moby/api
Sebastiaan van Stijn 058a31e479
volumes: fix error-handling when removing volumes with swarm enabled
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>
2023-03-13 19:17:35 +01:00
..
server volumes: fix error-handling when removing volumes with swarm enabled 2023-03-13 19:17:35 +01:00
templates/server swagger: fix "generated code" comment not in correct format 2019-11-05 11:32:37 -08:00
types Merge pull request #45032 from corhere/shim-opts 2023-03-02 21:45:05 +01:00
common.go API: bump version to 1.43 2022-07-12 10:40:30 +02:00
common_unix.go Update to Go 1.17.0, and gofmt with Go 1.17 2021-08-24 23:33:27 +02:00
common_windows.go Add canonical import comment 2018-02-05 16:51:57 -05:00
README.md API: minor fixes in the README 2017-10-11 16:12:10 +02:00
swagger-gen.yaml Use a config to generate swagger api types 2016-10-31 11:13:41 -04:00
swagger.yaml Merge pull request #44061 from fussybeaver/44059-swagger-create-image-info 2023-01-10 16:06:43 +01:00

Working on the Engine API

The Engine API is an HTTP API used by the command-line client to communicate with the daemon. It can also be used by third-party software to control the daemon.

It consists of various components in this repository:

  • api/swagger.yaml A Swagger definition of the API.
  • api/types/ Types shared by both the client and server, representing various objects, options, responses, etc. Most are written manually, but some are automatically generated from the Swagger definition. See #27919 for progress on this.
  • cli/ The command-line client.
  • client/ The Go client used by the command-line client. It can also be used by third-party Go programs.
  • daemon/ The daemon, which serves the API.

Swagger definition

The API is defined by the Swagger definition in api/swagger.yaml. This definition can be used to:

  1. Automatically generate documentation.
  2. Automatically generate the Go server and client. (A work-in-progress.)
  3. Provide a machine readable version of the API for introspecting what it can do, automatically generating clients for other languages, etc.

Updating the API documentation

The API documentation is generated entirely from api/swagger.yaml. If you make updates to the API, edit this file to represent the change in the documentation.

The file is split into two main sections:

  • definitions, which defines re-usable objects used in requests and responses
  • paths, which defines the API endpoints (and some inline objects which don't need to be reusable)

To make an edit, first look for the endpoint you want to edit under paths, then make the required edits. Endpoints may reference reusable objects with $ref, which can be found in the definitions section.

There is hopefully enough example material in the file for you to copy a similar pattern from elsewhere in the file (e.g. adding new fields or endpoints), but for the full reference, see the Swagger specification.

swagger.yaml is validated by hack/validate/swagger to ensure it is a valid Swagger definition. This is useful when making edits to ensure you are doing the right thing.

Viewing the API documentation

When you make edits to swagger.yaml, you may want to check the generated API documentation to ensure it renders correctly.

Run make swagger-docs and a preview will be running at http://localhost. Some of the styling may be incorrect, but you'll be able to ensure that it is generating the correct documentation.

The production documentation is generated by vendoring swagger.yaml into docker/docker.github.io.