This passed the --net=container:CONTINER_ID to lxc-start as --share-net
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Abin Shahab <ashahab@altiscale.com> (github: ashahab-altiscale)
Since the containers can handle the out of memory kernel kills gracefully, docker
will only provide out of memory information as an additional metadata as part of
container status.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Vishnu Kannan <vishnuk@google.com> (github: vishh)
This also removes dead code in the native driver for a past feature that
was never fully implemented.
Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <crosbymichael@gmail.com>
This changes the way the exec drivers work by not specifing a -driver
flag on reexec. For each of the exec drivers they register their own
functions that will be matched aginst the argv 0 on exec and called if
they match.
This also allows any functionality to be added to docker so that the
binary can be reexec'd and any type of function can be called. I moved
the flag parsing on docker exec to the specific initializers so that the
implementations do not bleed into one another. This also allows for
more flexability within reexec initializers to specify their own flags
and options.
Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <michael@docker.com>
lxc is special in that we cannot create the master outside of the
container without opening the slave because we have nothing to provide to the
cmd. We have to open both then do the crazy setup on command right now instead of
passing the console path to lxc and telling it to open up that console. we save a couple of
openfiles in the native driver because we can do this.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <michael@docker.com> (github: crosbymichael)
This uses "," instead of spaces so that the flags are parsed correctly
and also does not do a strings.Split on an empty string because
strings.Split will return a slice with one element, and empty string
causing parsing to fail when it validates that the cap exists.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <michael@docker.com> (github: crosbymichael)
This patch adds pause/unpause to the command line, api, and drivers
for use on containers. This is implemented using the cgroups/freeze
utility in libcontainer and lxc freeze/unfreeze.
Co-Authored-By: Eric Windisch <ewindisch@docker.com>
Co-Authored-By: Chris Alfonso <calfonso@redhat.com>
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Ian Main <imain@redhat.com> (github: imain)
This is a fix for a race condition in the LXC driver. This is described
more in issue #6092.
Closes#6092
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Shane Canon <scanon@lbl.gov> (github: scanon)
We now have one place that keeps track of (most) devices that are allowed and created within the container. That place is pkg/libcontainer/devices/devices.go
This fixes several inconsistencies between which devices were created in the lxc backend and the native backend. It also fixes inconsistencies between wich devices were created and which were allowed. For example, /dev/full was being created but it was not allowed within the cgroup. It also declares the file modes and permissions of the default devices, rather than copying them from the host. This is in line with docker's philosphy of not being host dependent.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Timothy Hobbs <timothyhobbs@seznam.cz> (github: https://github.com/timthelion)
We don't have the flexibility to do extra things with lxc because it is
a black box and most fo the magic happens before we get a chance to
interact with it in dockerinit.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <michael@crosbymichael.com> (github: crosbymichael)
This also cleans up some of the left over restriction paths code from
before.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <michael@crosbymichael.com> (github: crosbymichael)
It has been pointed out that some files in /proc and /sys can be used
to break out of containers. However, if those filesystems are mounted
read-only, most of the known exploits are mitigated, since they rely
on writing some file in those filesystems.
This does not replace security modules (like SELinux or AppArmor), it
is just another layer of security. Likewise, it doesn't mean that the
other mitigations (shadowing parts of /proc or /sys with bind mounts)
are useless. Those measures are still useful. As such, the shadowing
of /proc/kcore is still enabled with both LXC and native drivers.
Special care has to be taken with /proc/1/attr, which still needs to
be mounted read-write in order to enable the AppArmor profile. It is
bind-mounted from a private read-write mount of procfs.
All that enforcement is done in dockerinit. The code doing the real
work is in libcontainer. The init function for the LXC driver calls
the function from libcontainer to avoid code duplication.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Jérôme Petazzoni <jerome@docker.com> (github: jpetazzo)
Without this patch, containers inherit the open file descriptors of the daemon, so my "exec 42>&2" allows us to "echo >&42 some nasty error with some bad advice" directly into the daemon log. :)
Also, "hack/dind" was already doing this due to issues caused by the inheritance, so I'm removing that hack too since this patch obsoletes it by generalizing it for all containers.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Andrew Page <admwiggin@gmail.com> (github: tianon)