This prevents mounts in the plugins dir from leaking into other
namespaces which can prevent removal (`device or resource busy`),
particularly on older kernels.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Changes most references of syscall to golang.org/x/sys/
Ones aren't changes include, Errno, Signal and SysProcAttr
as they haven't been implemented in /x/sys/.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Jones <tophj@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
[s390x] switch utsname from unsigned to signed
per 33267e036f
char in s390x in the /x/sys/unix package is now signed, so
change the buildtags
Signed-off-by: Christopher Jones <tophj@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Enables other subsystems to watch actions for a plugin(s).
This will be used specifically for implementing plugins on swarm where a
swarm controller needs to watch the state of a plugin.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Before this patch, if the plugin's `config.json` is successfully removed
but the main plugin state dir could not be removed for some reason (e.g.
leaked mount), it will prevent the daemon from being able to be
restarted.
This patches changes this to atomically remove the plugin such that on
daemon restart we can detect that there was an error and re-try. It also
changes the logic so that it only logs errors on restore rather than
erroring out the daemon.
This also removes some code which is now duplicated elsewhere.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Also, this removes the use of a questionable golang range feature which
corrects for mutation of a slice during iteration over that slice. This
makes the filter operation easier to read and reason about.
Signed-off-by: David Sheets <dsheets@docker.com>
Previously, a 'plugin not found' error would be returned if a plugin to be
retrieved was found but disabled. This was misleading and incorrect. Now,
a new error plugin.ErrDisabled is returned in this case. This makes the
error message when trying to statically start plugins (from daemon.json or
dockerd command line) accurate.
Signed-off-by: David Sheets <dsheets@docker.com>
Increases the test coverage of pkg/plugins.
Changed signature of function NewClientWithTimeout in pkg/plugin/client, to
take time.Duration instead of integers.
Signed-off-by: Raja Sami <raja.sami@tenpearl.com>
This was mistakenly unmounting everything under `plugins/*` instead of
just `plugins/<id>/*` anytime a plugin is removed.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
In some cases, if a user specifies `-f` when disabling a plugin mounts
can still exist on the plugin rootfs.
This can cause problems during upgrade where the rootfs is removed and
may cause data loss.
To resolve this, ensure the rootfs is unmounted
before performing an upgrade.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
While restoring plugins during daemon restart, some plugins can fail to
respond to net.Dial. These plugins should be explicitly set to disabled,
else they will retain their original state of enabled, which is
incorrect.
Tested with a plugin that fails to restart and observed that the state
was set to disabled.
Signed-off-by: Anusha Ragunathan <anusha.ragunathan@docker.com>
When the daemon is configured to run with an authorization-plugin and if
the plugin is disabled, the daemon continues to send API requests to the
plugin and expect it to respond. But the plugin has been disabled. As a
result, all API requests are blocked. Fix this behavior by removing the
disabled plugin from the authz middleware chain.
Tested using riyaz/authz-no-volume-plugin and observed that after
disabling the plugin, API request/response is functional.
Fixes#31836
Signed-off-by: Anusha Ragunathan <anusha.ragunathan@docker.com>
Embedding DockerVersion in plugin config when the plugin is created,
enables users to do a docker plugin inspect and know which version
the plugin was built on. This is helpful in cases where users are
running a new plugin on older docker releases and confused at
unexpected behavior.
By embedding DockerVersion in the config, we claim that there's no
guarantee that if the plugin config's DockerVersion is greater that
the version of the docker engine the plugin is executed against, the
plugin will work as expected.
For example, lets say:
- in 17.03, a plugin was released as johndoe/foo:v1
- in 17.05, the plugin uses the new ipchost config setting and author
publishes johndoe/foo:v2
In this case, johndoe/foo:v2 was built on 17.05 using ipchost, but is
running on docker-engine version 17.03. Since 17.05 > 17.03, there's
no guarantee that the plugin will work as expected. Ofcourse, if the
plugin did not use newly added config settings (ipchost in this case)
in 17.05, it would work fine in 17.03.
Signed-off-by: Anusha Ragunathan <anusha.ragunathan@docker.com>
Tested using global-net-plugin-ipc which sets PidHost in config.json.
Plugins might need access to host pid namespace. Add support for that.
Tested using aragunathan/global-net-plugin-ipc which sets "pidhost" in
config.json. Observed using `readlink /proc/self/ns/pid` that plugin and
host have the same ns.
Signed-off-by: Anusha Ragunathan <anusha.ragunathan@docker.com>
Plugins might need access to host ipc namespace. A good usecase is
a volume plugin running iscsi multipath commands that need access to
host kernel locks.
Tested with a custom plugin (aragunathan/global-net-plugin-full) that's
built with `"ipchost" : true` in config.json. Observed using
`readlink /proc/self/ns/ipc` that plugin and host have the same ns.
Signed-off-by: Anusha Ragunathan <anusha.ragunathan@docker.com>
TestPluginTrustedInstall revealed a race in the plugin shutdown logic,
where the exit channel signal was sent even before the propagated mounts
were unmounted. If the same plugin was enabled, it would try to setup
propagated mounts *before* it was unmounted resulting in errors.
This change fixes the behavior by waiting until the unmount completes on
disable before marking the plugin as disabled.
Signed-off-by: Anusha Ragunathan <anusha.ragunathan@docker.com>
When a plugin fails to start, we still incorrectly mark it as enabled.
This change verifies that we can dial to the plugin socket to confirm that
the plugin is functional and only then mark the plugin as enabled. Also,
dont delete the plugin on install, if only the enable fails.
Signed-off-by: Anusha Ragunathan <anusha.ragunathan@docker.com>
Remove forked reference package. Use normalized named values
everywhere and familiar functions to convert back to familiar
strings for UX and storage compatibility.
Enforce that the source repository in the distribution metadata
is always a normalized string, ignore invalid values which are not.
Update distribution tests to use normalized values.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net> (github: dmcgowan)
This persists the "propagated mount" for plugins outside the main
rootfs. This enables `docker plugin upgrade` to not remove potentially
important data during upgrade rather than forcing plugin authors to hard
code a host path to persist data to.
Also migrates old plugins that have a propagated mount which is in the
rootfs on daemon startup.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
This allows a plugin to be upgraded without requiring to
uninstall/reinstall a plugin.
Since plugin resources (e.g. volumes) are tied to a plugin ID, this is
important to ensure resources aren't lost.
The plugin must be disabled while upgrading (errors out if enabled).
This does not add any convenience flags for automatically
disabling/re-enabling the plugin during before/after upgrade.
Since an upgrade may change requested permissions, the user is required
to accept permissions just like `docker plugin install`.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
This fix adds `--filter capability=[volumedriver|authz]` to `docker plugin ls`.
The related docs has been updated.
An integration test has been added.
Signed-off-by: Yong Tang <yong.tang.github@outlook.com>
This fix adds `--filter enabled=true` to `docker plugin ls`,
as was specified in 28624.
The related API and docs has been updated.
An integration test has been added.
This fix fixes 28624.
Signed-off-by: Yong Tang <yong.tang.github@outlook.com>
Use resolving to repo info as the split point between the
legitimate reference package and forked reference package.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net> (github: dmcgowan)