/copy` endpoint was deprecated in 1.8 and errors
since 1.12. See https://github.com/moby/moby/pull/22149 for more info.
Signed-off-by: Roman Volosatovs <roman.volosatovs@docker.com>
Discovered a few instances, where loop variable is incorrectly used
within a test closure, which is marked as parallel.
Few of these were actually loops over singleton slices, therefore the issue
might not have surfaced there (yet), but it is good to fix there as
well, as this is an incorrect pattern used across different tests.
Signed-off-by: Roman Volosatovs <roman.volosatovs@docker.com>
Rootlesskit doesn't currently handle IPv6 addresses, causing TestNetworkLoopbackNat
and TestNetworkNat to fail;
Error starting userland proxy:
error while calling PortManager.AddPort(): listen tcp: address :::8080: too many colons in address
This patch:
- Updates `getExternalAddress()` to pick IPv4 address if both IPv6 and IPv4 are found
- Update TestNetworkNat to net.JoinHostPort(), so that square brackets are used for
IPv6 addresses (e.g. `[::]:8080`)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Using `d.Kill()` with rootless mode causes the restarted daemon to not
be able to start containerd (it times out).
Originally this was SIGKILLing the daemon because we were hoping to not
have to manipulate on disk state, but since we need to anyway we can
shut it down normally.
I also tested this to ensure the test fails correctly without the fix
that the test was added to check for.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Adds a test case for the case where dockerd gets stuck on startup due to
hanging `daemon.shutdownContainer`
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
This fixes a regression based on expectations of the runtime:
```
docker pull arm32v7/alpine
docker run arm32v7/alpine
```
Without this change, the `docker run` will fail due to platform
matching on non-arm32v7 systems, even though the image could run
(assuming the system is setup correctly).
This also emits a warning to make sure that the user is aware that a
platform that does not match the default platform of the system is being
run, for the cases like:
```
docker pull --platform armhf busybox
docker run busybox
```
Not typically an issue if the requests are done together like that, but
if the image was already there and someone did `docker run` without an
explicit `--platform`, they may very well be expecting to run a native
version of the image instead of the armhf one.
This warning does add some extra noise in the case of platform specific
images being run, such as `arm32v7/alpine`, but this can be supressed by
explicitly setting the platform.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
After dicussing with maintainers, it was decided putting the burden of
providing the full cap list on the client is not a good design.
Instead we decided to follow along with the container API and use cap
add/drop.
This brings in the changes already merged into swarmkit.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
In order to run tests at mips64el device.
Now official-images has supported the following images for mips64el.
buildpack-deps:stretch
buildpack-deps:buster
debian:stretch
debian:buster
But official-images does not support the following images for mips64el.
debian:jessie
buildpack-deps:jessie
Signed-off-by: wanghuaiqing <wanghuaiqing@loongson.cn>
If the container specified in `--volumes-from` did not exist, the
API returned a 404 status, which was interpreted by the CLI as the
specified _image_ to be missing (even if that was not the case).
This patch changes these error to return a 400 (bad request);
Before this change:
# make sure the image is present
docker pull busybox
docker create --volumes-from=nosuchcontainer busybox
# Unable to find image 'busybox:latest' locally
# latest: Pulling from library/busybox
# Digest: sha256:95cf004f559831017cdf4628aaf1bb30133677be8702a8c5f2994629f637a209
# Status: Image is up to date for busybox:latest
# Error response from daemon: No such container: nosuchcontainer
After this change:
# make sure the image is present
docker pull busybox
docker create --volumes-from=nosuchcontainer busybox
# Error response from daemon: No such container: nosuchcontainer
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Usage: DOCKER_BUILD_ARGS="--build-arg CONTAINERD_COMMIT=master --build-arg RUNC_COMMIT=master" DOCKER_EXPERIMENTAL=1 TEST_SKIP_INTEGRATION_CLI=1 make test-integration
Depends on containerd master (v1.4) and runc master (v1.0.0-rc91).
Currently `TEST_SKIP_INTEGRATION_CLI=1` must be specified.
Signed-off-by: Akihiro Suda <akihiro.suda.cz@hco.ntt.co.jp>
When a container is left running after the daemon exits (e.g. the daemon
is SIGKILL'd or crashes), it should stop any running containers when the
daemon starts back up.
What actually happens is the daemon only sends the container's
configured stop signal and does not check if it has exited.
If the container does not actually exit then it is left running.
This fixes this unexpected behavior by calling the same function to shut
down the container that the daemon shutdown process does.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>