The signatures of functions in containerd's errdefs packages are very
similar to those in our own, and it's easy to accidentally use the wrong
package.
This patch uses a consistent alias for all occurrences of this import.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Push the reference parsing from repo and tag names into the api and pass
a reference object to the ImageService.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
Commit 3991faf464 moved search into the registry
package, which also made the `dockerversion` package a dependency for registry,
which brings additional (indirect) dependencies, such as `pkg/parsers/kernel`,
and `golang.org/x/sys/windows/registry`.
Client code, such as used in docker/cli may depend on the `registry` package,
but should not depend on those additional dependencies.
This patch moves setting the userAgent to the API router, and instead of
passing it as a separate argument, includes it into the "headers".
As these headers now not only contain the `X-Meta-...` headers, the variables
were renamed accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Use the utility introduced in 1bd486666b to
share the same implementation as similar options. The IPCModeContainer const
is left for now, but we need to consider what to do with these.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Commit e7d75c8db7 fixed validation of "host"
mode values, but also introduced a regression for validating "container:"
mode PID-modes.
PID-mode implemented a stricter validation than the other options and, unlike
the other options, did not accept an empty container name/ID. This feature was
originally implemented in fb43ef649b, added some
some integration tests (but no coverage for this case), and the related changes
in the API types did not have unit-tests.
While a later change (d4aec5f0a6) added a test
for the `--pid=container:` (empty name) case, that test was later migrated to
the CLI repository, as it covered parsing the flag (and validating the result).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
commit 1bd486666b refactored this code, but
it looks like I removed some changes in this part of the code when extracting
these changes from a branch I was working on, and the behavior did not match
the function's description (name to be empty if there is no "container:" prefix
Unfortunately, there was no test coverage for this in this repository, so we
didn't catch this.
This patch:
- fixes containerID() to not return a name/ID if no container: prefix is present
- adds test-coverage for TestCgroupSpec
- adds test-coverage for NetworkMode.ConnectedContainer
- updates some test-tables to remove duplicates, defaults, and use similar cases
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Make if more explicit which test-cases should be valid, and make it the
first field, because the "valid" field is shared among all test-cases in
the test-table, and making it the first field makes it slightly easier
to distinguish valid from invalid cases.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Commit 3246db3755 added handling for removing
cluster volumes, but in some conditions, this resulted in errors not being
returned if the volume was in use;
docker swarm init
docker volume create foo
docker create -v foo:/foo busybox top
docker volume rm foo
This patch changes the logic for ignoring "local" volume errors if swarm
is enabled (and cluster volumes supported).
While working on this fix, I also discovered that Cluster.RemoveVolume()
did not handle the "force" option correctly; while swarm correctly handled
these, the cluster backend performs a lookup of the volume first (to obtain
its ID), which would fail if the volume didn't exist.
Before this patch:
make TEST_FILTER=TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled DOCKER_GRAPHDRIVER=vfs test-integration
...
Running /go/src/github.com/docker/docker/integration/volume (arm64.integration.volume) flags=-test.v -test.timeout=10m -test.run TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled
...
=== RUN TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled
=== PAUSE TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled
=== CONT TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled
=== RUN TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/volume_in_use
volume_test.go:122: assertion failed: error is nil, not errdefs.IsConflict
volume_test.go:123: assertion failed: expected an error, got nil
=== RUN TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/volume_not_in_use
=== RUN TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/non-existing_volume
=== RUN TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/non-existing_volume_force
volume_test.go:143: assertion failed: error is not nil: Error response from daemon: volume no_such_volume not found
--- FAIL: TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled (1.57s)
--- FAIL: TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/volume_in_use (0.00s)
--- PASS: TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/volume_not_in_use (0.01s)
--- PASS: TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/non-existing_volume (0.00s)
--- FAIL: TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/non-existing_volume_force (0.00s)
FAIL
With this patch:
make TEST_FILTER=TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled DOCKER_GRAPHDRIVER=vfs test-integration
...
Running /go/src/github.com/docker/docker/integration/volume (arm64.integration.volume) flags=-test.v -test.timeout=10m -test.run TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled
...
make TEST_FILTER=TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled DOCKER_GRAPHDRIVER=vfs test-integration
...
Running /go/src/github.com/docker/docker/integration/volume (arm64.integration.volume) flags=-test.v -test.timeout=10m -test.run TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled
...
=== RUN TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled
=== PAUSE TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled
=== CONT TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled
=== RUN TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/volume_in_use
=== RUN TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/volume_not_in_use
=== RUN TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/non-existing_volume
=== RUN TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/non-existing_volume_force
--- PASS: TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled (1.53s)
--- PASS: TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/volume_in_use (0.00s)
--- PASS: TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/volume_not_in_use (0.01s)
--- PASS: TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/non-existing_volume (0.00s)
--- PASS: TestVolumesRemoveSwarmEnabled/non-existing_volume_force (0.00s)
PASS
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
SearchRegistryForImages does not make sense as part of the image
service interface. The implementation just wraps the search API of the
registry service to filter the results client-side. It has nothing to do
with local image storage, and the implementation of search does not need
to change when changing which backend (graph driver vs. containerd
snapshotter) is used for local image storage.
Filtering of the search results is an implementation detail: the
consumer of the results does not care which actor does the filtering so
long as the results are filtered as requested. Move filtering into the
exported API of the registry service to hide the implementation details.
Only one thing---the registry service implementation---would need to
change in order to support server-side filtering of search results if
Docker Hub or other registry servers were to add support for it to their
APIs.
Use a fake registry server in the search unit tests to avoid having to
mock out the registry API client.
Signed-off-by: Cory Snider <csnider@mirantis.com>
Co-authored-by: Nicolas De Loof <nicolas.deloof@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
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>
Deprecate `<none>:<none>` and `<none>@<none>` magic strings included in
`RepoTags` and `RepoDigests`.
Produce an empty arrays instead and leave the presentation of
untagged/dangling images up to the client.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
Kubernetes only permits RuntimeClass values which are valid lowercase
RFC 1123 labels, which disallows the period character. This prevents
cri-dockerd from being able to support configuring alternative shimv2
runtimes for a pod as shimv2 runtime names must contain at least one
period character. Add support for configuring named shimv2 runtimes in
daemon.json so that runtime names can be aliased to
Kubernetes-compatible names.
Allow options to be set on shimv2 runtimes in daemon.json.
The names of the new daemon runtime config fields have been selected to
correspond with the equivalent field names in cri-containerd's
configuration so that users can more easily follow documentation from
the runtime vendor written for cri-containerd and apply it to
daemon.json.
Signed-off-by: Cory Snider <csnider@mirantis.com>
The errors are already returned to the client in the API response, so
logging them to the daemon log is redundant. Log the errors at level
Debug so as not to pollute the end-users' daemon logs with noise.
Refactor the logs to use structured fields. Add the request context to
the log entry so that logrus hooks could annotate the log entries with
contextual information about the API request in the hypothetical future.
Fixes#44997
Signed-off-by: Cory Snider <csnider@mirantis.com>
TagImage is just a wrapper for TagImageWithReference which parses the
repo and tag into a reference. Change TagImageWithReference into
TagImage and move the responsibility of reference parsing to caller.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
This is a squashed version of various PRs (or related code-changes)
to implement image inspect with the containerd-integration;
- add support for image inspect
- introduce GetImageOpts to manage image inspect data in backend
- GetImage to return image tags with details
- list images matching digest to discover all tags
- Add ExposedPorts and Volumes to the image returned
- Refactor resolving/getting images
- Return the image ID on inspect
- consider digest and ignore tag when both are set
- docker run --platform
Signed-off-by: Djordje Lukic <djordje.lukic@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas De Loof <nicolas.deloof@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The IPCMode type was added in 497fc8876e, and from
that patch, the intent was to allow `host` (without `:`), `""` (empty, default)
or `container:<container ID>`, but the `Valid()` function seems to be too relaxed
and accepting both `:`, as well as `host:<anything>`. No unit-tests were added
in that patch, and integration-tests only tested for valid values.
Later on, `PidMode`, and `UTSMode` were added in 23feaaa240
and f2e5207fc9, both of which were implemented as
a straight copy of the `IPCMode` implementation, copying the same bug.
Finally, commit d4aec5f0a6 implemented unit-tests
for these types, but testing for the wrong behavior of the implementation.
This patch updates the validation to correctly invalidate `host[:<anything>]`
and empty (`:`) types.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These types were moved to api/types/container in 7ac4232e70,
but the unit-tests for them were not moved. This patch moves the unit-tests back together
with the types.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This allows differentiating how the detailed data is collected between
the containerd-integration code and the existing implementation.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas De Loof <nicolas.deloof@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The reference.ParseNormalizedNamed() utility already returns a Named
reference, but we're interested in wether the digest has a digest, so
check for that.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Make the example actually do something, and include the output, so that it
shows up in the documentation.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This adds a new filter argument to the volume prune endpoint "all".
When this is not set, or it is a false-y value, then only anonymous
volumes are considered for pruning.
When `all` is set to a truth-y value, you get the old behavior.
This is an API change, but I think one that is what most people would
want.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
api/server/router/build/build_routes.go:239:32: empty-lines: extra empty line at the start of a block (revive)
api/server/middleware/version.go:45:241: empty-lines: extra empty line at the end of a block (revive)
api/server/router/swarm/helpers_test.go:11:44: empty-lines: extra empty line at the end of a block (revive)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Also renamed variables that collided with import
api/types/strslice/strslice_test.go:36:41: empty-lines: extra empty line at the end of a block (revive)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These were moved, and deprecated in f19ef20a44 and
4caf68f4f6, which are part of the 22.x release, so
we can safely remove these from master.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
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 Tagger was introduced in 0296797f0f, as part
of a refactor, but was never used outside of the package itself. The commit
also didn't explain why this was changed into a Type with a constructor, as all
the constructor appears to be used for is to sanitize and validate the tags.
This patch removes the `Tagger` struct and its constructor, and instead just
uses a function to do the same.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The OOMKilled flag on a container's state has historically behaved
rather unintuitively: it is updated on container exit to reflect whether
or not any process within the container has been OOM-killed during the
preceding run of the container. The OOMKilled flag would be set to true
when the container exits if any process within the container---including
execs---was OOM-killed at any time while the container was running,
whether or not the OOM-kill was the cause of the container exiting. The
flag is "sticky," persisting through the next start of the container;
only being cleared once the container exits without any processes having
been OOM-killed that run.
Alter the behavior of the OOMKilled flag such that it signals whether
any process in the container had been OOM-killed since the most recent
start of the container. Set the flag immediately upon any process being
OOM-killed, and clear it when the container transitions to the "running"
state.
There is an ulterior motive for this change. It reduces the amount of
state the libcontainerd client needs to keep track of and clean up on
container exit. It's one less place the client could leak memory if a
container was to be deleted without going through libcontainerd.
Signed-off-by: Cory Snider <csnider@mirantis.com>
Currently only provides the existing "platform" option, but more
options will be added in follow-ups.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas De Loof <nicolas.deloof@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
full diff: 6068d1894d...48dd89375d
Finishes off the work to change references to cluster volumes in the API
from using "csi" as the magic word to "cluster". This reflects that the
volumes are "cluster volumes", not "csi volumes".
Notably, there is no change to the plugin definitions being "csinode"
and "csicontroller". This terminology is appropriate with regards to
plugins because it accurates reflects what the plugin is.
Signed-off-by: Drew Erny <derny@mirantis.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
My IDE was complaining about some things;
- fix inconsistent receiver name (i vs s)
- fix some variables that collided with imports
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Some error conditions returned a non-typed error, which would be returned
as a 500 status by the API. This patch;
- Updates such errors to return an errdefs.InvalidParameter type
- Introduces a locally defined `invalidParam{}` type for convenience.
- Updates some error-strings to match Go conventions
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This has been around for a long time - since v17.04 (API v1.28)
but was never documented.
It allows removing a plugin even if it's still in use.
Signed-off-by: Milas Bowman <milas.bowman@docker.com>
Commit 7a9cb29fb9 added a new "platform" query-
parameter to the `POST /containers/create` endpoint, but did not update the
swagger file and documentation.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Making the api types more focused per API type, and the general
api/types package somewhat smaller.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This removes;
- VolumeCreateBody (alias for CreateOptions)
- VolumeListOKBody (alias for ListResponse)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This removes;
- ContainerCreateCreatedBody (alias for CreateResponse)
- ContainerWaitOKBody (alias for WaitResponse)
- ContainerWaitOKBodyError (alias for WaitExitError)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The 22.06 branch was created, so changes in master/main should now be
targeting the next version of the API (1.43).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Older versions of Go don't format comments, so committing this as
a separate commit, so that we can already make these changes before
we upgrade to Go 1.19.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
commit 737e8c6ab8 added validation for the wait
condition parameter, however, the default ("not-running") option was not part
of the list of valid options, resulting in a regression if the default value
was explicitly passed;
docker scan --accept-license --version
Error response from daemon: invalid condition: "not-running"
This patch adds the missing option, and adds a test to verify.
With this patch;
make BIND_DIR=. DOCKER_GRAPHDRIVER=vfs TEST_FILTER=TestWaitConditions test-integration
...
--- PASS: TestWaitConditions (0.04s)
--- PASS: TestWaitConditions/removed (1.79s)
--- PASS: TestWaitConditions/default (1.91s)
--- PASS: TestWaitConditions/next-exit (1.97s)
--- PASS: TestWaitConditions/not-running (1.99s)
PASS
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Now client have the possibility to set the console size of the executed
process immediately at the creation. This makes a difference for example
when executing commands that output some kind of text user interface
which is bounded by the console dimensions.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
The LoopkupImage method is only used by the inspect image route and
returns an api/type struct. The depenency to api/types of the
daemon/images package is wrong, the daemon doesn't need to know about
the api types.
Signed-off-by: Djordje Lukic <djordje.lukic@docker.com>
Starting with the 22.06 release, buildx is the default client for
docker build, which uses BuildKit as builder.
This patch changes the default builder version as advertised by
the daemon to "2" (BuildKit), so that pre-22.06 CLIs with BuildKit
support (but no buildx installed) also default to using BuildKit
when interacting with a 22.06 (or up) daemon.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Using the swagger.yaml to generate api models will create incompatible field types. Some inconsistencies had already been mentioned at #39131. I've added more fixes from real life experience, some only occurring on Windows.
Closes#39131
Signed-off-by: Tobias Gesellchen <tobias@gesellix.de>
On Linux the daemon was not respecting the HostConfig.ConsoleSize
property and relied on cli initializing the tty size after the container
was created. This caused a delay between container creation and
the tty actually being resized.
This is also a small change to the api description, because
HostConfig.ConsoleSize is no longer Windows-only.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
This import was left behind due to some PR's being merged, both
affecting the imports that were used.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This allows the postContainersKill() handler to pass values as-is. As part of
the rewrite, I also moved the daemon.GetContainer(name) call later in the
function, so that we can fail early if an invalid signal is passed, before
doing the (heavier) fetching of the container.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Both of these pass the signal to daemon.containerStop(), which already validates
the signal; 2ed904cad7/daemon/stop.go (L48-L52)
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>
Containers can have a default stop-signal (`--stop-signal` / `STOPSIGNAL`) and
timeout (`--stop-timeout`). It is currently not possible to update either of
these after the container is created (`docker update` does not allow updating
them), and while either of these can be overridden through some commands, we
currently do not have a command that can override *both*:
command | stop-signal | stop-timeout | notes
----------------|-------------|--------------|----------------------------
docker kill | yes | DNA | only sends a single signal
docker restart | no | yes |
docker stop | no | yes |
As a result, if a user wants to stop a container with a custom signal and
timeout, the only option is to do this manually:
docker kill -s <custom signal> mycontainer
# wait <desired timeout>
# press ^C to cancel the graceful stop
# forcibly kill the container
docker kill mycontainer
This patch adds a new `signal` query parameter to the container "stop" and
"restart" endpoints. This parameter can be added as a new flag on the CLI,
which would allow stopping and restarting with a custom timeout and signal,
for example:
docker stop --signal=SIGWINCH --time=120 mycontainer
docker restart --signal=SIGWINCH --time=120 mycontainer
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
ContainerConfig is used in multiple locations (for example, both for
Image.Config and Image.ContainerConfig). Unfortunately, swagger does
not allow documenting individual uses if a type is used; for this type,
the content is _optional_ when used as Image.ContainerConfig (which is
set by the classic builder, which does a "commit" of a container, but
not used when building an image with BuildKit).
This patch attempts to address this confusion by documenting that
"it may be empty (or fields not propagated) if it's used for the
Image.ContainerConfig field".
Perhaps alternatives are possible (aliasing the type?) but we can
look at those in a follow-up.
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>
These were changes I drafted when reviewing 7c731e02a9,
and had these stashed in my local git;
- rename receiver to prevent "unconsistent receiver name" warnings
- make NewRouter() slightly more idiomatic, and wrap the options,
to make them easier to read.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This adds an additional "Swarm" header to the _ping endpoint response,
which allows a client to detect if Swarm is enabled on the daemon, without
having to call additional endpoints.
This change is not versioned in the API, and will be returned irregardless
of the API version that is used. Clients should fall back to using other
endpoints to get this information if the header is not present.
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>
All other endpoints handle this in the API; given that the JSON format for
filters is part of the API, it makes sense to handle it there, and not have
that concept leak into further down the code.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Move the default to the service itself, and produce the correct status code
if an invalid limit was specified. The default is currently set both on the
cli and on the daemon side, and it should be only set on one of them.
There is a slight change in behavior; previously, searching with `--limit=0`
would produce an error, but with this change, it's considered the equivalent
of "no limit set" (and using the default).
We could keep the old behavior by passing a pointer (`nil` means "not set"),
but I left that for a follow-up exercise (we may want to pass an actual
config instead of separate arguments, as well as some other things that need
cleaning up).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This fixes the "deprecated" comment to have the correct format to be picked
up by editors, and adds `omitempty` labels for KernelMemory and KernelMemoryTCP.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- Omit `KernelMemory` and `KernelMemoryTCP` fields in `/info` response if they're
not supported, or when using API v1.42 or up.
- Re-enable detection of `KernelMemory` (as it's still needed for older API versions)
- Remove warning about kernel memory TCP in daemon logs (a warning is still returned
by the `/info` endpoint, but we can consider removing that).
- Prevent incorrect "Minimum kernel memory limit allowed" error if the value was
reset because it's not supported by the host.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- remove KernelMemory option from `v1.42` api docs
- remove KernelMemory warning on `/info`
- update changes for `v1.42`
- remove `KernelMemory` field from endpoints docs
Signed-off-by: aiordache <anca.iordache@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This should help with CI being unstable when generating the types (due
to Go randomizing order). Unfortunately, the (file) names are a bit ugly,
but addressing that in a follow-up.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This field was used when Windows did not yet support regular images, and required
the base-image to pre-exist on the Windows machine (as those layers were not yet
allowed to be distributed).
Commit f342b27145 (docker 1.13.0, API v1.25) removed
usage of the field. The field was not documented in the API, but because it was not
removed from the Golang structs in the API, ended up in the API documentation when
we switched to using Swagger instead of plain MarkDown for the API docs.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This field was used when Windows did not yet support regular images, and required
the base-image to pre-exist on the Windows machine (as those layers were not yet
allowed to be distributed).
Commit f342b27145 (docker 1.13.0, API v1.25) removed
usage of the field.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- rename definition in swagger from `Image` to `ImageInspect` to match the go type
- improve (or add) documentation for various fields
- move example values in-line in the "definitions" section
- remove the `required` fields from `ImageInspect`, as the type is only used as
response type (not to make requests).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The log message's timestamp was being read after it was returned to the
pool. By coincidence the timestamp field happened to not be zeroed on
reset so much of the time things would work as expected. But if the
message value was to be taken back out of the pool before WriteLogEntry
returned, the timestamp recorded in the gzip header of compressed
rotated log files would be incorrect.
Make future use-after-put bugs fail fast by zeroing all fields of the
Message value, including the timestamp, when it is put into the pool.
Signed-off-by: Cory Snider <csnider@mirantis.com>
While this feature is deprecated / unsupported on cgroups v2, it's
part of the API, so let's at least document it.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The endpoint was silently ignoring invalid values for the "condition" parameter.
This patch now returns a 400 status if an unknown, non-empty "condition" is passed.
With this patch:
curl --unix-socket /var/run/docker.sock -XPOST 'http://localhost/v1.41/containers/foo/wait?condition=foobar'
{"message":"invalid condition: \"foobar\""}
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The /containers/{id}/wait can return a 400 (invalid argument) error if
httputils.ParseForm() fails.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This patch updates the swagger, and:
- adds an enum definition to document valid values (instead of describing them)
- updates the description to mention both "omitted" and "empty" values (although
the former is already implicitly covered by the field being "optional" and
having a default value).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Commit 0380fbff37 added the ability to pass a
--platform flag on `docker import` when importing an archive. The intent
of that commit was to allow importing a Linux rootfs on a Windows daemon
(as part of the experimental LCOW feature).
A later commit (337ba71fc1) changed some
of this code to take both OS and Architecture into account (for `docker build`
and `docker pull`), but did not yet update the `docker image import`.
This patch updates the import endpoitn to allow passing both OS and
Architecture. Note that currently only matching OSes are accepted,
and an error will be produced when (e.g.) specifying `linux` on Windows
and vice-versa.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This error is meant to be used in the output stream, and some comments
were added to prevent accidentally using local variables.
Renaming the variable instead to make it less ambiguous.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Commit 3b5fac462d / docker 1.10 removed support
for the LXC runtime, and removed the corresponding fields from the API (v1.22).
This patch removes the `HostConfig.LxcConf` field from the swagger definition.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>