This const was previously living in pkg/signal, but with that package
being moved to its own module, it didn't make much sense to put docker's
defaults in a generic module.
The const from the "signal" package is currenlty used *both* by the CLI
and the daemon as a default value when creating containers. This put up
some questions:
a. should the default be non-exported, and private to the container
package? After all, it's a _default_ (so should be used if _NOT_ set).
b. should the client actually setting a default, or instead just omit
the value, unless specified by the user? having the client set a
default also means that the daemon cannot change the default value
because the client (or older clients) will override it.
c. consider defaults from the client and defaults of the daemon to be
separate things, and create a default const in the CLI.
This patch implements option "a" (option "b" will be done separately,
as it involves the CLI code). This still leaves "c" open as an option,
if the CLI wants to set its own default.
Unfortunately, this change means we'll have to drop the alias for the
deprecated pkg/signal.DefaultStopSignal const, but a comment was left
instead, which can assist consumers of the const to find why it's no
longer there (a search showed the Docker CLI as the only consumer though).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Needed for runc >= 1.0.0-rc94.
See runc issue 2928.
Signed-off-by: Akihiro Suda <akihiro.suda.cz@hco.ntt.co.jp>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This made my IDE unhappy; `ConfigFilePath` is an exported function, so
it makes sense to use the same signature for both Linux and Windows.
This patch also adds error handling (same as on Linux), even though the
current implementation will never return an error (it's good practice
to handle errors, so I assumed this would be the right approach)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
also renamed the non-windows variant of this file to be
consistent with other files in this package
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
As standard mount.Unmount does what we need, let's use it.
In addition, this adds ignoring "not mounted" condition, which
was previously implemented (see PR#33329, commit cfa2591d3f)
via a very expensive call to mount.Mounted().
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
On unix, merge secrets/configs handling. This is important because
configs can contain secrets (via templating) and potentially a config
could just simply have secret information "by accident" from the user.
This just make sure that configs are as secure as secrets and de-dups a
lot of code.
Generally this makes everything simpler and configs more secure.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
It's a common scenario for admins and/or monitoring applications to
mount in the daemon root dir into a container. When doing so all mounts
get coppied into the container, often with private references.
This can prevent removal of a container due to the various mounts that
must be configured before a container is started (for example, for
shared /dev/shm, or secrets) being leaked into another namespace,
usually with private references.
This is particularly problematic on older kernels (e.g. RHEL < 7.4)
where a mount may be active in another namespace and attempting to
remove a mountpoint which is active in another namespace fails.
This change moves all container resource mounts into a common directory
so that the directory can be made unbindable.
What this does is prevents sub-mounts of this new directory from leaking
into other namespaces when mounted with `rbind`... which is how all
binds are handled for containers.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Files that are suffixed with `_linux.go` or `_windows.go` are
already only built on Linux / Windows, so these build-tags
were redundant.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The shutdown timeout for containers in insufficient on Windows. If the daemon is shutting down, and a container takes longer than expected to shut down, this can cause the container to remain in a bad state after restart, and never be able to start again. Increasing the timeout makes this less likely to occur.
Signed-off-by: Darren Stahl <darst@microsoft.com>
This enables docker cp and ADD/COPY docker build support for LCOW.
Originally, the graphdriver.Get() interface returned a local path
to the container root filesystem. This does not work for LCOW, so
the Get() method now returns an interface that LCOW implements to
support copying to and from the container.
Signed-off-by: Akash Gupta <akagup@microsoft.com>
Since the commit d88fe447df ("Add support for sharing /dev/shm/ and
/dev/mqueue between containers") container's /dev/shm is mounted on the
host first, then bind-mounted inside the container. This is done that
way in order to be able to share this container's IPC namespace
(and the /dev/shm mount point) with another container.
Unfortunately, this functionality breaks container checkpoint/restore
(even if IPC is not shared). Since /dev/shm is an external mount, its
contents is not saved by `criu checkpoint`, and so upon restore any
application that tries to access data under /dev/shm is severily
disappointed (which usually results in a fatal crash).
This commit solves the issue by introducing new IPC modes for containers
(in addition to 'host' and 'container:ID'). The new modes are:
- 'shareable': enables sharing this container's IPC with others
(this used to be the implicit default);
- 'private': disables sharing this container's IPC.
In 'private' mode, container's /dev/shm is truly mounted inside the
container, without any bind-mounting from the host, which solves the
issue.
While at it, let's also implement 'none' mode. The motivation, as
eloquently put by Justin Cormack, is:
> I wondered a while back about having a none shm mode, as currently it is
> not possible to have a totally unwriteable container as there is always
> a /dev/shm writeable mount. It is a bit of a niche case (and clearly
> should never be allowed to be daemon default) but it would be trivial to
> add now so maybe we should...
...so here's yet yet another mode:
- 'none': no /dev/shm mount inside the container (though it still
has its own private IPC namespace).
Now, to ultimately solve the abovementioned checkpoint/restore issue, we'd
need to make 'private' the default mode, but unfortunately it breaks the
backward compatibility. So, let's make the default container IPC mode
per-daemon configurable (with the built-in default set to 'shareable'
for now). The default can be changed either via a daemon CLI option
(--default-shm-mode) or a daemon.json configuration file parameter
of the same name.
Note one can only set either 'shareable' or 'private' IPC modes as a
daemon default (i.e. in this context 'host', 'container', or 'none'
do not make much sense).
Some other changes this patch introduces are:
1. A mount for /dev/shm is added to default OCI Linux spec.
2. IpcMode.Valid() is simplified to remove duplicated code that parsed
'container:ID' form. Note the old version used to check that ID does
not contain a semicolon -- this is no longer the case (tests are
modified accordingly). The motivation is we should either do a
proper check for container ID validity, or don't check it at all
(since it is checked in other places anyway). I chose the latter.
3. IpcMode.Container() is modified to not return container ID if the
mode value does not start with "container:", unifying the check to
be the same as in IpcMode.IsContainer().
3. IPC mode unit tests (runconfig/hostconfig_test.go) are modified
to add checks for newly added values.
[v2: addressed review at https://github.com/moby/moby/pull/34087#pullrequestreview-51345997]
[v3: addressed review at https://github.com/moby/moby/pull/34087#pullrequestreview-53902833]
[v4: addressed the case of upgrading from older daemon, in this case
container.HostConfig.IpcMode is unset and this is valid]
[v5: document old and new IpcMode values in api/swagger.yaml]
[v6: add the 'none' mode, changelog entry to docs/api/version-history.md]
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
Replicate relevant mutations to the in-memory ACID store. Readers will
then be able to query container state without locking.
Signed-off-by: Fabio Kung <fabio.kung@gmail.com>
The Solaris version (previously daemon/inspect_solaris.go) was
apparently missing some fields that should be available on that
platform.
Signed-off-by: Fabio Kung <fabio.kung@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: John Howard <jhoward@microsoft.com>
Working directory processing was handled differently for Hyper-V and Windows-Server containers, as annotated in the builder documentation (updated in this PR). For Hyper-V containers, the working directory set by WORKDIR was not created. This PR makes Hyper-V containers work the same as Windows Server containers (and the same as Linux).
Example (only applies to Hyper-V containers, so not reproducible under CI environment)
Dockerfile:
FROM microsoft/nanoserver
WORKDIR c:\installer
ENV GOROOT=c:\installer
ADD go.exe .
RUN go --help
Running on Windows Server 2016, using docker master without this change, but with daemon set to --exec-opt isolation=hyperv as it would be for Client operating systems.
PS E:\go\src\github.com\docker\docker> dockerd -g c:\control --exec-opt isolation=hyperv
time="2017-02-01T15:48:09.657286100-08:00" level=info msg="Windows default isolation mode: hyperv"
time="2017-02-01T15:48:09.662720900-08:00" level=info msg="[graphdriver] using prior storage driver: windowsfilter"
time="2017-02-01T15:48:10.011588000-08:00" level=info msg="Graph migration to content-addressability took 0.00 seconds"
time="2017-02-01T15:48:10.016655800-08:00" level=info msg="Loading containers: start."
time="2017-02-01T15:48:10.460820000-08:00" level=info msg="Loading containers: done."
time="2017-02-01T15:48:10.509859600-08:00" level=info msg="Daemon has completed initialization"
time="2017-02-01T15:48:10.509859600-08:00" level=info msg="Docker daemon" commit=3c64061 graphdriver=windowsfilter version=1.14.0-dev
First with no explicit isolation:
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir> docker build --no-cache .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 10.1 MB
Step 1/5 : FROM microsoft/nanoserver
---> 89b8556cb9ca
Step 2/5 : WORKDIR c:\installer
---> 7e0f41d08204
Removing intermediate container 236c7802042a
Step 3/5 : ENV GOROOT c:\installer
---> Running in 8ea5237183c1
---> 394b70435261
Removing intermediate container 8ea5237183c1
Step 4/5 : ADD go.exe .
---> e47401a1745c
Removing intermediate container 88dcc28e74b1
Step 5/5 : RUN go --help
---> Running in efe90e1b6b8b
container efe90e1b6b8b76586abc5c1dc0e2797b75adc26517c48733d90651e767c8463b encountered an error during CreateProcess: failure in a Windows system call: The directory name is invalid. (0x10b) extra info: {"ApplicationName":"","CommandLine":"cmd /S /C go --help","User":"","WorkingDirectory":"C:\\installer","Environment":{"GOROOT":"c:\\installer"},"EmulateConsole":false,"CreateStdInPipe":true,"CreateStdOutPipe":true,"CreateStdErrPipe":true,"ConsoleSize":[0,0]}
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir>
Then forcing process isolation:
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir> docker build --isolation=process --no-cache .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 10.1 MB
Step 1/5 : FROM microsoft/nanoserver
---> 89b8556cb9ca
Step 2/5 : WORKDIR c:\installer
---> 350c955980c8
Removing intermediate container 8339c1e9250c
Step 3/5 : ENV GOROOT c:\installer
---> Running in bde511c5e3e0
---> b8820063b5b6
Removing intermediate container bde511c5e3e0
Step 4/5 : ADD go.exe .
---> e4ac32f8902b
Removing intermediate container d586e8492eda
Step 5/5 : RUN go --help
---> Running in 9e1aa235af5f
Cannot mkdir: C:\installer is not a directory
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir>
Now compare the same results after this PR. Again, first with no explicit isolation (defaulting to Hyper-V containers as that's what the daemon it set to) - note it now succeeds 😄
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir> docker build --no-cache .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 10.1 MB
Step 1/5 : FROM microsoft/nanoserver
---> 89b8556cb9ca
Step 2/5 : WORKDIR c:\installer
---> 4f319f301c69
Removing intermediate container 61b9c0b1ff6f
Step 3/5 : ENV GOROOT c:\installer
---> Running in c464a1d612d8
---> 96a26ab9a7b5
Removing intermediate container c464a1d612d8
Step 4/5 : ADD go.exe .
---> 0290d61faf57
Removing intermediate container dc5a085fffe3
Step 5/5 : RUN go --help
---> Running in 60bd56042ff8
Go is a tool for managing Go source code.
Usage:
go command [arguments]
The commands are:
build compile packages and dependencies
clean remove object files
doc show documentation for package or symbol
env print Go environment information
fix run go tool fix on packages
fmt run gofmt on package sources
generate generate Go files by processing source
get download and install packages and dependencies
install compile and install packages and dependencies
list list packages
run compile and run Go program
test test packages
tool run specified go tool
version print Go version
vet run go tool vet on packages
Use "go help [command]" for more information about a command.
Additional help topics:
c calling between Go and C
buildmode description of build modes
filetype file types
gopath GOPATH environment variable
environment environment variables
importpath import path syntax
packages description of package lists
testflag description of testing flags
testfunc description of testing functions
Use "go help [topic]" for more information about that topic.
The command 'cmd /S /C go --help' returned a non-zero code: 2
And the same with forcing process isolation. Also works 😄
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir> docker build --isolation=process --no-cache .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 10.1 MB
Step 1/5 : FROM microsoft/nanoserver
---> 89b8556cb9ca
Step 2/5 : WORKDIR c:\installer
---> f423b9cc3e78
Removing intermediate container 41330c88893d
Step 3/5 : ENV GOROOT c:\installer
---> Running in 0b99a2d7bf19
---> e051144bf8ec
Removing intermediate container 0b99a2d7bf19
Step 4/5 : ADD go.exe .
---> 7072e32b7c37
Removing intermediate container a7a97aa37fd1
Step 5/5 : RUN go --help
---> Running in 7097438a54e5
Go is a tool for managing Go source code.
Usage:
go command [arguments]
The commands are:
build compile packages and dependencies
clean remove object files
doc show documentation for package or symbol
env print Go environment information
fix run go tool fix on packages
fmt run gofmt on package sources
generate generate Go files by processing source
get download and install packages and dependencies
install compile and install packages and dependencies
list list packages
run compile and run Go program
test test packages
tool run specified go tool
version print Go version
vet run go tool vet on packages
Use "go help [command]" for more information about a command.
Additional help topics:
c calling between Go and C
buildmode description of build modes
filetype file types
gopath GOPATH environment variable
environment environment variables
importpath import path syntax
packages description of package lists
testflag description of testing flags
testfunc description of testing functions
Use "go help [topic]" for more information about that topic.
The command 'cmd /S /C go --help' returned a non-zero code: 2
PS E:\docker\build\unifyworkdir>
Fixes#22564
When an error occurs on mount, there should not be any call later to
unmount. This can throw off refcounting in the underlying driver
unexpectedly.
Consider these two cases:
```
$ docker run -v foo:/bar busybox true
```
```
$ docker run -v foo:/bar -w /foo busybox true
```
In the first case, if mounting `foo` fails, the volume driver will not
get a call to unmount (this is the incorrect behavior).
In the second case, the volume driver will not get a call to unmount
(correct behavior).
This occurs because in the first case, `/bar` does not exist in the
container, and as such there is no call to `volume.Mount()` during the
`create` phase. It will error out during the `start` phase.
In the second case `/bar` is created before dealing with the volume
because of the `-w`. Because of this, when the volume is being setup
docker will try to copy the image path contents in the volume, in which
case it will attempt to mount the volume and fail. This happens during
the `create` phase. This makes it so the container will not be created
(or at least fully created) and the user gets the error on `create`
instead of `start`. The error handling is different in these two phases.
Changed to only send `unmount` if the volume is mounted.
While investigating the cause of the reported issue I found some odd
behavior in unmount calls so I've cleaned those up a bit here as well.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
"VolumeDriver.Mount" is being called on container start.
Make the symmetric call on container stop.
Signed-off-by: Anusha Ragunathan <anusha@docker.com>
"--restart" and "--rm" are conflict options, if a container is started
with AutoRemove flag, we should forbid the update action for its Restart
Policy.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Wei <zhangwei555@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: John Howard <jhoward@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: John Starks <jostarks@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Darren Stahl <darst@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Tonis Tiigi <tonistiigi@gmail.com>
Add `--restart` flag for `update` command, so we can change restart
policy for a container no matter it's running or stopped.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Wei <zhangwei555@huawei.com>