> HasAvailableFlags checks if the command contains any flags (local
> plus persistent from the entire structure) which are not hidden or
> deprecated.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- Moving the `common*.go` files in `cmd/dockerd` directly (it's the
only place it's getting used)
- Rename `cli/flags` to `cli/config` because it's the only thing left
in that package 👼
Now, `integration-cli` does *truly* not depend on `cobra` stuff.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
This makes integration not depend anymore of `cli` and thus not
require `cobra` and other packages to compile.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Allows storing key under any directory. In the case where the
"/etc/docker" directory is not preserved, this file can be
specified to a location where it will be preserved to ensure
the ID does not change across restarts.
Note this key is currently only used today to generate the ID
used in Docker info and for manifest schema v1 pushes. The key
signature and finger on these manifests are not checked or
used any longer for security, deprecated by notary.
Removes old key migration from a pre-release of Docker which put
the key under the home directory and was used to preserve ID used
for swarm v1 after the file moved.
closes#32135
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net>
Starting with this commit, integration tests should no longer rely on
the docker cli, they should be API tests instead. For the existing tests
the scripts will use a frozen version of the docker cli with a
DOCKER_API_VERSION frozen to 1.30, which should ensure that the CI remains
green at all times.
To help contributors develop and test manually with a modified docker
cli, this commit also adds a DOCKER_CLI_PATH environment variable to the
Makefile. This allows to set the path of a custom cli that will be
available inside the development container and used to run the
integration tests.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Porterie (icecrime) <arnaud.porterie@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
This is synonymous with `docker run --cidfile=FILE` and writes the digest of
the newly built image to the named file. This is intended to be used by build
systems which want to avoid tagging (perhaps because they are in CI or
otherwise want to avoid fixed names which can clash) by enabling e.g. Makefile
constructs like:
image.id: Dockerfile
docker build --iidfile=image.id .
do-some-more-stuff: image.id
do-stuff-with <image.id
Currently the only way to achieve this is to use `docker build -q` and capture
the stdout, but at the expense of losing the build output.
In non-silent mode (without `-q`) with API >= v1.29 the caller will now see a
`JSONMessage` with the `Aux` field containing a `types.BuildResult` in the
output stream for each image/layer produced during the build, with the final
one being the end product. Having all of the intermediate images might be
interesting in some cases.
In silent mode (with `-q`) there is no change, on success the only output will
be the resulting image digest as it was previosuly.
There was no wrapper to just output an Aux section without enclosing it in a
Progress, so add one here.
Added some tests to integration cli tests.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@docker.com>
Commit bb5dfdb8c5 added a
labels option to the docker-compose file format, but
added it to the 3.2 schema.
This patch moves the change to the 3.3 schema
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This new flag will allow the configuration of an interface that
can be used for data path traffic to be isolated from control
plane traffic. This flag is simply percolated down to libnetwork
and will be used by all the global scope drivers (today overlay)
Negative test added for invalid flag arguments
Signed-off-by: Flavio Crisciani <flavio.crisciani@docker.com>
swarmkit's API type. Make sure this parameter gets propagated to
swarmkit, and also add an extra option to the CLI when providing
external CAs to parse the CA cert from a file.
Signed-off-by: Ying Li <ying.li@docker.com>
These tests were caught in the crossfire of the transition to testify.
testify has a few subtle differences from the similar custom framework
it replaced:
- Error behaves differently
- Equal takes its arguments in a different order
This PR also takes the opportunity to use a few shorthands from testify,
such as Len, True, and False.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
This avoids issues when copy/pasting between different shells on
different OSes, which may not all support `\` as a continuation
character.
Fixes#32725
Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com>
I noticed that we're using a homegrown package for assertions. The
functions are extremely similar to testify, but with enough slight
differences to be confusing (for example, Equal takes its arguments in a
different order). We already vendor testify, and it's used in a few
places by tests.
I also found some problems with pkg/testutil/assert. For example, the
NotNil function seems to be broken. It checks the argument against
"nil", which only works for an interface. If you pass in a nil map or
slice, the equality check will fail.
In the interest of avoiding NIH, I'm proposing replacing
pkg/testutil/assert with testify. The test code looks almost the same,
but we avoid the confusion of having two similar but slightly different
assertion packages, and having to maintain our own package instead of
using a commonly-used one.
In the process, I found a few places where the tests should halt if an
assertion fails, so I've made those cases (that I noticed) use "require"
instead of "assert", and I've vendored the "require" package from
testify alongside the already-present "assert" package.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
It was possible to see output like this:
"UpdateStatus": {
"State": "updating",
"StartedAt": "2017-04-14T17:10:03.226607162Z",
"CompletedAt": "1970-01-01T00:00:00Z",
"Message": "update in progress"
}
The timestamp fields were already changed to pointers, and left nil if
the timestamp value was zero. However the zero-value of a timestamp from
gRPC is different from the value Go considers to be zero. gRPC uses the
Unix epoch instead of Go's epoch. Therefore, check that the timestamp
does not match the Unix epoch.
Also, add " ago" to the timestamps as shown in "docker service inspect
--pretty", as they are shown as relative times.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>