Change the kill mode to process so that systemd does not kill container
processes when the daemon is shutdown but only the docker daemon
Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <crosbymichael@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit db435f526a)
This adds support for reloading the docker daemon
(SIGHIUP) so that changes in '/etc/docker/daemon.json'
can be loaded at runtime by reloading the service
through systemd ('systemctl reload docker')
Before this change, systemd would output an error
that "reloading" is not supported for the docker
service;
systemctl reload docker
Failed to reload docker.service: Job type reload is not applicable for unit docker.service.
After this change, the docker daemon can be reloaded
through 'systemctl reload docker', which reloads
the configuration;
journalctl -f -u docker.service
May 02 03:49:20 testing systemd[1]: Reloading Docker Application Container Engine.
May 02 03:49:20 testing docker[28496]: time="2016-05-02T03:49:20.143964103-04:00" level=info msg="Got signal to reload configuration, reloading from: /etc/docker/daemon.json"
May 02 03:49:20 testing systemd[1]: Reloaded Docker Application Container Engine.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
We need to add delegate yes to docker's service file so that it can
manage the cgroups of the processes that it launches without systemd
interfering with them and moving the processes after it is reloaded.
```
Delegate=
Turns on delegation of further resource control partitioning to
processes of the unit. For unprivileged services (i.e. those
using the User= setting), this allows processes to create a
subhierarchy beneath its control group path. For privileged
services and scopes, this ensures the processes will have all
control group controllers enabled.
```
This is the proper fix for issue #20152
Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <crosbymichael@gmail.com>
Previously, this check only worked if no host was specified and was
hard coded to check for "/var/run/docker.sock"
This change generalizes that check and captures any specified socket
and waits for it to be created.
Caveat: This will only check the first socket specified, but it is an
improvement over none at all.
Fixes#185160
Signed-off-by: Andrew Guenther <guenther.andrew.j@gmail.com>
systemd sets an additional limit on processes and threads that defaults to 512 when run under Linux >= 4.3.
See more information here: http://unix.stackexchange.com/a/255603/59955
Signed-off-by: Candid Dauth <cdauth@cdauth.eu>
With content addressability update starting upgraded
daemon for the first time can take a long time if
graph dir was not prepared with a migration tool before.
This avoids systemd timeouts while the migration is
taking place.
Signed-off-by: Tonis Tiigi <tonistiigi@gmail.com>
Add 10 seconds timeout when running `sudo service docker stop`. This is
especially needed when running `sudo service docker restart`. Otherwise,
`restart` results in exitstatus 1, because `start` has nothing to do.
Signed-off-by: Ewa Czechowska <ewa@ai-traders.com>
On boot, the init script is invoked from `/etc/rcN.d/S20docker` (where N
is the runlevel). Consequently, the init script tried to find the
defaults at `/etc/defaults/S20docker` and the binary at
`/usr/bin/S20docker`. This causes the docker daemon to fail at boot with
the error
/usr/bin/S20docker not present or not executable
Starting it manually works because it invokes `/etc/init.d/docker` which
has the correct basename.
Fix this by hardcoding "docker" as the base name.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Rampke <mr@soundcloud.com>
The shebang for OpenRC init scripts is now #!/sbin/openrc-run, and we
can also use the default start and stop functions built into OpenRC.
Signed-off-by: William Hubbs <w.d.hubbs@gmail.com>
The docker script in contrib/init/sysvinit-redhat will fail silently on
a start if Docker is not installed in the default /usr/bin/ location.
While a non-zero exit code is returned the user will receive no visible
indication (i.e. error message) as to why Docker was not started.
This commit changes the logic so that in the case that the docker
executable is not found in the expected location or the user does not
have execute permissions on the executable appropriate error messages
are now shown to the user as well as exiting with a non-zero exit code
Signed-off-by: Rob Vesse <rvesse@dotnetrdf.org>
Currently the service type is 'simple', the default, meaning that
docker.service is considered to be started straight after
spawning. This is incorrect as there is significant amount of time
between spawning and docker ready to accept connections on the passed
sockets. Docker does implement systemd socket activate and
notification protocol, and send the ready signal to systemd, once it
is ready. However for systemd to take those notifications into
account, the service file type should be set to notify.
Signed-off-by: Dimitri John Ledkov <dimitri.j.ledkov@intel.com>
If you have some kind of bogus `other_args` in `/etc/sysconfig/docker` the start script will report "started" but it's full of lies. This enhances the flow so that if the pidfile never shows up (failure to start) you get a proper failure message.
I also added dots for fun.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Minard <jeff.minard@creditkarma.com>
This will now properly check whether /etc/init.d/docker or service docker is
invoking the script and respond to the user accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Steven Richards <steven@axiomzen.co>
Give Docker more time to kill containers before upstart kills Docker.
The default kill timeout is 5 seconds.
This will help decrease the chance of but not eliminate the chance of
orphaned container processes.
Signed-off-by: David Xia <dxia@spotify.com>
Once the job has failed and is respawned, the status becomes `docker
respawn/post-start` after subsequent failures (as opposed to `docker
stop/post-start`), so the post-start script needs to take this into
account.
I could not find specific documentation on the job transitioning to the
`respawn/post-start` state, but this was observed on Ubuntu 14.04.2.
Signed-off-by: Lewis Marshall <lewis@lmars.net>
The validation script from #10681 is too pedantic, and does not handle
well situations like:
```
cat <<EOF # or <<-EOF
Whether the leading whitespace is stripped out or not by bash
it should still be considered as valid.
EOF
```
This reverts commit 4e65c1c319.
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
Created a validation that detects all trailing whitespaces from every
text file that isn't *.go, *.md, vendor/*,
docs/theme/mkdocs/tipuesearch*
Removed trailing whitespaces from every text file except from vendor/*
builder/parser/testfiles*, docs/theme/mkdocs/tipuesearch* and *.md
Signed-off-by: André Martins <martins@noironetworks.com>
set LimitCORE=infinity to ensure complete core creation,
allows extraction of as much information as possible.
Thanks to Ulrich Obergfell <uobergfe@redhat.com>
and Jeremy Eder <jeder@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Lokesh Mandvekar <lsm5@fedoraproject.org>
unshare the mount namespace of the docker daemon to avoid other pids
outside the daemon holding mount references of docker containers.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Batts <vbatts@redhat.com>
This systemd.exec setting will construct a new mount namespace for the
docker daemon, and use slave shared-subtree mounts so that volume mounts
propogate correctly into containers.
By having an unshared mount namespace for the daemon it ensures that
mount references are not held by other pids outside of the docker
daemon. Frequently this can be seen in EBUSY or "device or resource
busy" errors.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Batts <vbatts@redhat.com>
Fixes#6647: Other upstart jobs that depend on docker by specifying
"start on started docker" would often start before the docker daemon was
ready, so they'd fail with "Cannot connect to the Docker daemon" or
"dial unix /var/run/docker.sock: no such file or directory".
This is because "docker -d" doesn't daemonize, it runs in the
foreground, so upstart can't know when the daemon is ready to receive
incoming connections. (Traditionally, a daemon will create all necessary
sockets and then fork to signal that it's ready; according to @tianon
this "isn't possible in Go"[1]. See also [2].)
Presumably this isn't a problem with systemd init with its socket
activation. The SysV init scripts may or may not suffer from this
problem but I have no motivation to fix them.
This commit adds a "post-start" stanza to the upstart configuration
that waits for the socket to be available. Upstart won't emit the
"started" event until the "post-start" script completes.[3]
Note that the system administrator might have specified a different path
for the socket, or a tcp socket instead, by customising
/etc/default/docker. In that case we don't try to figure out what the
new socket is, but at least we don't wait in vain for
/var/run/docker.sock to appear.
If the main script (`docker -d`) fails to start, the `initctl status
$UPSTART_JOB | grep -q "stop/"` line ensures that we don't loop forever.
I stole this idea from Steve Langasek.[4]
If for some reason we *still* end up in an infinite loop --I guess
`docker -d` must have hung-- then at least we'll be able to see the
"Waiting for /var/run/docker.sock" debug output in
/var/log/upstart/docker.log.
I considered using inotifywait instead of sleep, but it isn't worth
the complexity & the extra dependency.
[1] https://github.com/docker/docker/issues/6647#issuecomment-47001613
[2] https://code.google.com/p/go/issues/detail?id=227
[3] http://upstart.ubuntu.com/cookbook/#post-start
[4] https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/upstart-devel/2013-April/002492.html
Signed-off-by: David Röthlisberger <david@rothlis.net>
Two problems how they are today:
In the current systemd unit files it is impossible to have the
docker.service started at system boot. Instead enableing docker.service
will actually enable docker.socket. This is a problem, as that means
any container with --restart=always will not launch on reboot. And of
course as soon as you log in and type docker ps, docker.service will be
launched and now your images are running. Talk about a PITA to debug!
The fix is to just install docker.service when people ask docker.service
to be enabled. If an admin wants to enable docker.socket instead, that
is fine and will work just as it does today.
The second problem is a common docker devel workflow, although not
something normal admins would hit. In this case consider a dev doing
the following:
systemctl stop docker.service
docker -d
[run commands]
[^C]
systemctl start docker.service
Running docker -d (without -F fd://) will clean up the
/var/run/docker.sock when it exits. Remember, you just ran the docker
daemon not telling it about socket actviation, so cleaning up its socket
makes sense! The new docker, started by systemd will expect socket
activation, but the last one cleaned up the docker.sock. So things are
just broken. You can, today, work around this by restarting
docker.socket. This fixes it by telling docker.socket that it is
PartOf=docker.service. So when docker.service is
started/stopped/restarted docker.socket will also be
started/stopped/restarted. So the above semi-common devel workflow will
be fine. When docker.service is stopped, so is docker.socket, docker
-d (without -F fd://) will create and delete /var/run/docker.sock.
Starting docker.service again will restart docker.socket, which will
create the file an all is happy in the word.
Signed-off-by: Eric Paris <eparis@redhat.com>
This change will allow the Docker daemon's init script to wait up to 5
minutes before being forcibly terminated by the initscript. Many
non-trivial containers will take more than the default 3 seconds to
stop, which can result in containers whose rootfs is still mounted and
will not restart when the daemon starts up again, or worse, orphan
processes that are still running.
Signed-off-by: Steven Merrill <steven.merrill@gmail.com>
- add `set -e` to make failing commands bail the script
- remove trailing `exit 0` which is just extraneous anyhow
- adjust `status_of_proc` options to pass in `$DOCKER_DESC` so we get consistently styled messages like `Docker is running` or `Docker is not running` or `could not access PID file for Docker`
Signed-off-by: Andrew Page <admwiggin@gmail.com>
This should not be done by default but used by adminsys with a drop-in.d file,
for buggy daemons which crash without known fixes.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Sébastien Luttringer <seblu@seblu.net> (github: seblu)