Commit 322e2a7d05 changed the format of errors
returned by the API to be in JSON format for API v1.24. Older versions of
the API returned errors in plain-text format.
API v1.23 and older are deprecated, so we can remove support for plain-text
error responses.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The github.com/containerd/containerd/log package was moved to a separate
module, which will also be used by upcoming (patch) releases of containerd.
This patch moves our own uses of the package to use the new module.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Currently, all traces coming from the API have an empty operation
string, which make them indistinguishable from each other without looking
at the logs of the root span, and prevent proper filtering on Jaeger UI.
With this change, traces get the route pattern as the operation string.
Signed-off-by: Albin Kerouanton <albinker@gmail.com>
This uses otel standard environment variables to configure tracing in
the daemon.
It also adds support for propagating trace contexts in the client and
reading those from the API server.
See
https://opentelemetry.io/docs/specs/otel/configuration/sdk-environment-variables/
for details on otel environment variables.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
As of Go 1.8, "net/http".Server provides facilities to close all
listeners, making the same facilities in server.Server redundant.
http.Server also improves upon server.Server by additionally providing a
facility to also wait for outstanding requests to complete after closing
all listeners. Leverage those facilities to give in-flight requests up
to five seconds to finish up after all containers have been shut down.
Signed-off-by: Cory Snider <csnider@mirantis.com>
It's surprising that the method to begin serving requests is named Wait.
And it is unidiomatic: it is a synchronous call, but it sends its return
value to the channel passed in as an argument instead of just returning
the value. And ultimately it is just a trivial wrapper around serveAPI.
Export the ServeAPI method instead so callers can decide how to call and
synchronize around it.
Call ServeAPI synchronously on the main goroutine in cmd/dockerd. The
goroutine and channel which the Wait() API demanded are superfluous
after all. The notifyReady() call was always concurrent and asynchronous
with respect to serving the API (its implementation spawns a goroutine)
so it makes no difference whether it is called before ServeAPI() or
after `go ServeAPI()`.
Signed-off-by: Cory Snider <csnider@mirantis.com>
The Server.cfg field is never referenced by any code in package
"./api/server". "./api/server".Config struct values are used by
DaemonCli code, but only to pass around configuration copied out of the
daemon config within the "./cmd/dockerd" package. Delete the
"./api/server".Config struct definition and refactor the "./cmd/dockerd"
package to pull configuration directly from cli.Config.
Signed-off-by: Cory Snider <csnider@mirantis.com>
After discussing in the maintainers meeting, we concluded that Slowloris attacks
are not a real risk other than potentially having some additional goroutines
lingering around, so setting a long timeout to satisfy the linter, and to at
least have "some" timeout.
libnetwork/diagnostic/server.go:96:10: G112: Potential Slowloris Attack because ReadHeaderTimeout is not configured in the http.Server (gosec)
srv := &http.Server{
Addr: net.JoinHostPort(ip, strconv.Itoa(port)),
Handler: s,
}
api/server/server.go:60:10: G112: Potential Slowloris Attack because ReadHeaderTimeout is not configured in the http.Server (gosec)
srv: &http.Server{
Addr: addr,
},
daemon/metrics_unix.go:34:13: G114: Use of net/http serve function that has no support for setting timeouts (gosec)
if err := http.Serve(l, mux); err != nil && !strings.Contains(err.Error(), "use of closed network connection") {
^
cmd/dockerd/metrics.go:27:13: G114: Use of net/http serve function that has no support for setting timeouts (gosec)
if err := http.Serve(l, mux); err != nil && !strings.Contains(err.Error(), "use of closed network connection") {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The Logging boolean was unconditionally set to true and ignored in all locations,
except for enabling the debugging middleware, which was also gated by the active
logrus logging level.
While it could make sense to have a Loglevel option configured on the API server,
we don't have this currently, and to make that actually useful, that config would
need to be tollerated by all locations that produce logs (which isn't the case
either).
Looking at the history of this option; a boolean to disable logging was originally
added in commit c423a790d6, which hard-coded it to
"disabled" in a test, and "enabled" for the API server outside of tests (before
that commit, logging was always enabled).
02ddaad5d9 and 5c42b2b512
changed the hard-coded values to be configurable through a `Logging` env-var (env-
vars were used _internally_ at the time to pass on options), which later became
a configuration struct in a0bf80fe03.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This reverts the changes made in 2a9c987e5a, which
moved the GetHTTPErrorStatusCode() utility to the errdefs package.
While it seemed to make sense at the time to have the errdefs package provide
conversion both from HTTP status codes errdefs and the reverse, a side-effect
of the move was that the errdefs package now had a dependency on various external
modules, to handle conversio of errors coming from those sub-systems, such as;
- github.com/containerd/containerd
- github.com/docker/distribution
- google.golang.org/grpc
This patch moves the conversion from (errdef-) errors to HTTP status-codes to a
api/server/httpstatus package, which is only used by the API server, and should
not be needed by client-code using the errdefs package.
The MakeErrorHandler() utility was moved to the API server itself, as that's the
only place it's used. While the same applies to the GetHTTPErrorStatusCode func,
I opted for keeping that in its own package for a slightly cleaner interface.
Why not move it into the api/server/httputils package?
The api/server/httputils package is also imported in the client package, which
uses the httputils.ParseForm() and httputils.HijackConnection() functions as
part of the TestTLSCloseWriter() test. While this is only used in tests, I
wanted to avoid introducing the indirect depdencencies outside of the api/server
code.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The router swapper was previously used to toggle
a debug mode, that code has since been removed.
Now this router is unnecessary.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net>
The cancellable handler is no longer needed as the context that is
passed with the http request will be cancelled just like the close
notifier was doing.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Since Go 1.7, context is a standard package. Since Go 1.9, everything
that is provided by "x/net/context" is a couple of type aliases to
types in "context".
Many vendored packages still use x/net/context, so vendor entry remains
for now.
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
The `--enable-api-cors` flag was deprecated in f3dd2db4ff,
and marked for removal in docker 17.09 through 85f92ef359.
This patch removes the deprecated flag.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Use strongly typed errors to set HTTP status codes.
Error interfaces are defined in the api/errors package and errors
returned from controllers are checked against these interfaces.
Errors can be wraeped in a pkg/errors.Causer, as long as somewhere in the
line of causes one of the interfaces is implemented. The special error
interfaces take precedence over Causer, meaning if both Causer and one
of the new error interfaces are implemented, the Causer is not
traversed.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Makes sure that debug endpoints are always available, which will aid in
debugging demon issues.
Wraps debug endpoints in the middleware chain so the can be blocked by
authz.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Victor Vieux <vieux@docker.com>
update cobra and use Tags
Signed-off-by: Victor Vieux <vieux@docker.com>
allow client to talk to an older server
Signed-off-by: Victor Vieux <vieux@docker.com>
This fix tries to fix logrus formatting by removing `f` from
`logrus.[Error|Warn|Debug|Fatal|Panic|Info]f` when formatting string
is not present.
This fix fixes#23459.
Signed-off-by: Yong Tang <yong.tang.github@outlook.com>
This makes separating middlewares from the core api easier.
As an example, the authorization middleware is moved to
it's own package.
Initialize all static middlewares when the server is created, reducing
allocations every time a route is wrapper with the middlewares.
Signed-off-by: David Calavera <david.calavera@gmail.com>
Moving all strings to the errors package wasn't a good idea after all.
Our custom implementation of Go errors predates everything that's nice
and good about working with errors in Go. Take as an example what we
have to do to get an error message:
```go
func GetErrorMessage(err error) string {
switch err.(type) {
case errcode.Error:
e, _ := err.(errcode.Error)
return e.Message
case errcode.ErrorCode:
ec, _ := err.(errcode.ErrorCode)
return ec.Message()
default:
return err.Error()
}
}
```
This goes against every good practice for Go development. The language already provides a simple, intuitive and standard way to get error messages, that is calling the `Error()` method from an error. Reinventing the error interface is a mistake.
Our custom implementation also makes very hard to reason about errors, another nice thing about Go. I found several (>10) error declarations that we don't use anywhere. This is a clear sign about how little we know about the errors we return. I also found several error usages where the number of arguments was different than the parameters declared in the error, another clear example of how difficult is to reason about errors.
Moreover, our custom implementation didn't really make easier for people to return custom HTTP status code depending on the errors. Again, it's hard to reason about when to set custom codes and how. Take an example what we have to do to extract the message and status code from an error before returning a response from the API:
```go
switch err.(type) {
case errcode.ErrorCode:
daError, _ := err.(errcode.ErrorCode)
statusCode = daError.Descriptor().HTTPStatusCode
errMsg = daError.Message()
case errcode.Error:
// For reference, if you're looking for a particular error
// then you can do something like :
// import ( derr "github.com/docker/docker/errors" )
// if daError.ErrorCode() == derr.ErrorCodeNoSuchContainer { ... }
daError, _ := err.(errcode.Error)
statusCode = daError.ErrorCode().Descriptor().HTTPStatusCode
errMsg = daError.Message
default:
// This part of will be removed once we've
// converted everything over to use the errcode package
// FIXME: this is brittle and should not be necessary.
// If we need to differentiate between different possible error types,
// we should create appropriate error types with clearly defined meaning
errStr := strings.ToLower(err.Error())
for keyword, status := range map[string]int{
"not found": http.StatusNotFound,
"no such": http.StatusNotFound,
"bad parameter": http.StatusBadRequest,
"conflict": http.StatusConflict,
"impossible": http.StatusNotAcceptable,
"wrong login/password": http.StatusUnauthorized,
"hasn't been activated": http.StatusForbidden,
} {
if strings.Contains(errStr, keyword) {
statusCode = status
break
}
}
}
```
You can notice two things in that code:
1. We have to explain how errors work, because our implementation goes against how easy to use Go errors are.
2. At no moment we arrived to remove that `switch` statement that was the original reason to use our custom implementation.
This change removes all our status errors from the errors package and puts them back in their specific contexts.
IT puts the messages back with their contexts. That way, we know right away when errors used and how to generate their messages.
It uses custom interfaces to reason about errors. Errors that need to response with a custom status code MUST implementent this simple interface:
```go
type errorWithStatus interface {
HTTPErrorStatusCode() int
}
```
This interface is very straightforward to implement. It also preserves Go errors real behavior, getting the message is as simple as using the `Error()` method.
I included helper functions to generate errors that use custom status code in `errors/errors.go`.
By doing this, we remove the hard dependency we have eeverywhere to our custom errors package. Yes, you can use it as a helper to generate error, but it's still very easy to generate errors without it.
Please, read this fantastic blog post about errors in Go: http://dave.cheney.net/2014/12/24/inspecting-errors
Signed-off-by: David Calavera <david.calavera@gmail.com>
This is done by moving the following types to api/types/config.go:
- ContainersConfig
- ContainerAttachWithLogsConfig
- ContainerWsAttachWithLogsConfig
- ContainerLogsConfig
- ContainerStatsConfig
Remove dependency on "version" package from types.ContainerStatsConfig.
Decouple the "container" router from the "daemon/exec" implementation.
* This is done by making daemon.ContainerExecInspect() return an interface{}
value. The same trick is already used by daemon.ContainerInspect().
Improve documentation for router packages.
Extract localRoute and router into separate files.
Move local.router to image.imageRouter.
Changes:
- Move local/image.go to image/image_routes.go.
- Move local/local.go to image/image.go
- Rename router to imageRouter.
- Simplify imports for image/image.go (remove alias for router package).
Merge router/local package into router package.
Decouple the "image" router from the actual daemon implementation.
Add Daemon.GetNetworkByID and Daemon.GetNetworkByName.
Decouple the "network" router from the actual daemon implementation.
This is done by replacing the daemon.NetworkByName constant with
an explicit GetNetworkByName method.
Remove the unused Daemon.GetNetwork method and the associated constants NetworkByID and NetworkByName.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Waslowski <cr7pt0gr4ph7@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Calavera <david.calavera@gmail.com>
Currently, daemonbuilder package (part of daemon) implemented the
builder backend. However, it was a very thin wrapper around daemon
methods and caused an implementation dependency for api/server build
endpoint. api/server buildrouter should only know about the backend
implementing the /build API endpoint.
Removing daemonbuilder involved moving build specific methods to
respective files in the daemon, where they fit naturally.
Signed-off-by: Anusha Ragunathan <anusha@docker.com>
Read configuration after flags making this the priority:
1- Apply configuration from file.
2- Apply configuration from flags.
Reload configuration when a signal is received, USR2 in Linux:
- Reload router if the debug configuration changes.
- Reload daemon labels.
- Reload cluster discovery.
Signed-off-by: David Calavera <david.calavera@gmail.com>