The VirtualSize field is deprecated and the upcoming API version v1.44
will no longer propagate the field. See:
1261fe69a3,
Given that in docker 1.10 and up (API v1.22), the VirtualSize and Size
fields contain the same value, and the "df" endpoint was not supported
until API v1.25, we can "safely" use Size instead; see:
- 4ae7176ffb
- 4352da7803
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This makes it possible to update the image loaded for e2e tests without
modifying all tests that use them.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
These were deprecated in eb0ba4f8d5, which
was part of docker 19.03, so users should have had a chance to migrate.
This removes InStream, OutStream, NewInStream and NewOutStream
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This fixes the cli erroring out if the variable is set to an empty
value.
```
$ export DOCKER_BUILDKIT=
$ docker version
DOCKER_BUILDKIT environment variable expects boolean value: strconv.ParseBool: parsing "": invalid syntax
```
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
Since Swarm does not use the `build` section, there's no reason to validate properties here.
This makes it so we don't have to keep updating the schema in the CLI to support properties
added in the Compose Spec for build, and does not imply any new feature support since Swarm
does not consider this section.
Signed-off-by: Laura Brehm <laurabrehm@hey.com>
For moby/moby PR 45025 (Docker v24, API v1.43).
`docker run --annotation foo=bar` is similar to `podman run --annotation foo=bar`,
however, unlike Podman, Docker implementation also accepts an annotation with an empty value.
(`docker run --annotation foo`)
Signed-off-by: Akihiro Suda <akihiro.suda.cz@hco.ntt.co.jp>
Set the client's API version that's used in the info, instead of requesting
it as part of printing.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Make this function only _print_ the info we have, and not read the username
from the credential-store.
This patch adds a Username field to the (local) `info` type, and sets it
when needed, so that prettyPrintServerInfo only has to format and print
the information, instead of calling out to the credential-store.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Starting with b4ca1c7368, docker login
no longer depends on info.IndexServerAddress to determine the default
registry.
The prettyPrintServerInfo() still depended on this information, which
could potentially show the wrong information.
This patch changes it to also depend on the same information as docker login
now does.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The IndexServerAddress field was as part of the initial Windows implementation
of the engine. For legal reasons, Microsoft Windows (and thus Docker images
based on Windows) were not allowed to be distributed through non-Microsoft
infrastructure. As a temporary solution, a dedicated "registry-win-tp3.docker.io"
registry was created to serve Windows images.
Currently, this field always shows "https://index.docker.io/v1/", which is
confusing, because that address is not used for the registry (only for
authentication and "v1" search).
docker info
...
Registry: https://index.docker.io/v1/
Starting with b4ca1c7368, this field is also
no longer used during authentication, and a3d56e7d06
removed the (deprecated) ElectAuthServer() which was previously used to
query it.
Given that there's currently no practical use for this information, and
it only adds "noise" (and confusion), this patch removes it from the default
output.
For now, the field is (still) available for those that want to use it;
docker info --format '{{.IndexServerAddress}}'
https://index.docker.io/v1/
But it won't be printed by default.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Deprecate this function in favor of the implementation in the API types,
considering that to be the canonical implementation.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This utility provides the same logic as was implemented here (and using it
aligns with the "docker pull" equivalent).
Also added a TODO to replace this function with the regular "docker pull"
code.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
replace the local code with RetrieveAuthTokenFromImage, which does exactly the same;
623356001f/cli/command/registry.go (L163-L188)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Replace uses of this function in favor of the implementation in the
API types, so that we have a single, canonical implementation.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
changes readInput() to trim whitespace. The existing code tried to be
conservative and only trimmed whitespace for username (not for password).
Passwords with leading/trailing whitespace would be _very_ unlikely, and
trimming whitespace is generally accepted.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
ConfigureAuth used the readInput() utility to read the username and password.
However, this utility did not return errors it encountered, but instead did
an os.Exit(1). A result of this was that the terminal was not restored if
an error happened. When reading the password, the terminal is configured to
disable echo (i.e. characters are not printed), and failing to restore
the previous state means that the terminal is now "non-functional".
This patch:
- changes readInput() to return errors it encounters
- uses a defer() to restore terminal state
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This function no longer uses the /info endpoint to resolve the registry
to use. The documentation for this function was still referring to
the (once used) special registry for Windows images, which is no longer
in use, so update the docs to reflect reality :)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This patch adds additional information to the Client section of the output.
We were already outputting versions of CLI Plugins, and the Server, but not
for the Client.
Adding this information can help with bug-reports where the reporter only
provided the `docker info` output, or (e.g.) only `docker --version`. The
platform name helps identify what kind of builds the user has installed
(e.g. docker's docker-ce packages have "Docker Engine - Community" set
for this), although we should consider including "packager" information
as a more formalized field for this information.
Before this patch:
$ docker info
Client:
Context: default
Debug Mode: false
Plugins:
buildx: Docker Buildx (Docker Inc.)
Version: v0.10.4
Path: /usr/libexec/docker/cli-plugins/docker-buildx
...
With this patch applied:
$ docker info
Client: Docker Engine - Community
Version: 24.0.0-dev
Context: default
Debug Mode: false
Plugins:
buildx: Docker Buildx (Docker Inc.)
Version: v0.10.4
Path: /usr/libexec/docker/cli-plugins/docker-buildx
...
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This allows the type to be used for situations where this information is
not present, or not to be printed.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The Platform field was defined with omitempty, but would always be shown
in the JSON output, because it was never nil.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
It's defined on a non-exported type, and was only used in a template.
Replacing for a basic "nil" check, which should do the same.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The --format=json option was added for all inspect commands, but was not
implemented for "docker version". This patch implements the missing option.
Before this patch:
docker version --format=json
json
With this patch:
docker version --format=json
{"Client":{"Platform":{"Name":""},"Version":"24.0.0-dev","ApiVersion":"..."}}
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The --format=json option was added for all inspect commands, but was not implemented
for "docker info". This patch implements the missing option.
Before this patch:
docker info --format=json
json
With this patch applied:
docker info --format=json
{"ID":"80c2f18a-2c88-4e4a-ba69-dca0eea59835","Containers":7,"ContainersRunning":"..."}
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Of both "--quiet" and "--format" are set, --quiet takes precedence. This
patch adds a warning to inform the user that their custom format is not
used:
docker ps --format='{{.Image}}'
ubuntu:22.04
alpine
docker ps --format='{{.Image}}' --quiet
WARNING: Ignoring custom format, because both --format and --quiet are set.
40111f61d5c5
482efdf39fac
The warning is printed on STDERR, so can be redirected:
docker ps --format='{{.Image}}' --quiet 2> /dev/null
40111f61d5c5
482efdf39fac
The warning is only shown if the format is set using the "--format" option.
No warning is shown if a custom format is set through the CLI configuration
file:
mkdir -p ~/.docker/
echo '{"psFormat": "{{.Image}}"}' > ~/.docker/config.json
docker ps
ubuntu:22.04
alpine
docker ps --quiet
40111f61d5c5
482efdf39fac
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Previously, the formatter would ignore the quiet option if a custom format
was passed; this situation was handled in runPs(), where custom formats
would only be applied if the quiet option was not set, but only if the
format was set in the CLI's config.
This patch updates NewContainerFormat() to do the same, even if a `--format`
was passed on the command-line.
This is a change in behavior, so may need some discussion; possible alternatives;
- produce an error if both `--format` and `--quiet` are passed
- print a warning if both are passed (but use the logic from this patch)
Before this patch:
```console
docker ps --format '{{.Image}}'
ubuntu:22.04
alpine
docker ps --format '{{.Image}}' --quiet
ubuntu:22.04
alpine
mkdir -p ~/.docker/
echo '{"psFormat": "{{.Image}}"}' > ~/.docker/config.json
docker ps
ubuntu:22.04
alpine
docker ps --quiet
ubuntu:22.04
alpine
```
With this patch applied:
```console
docker ps --format '{{.Image}}'
ubuntu:22.04
alpine
docker ps --format '{{.Image}}' --quiet
40111f61d5c5
482efdf39fac
mkdir -p ~/.docker/
echo '{"psFormat": "{{.Image}}"}' > ~/.docker/config.json
docker ps
ubuntu:22.04
alpine
docker ps --quiet
40111f61d5c5
482efdf39fac
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- containerConfig collided with the containerConfig type
- warning collided with the warning const
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- Touch-up GoDoc to better document each method, adding punctuation, and
use doc-links where applicable.
- SetRawTerminal(): change the order in which we check if a terminal is
connected; check the local boolean first before checking if the NORAW
env-var is set.
- NewOut() / NewIn(); remove intermediate variables
- Remove explicit use of the embedded "commonStream" to make the code
slightly less verbose, and more "to the point".
- Document the intended purpose of SetIsTerminal(), which was added in
b2551c619d
to be used in unit-tests.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This field was deprecated in 6ea2767289, which
is part of docker 23.0, so users should have had a chance to migrate.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This field was deprecated in 15535d4594, which
is part of docker 23.0, so users should have had a chance to migrate.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These were deprecated in 3499669e18, which
is part of docker 23.0, so users should have had a chance to migrate.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These were deprecated in de6020a240, which
is part of docker 23.0, so users should have had a chance to migrate.
This removes IsErrContextDoesNotExist() and IsErrTLSDataDoesNotExist()
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This was deprecated in 467e650d4c, which
is part of docker 23.0, so users should have had a chance to migrate.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These were deprecated in 6c400a9c2009bba9376ad61ab59c04c1ad675871 (docker 19.03),
but the "Deprecated:" comments were missing a newline before them.
While most IDEs will detect such comments as "deprecated", pkg.go.dev and linters
will ignore them, which may result in users not being aware of them being deprecated.
This patch;
- Fixes the "Deprecated:" comments.
- Changes the var aliases to functions, which is slightly more boilerplating,
but makes sure the functions are documented as "function", instead of shown
in the "variables" section on pkg.go.dev.
- Adds some punctuation and adds "doc links", which allows readers to navigate
to related content on pkg.go.dev.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This moves all the terminal writing to a goroutine that updates the
terminal periodically.
In our MITM copier we just use an atomic to add to the total number of
bytes read/written, the goroutine reads the total and updates the
terminal as needed.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
cli/config/configfile/file_test.go:189:33: unused-parameter: parameter 'authConfig' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *mockNativeStore) Store(authConfig types.AuthConfig) error {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
cli/compose/schema/schema.go:20:44: unused-parameter: parameter 'input' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (checker portsFormatChecker) IsFormat(input interface{}) bool {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
cli/command/volume/prune_test.go:113:22: unused-parameter: parameter 'args' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func simplePruneFunc(args filters.Args) (types.VolumesPruneReport, error) {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
cli/command/service/update_test.go:507:41: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (s secretAPIClientMock) SecretList(ctx context.Context, options types.SecretListOptions) ([]swarm.Secret, error) {
^
cli/command/service/update_test.go:511:43: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (s secretAPIClientMock) SecretCreate(ctx context.Context, secret swarm.SecretSpec) (types.SecretCreateResponse, error) {
^
cli/command/service/update_test.go:515:43: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (s secretAPIClientMock) SecretRemove(ctx context.Context, id string) error {
^
cli/command/service/update_test.go:519:51: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (s secretAPIClientMock) SecretInspectWithRaw(ctx context.Context, name string) (swarm.Secret, []byte, error) {
^
cli/command/service/update_test.go:523:43: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (s secretAPIClientMock) SecretUpdate(ctx context.Context, id string, version swarm.Version, secret swarm.SecretSpec) error {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
cli/command/plugin/client_test.go:23:35: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) PluginCreate(ctx context.Context, createContext io.Reader, createOptions types.PluginCreateOptions) error {
^
cli/command/plugin/client_test.go:30:35: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) PluginEnable(ctx context.Context, name string, enableOptions types.PluginEnableOptions) error {
^
cli/command/plugin/client_test.go:37:36: unused-parameter: parameter 'context' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) PluginDisable(context context.Context, name string, disableOptions types.PluginDisableOptions) error {
^
cli/command/plugin/client_test.go:44:35: unused-parameter: parameter 'context' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) PluginRemove(context context.Context, name string, removeOptions types.PluginRemoveOptions) error {
^
cli/command/plugin/client_test.go:51:36: unused-parameter: parameter 'context' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) PluginInstall(context context.Context, name string, installOptions types.PluginInstallOptions) (io.ReadCloser, error) {
^
cli/command/plugin/client_test.go:58:33: unused-parameter: parameter 'context' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) PluginList(context context.Context, filter filters.Args) (types.PluginsListResponse, error) {
^
cli/command/plugin/client_test.go:66:43: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) PluginInspectWithRaw(ctx context.Context, name string) (*types.Plugin, []byte, error) {
^
cli/command/plugin/client_test.go:74:27: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) Info(ctx context.Context) (types.Info, error) {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
cli/command/image/build/context_test.go:21:19: unused-parameter: parameter 't' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func prepareEmpty(t *testing.T) string {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
I could either remove the name for these contexts, or make the fake functions
more accurately reflect the actual implementation (decided to go for the latter
one)
cli/command/secret/client_test.go:19:35: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) SecretCreate(ctx context.Context, spec swarm.SecretSpec) (types.SecretCreateResponse, error) {
^
cli/command/secret/client_test.go:26:43: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) SecretInspectWithRaw(ctx context.Context, id string) (swarm.Secret, []byte, error) {
^
cli/command/secret/client_test.go:33:33: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) SecretList(ctx context.Context, options types.SecretListOptions) ([]swarm.Secret, error) {
^
cli/command/secret/client_test.go:40:35: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) SecretRemove(ctx context.Context, name string) error {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
I could either remove the name for these contexts, or make the fake functions
more accurately reflect the actual implementation (decided to go for the latter
one)
. cli/command/config/client_test.go:19:35: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) ConfigCreate(ctx context.Context, spec swarm.ConfigSpec) (types.ConfigCreateResponse, error) {
^
cli/command/config/client_test.go:26:43: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) ConfigInspectWithRaw(ctx context.Context, id string) (swarm.Config, []byte, error) {
^
cli/command/config/client_test.go:33:33: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) ConfigList(ctx context.Context, options types.ConfigListOptions) ([]swarm.Config, error) {
^
cli/command/config/client_test.go:40:35: unused-parameter: parameter 'ctx' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (c *fakeClient) ConfigRemove(ctx context.Context, name string) error {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These method must implements an interface, but don't use the argument.
cli/trust/trust.go:85:40: unused-parameter: parameter 'u' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (scs simpleCredentialStore) Basic(u *url.URL) (string, string) {
^
cli/trust/trust.go:89:47: unused-parameter: parameter 'u' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (scs simpleCredentialStore) RefreshToken(u *url.URL, service string) string {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This method implements the interface defined in distribution, but doesn't
use the argument.
cli/registry/client/endpoint.go:123:69: unused-parameter: parameter 'params' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (th *existingTokenHandler) AuthorizeRequest(req *http.Request, params map[string]string) error {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This function must match the interface, but doesn't use the firs argument.
cli/command/service/progress/progress.go:417:40: unused-parameter: parameter 'service' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func (u *globalProgressUpdater) update(service swarm.Service, tasks []swarm.Task, activeNodes map[string]struct{}, rollback bool) (bool, error) {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These functions must have the same signature, but only some of them accept
an "all" boolean argument;
88924b1802/cli/command/system/prune.go (L79)
cli/command/container/prune.go:78:38: unused-parameter: parameter 'all' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func RunPrune(dockerCli command.Cli, all bool, filter opts.FilterOpt) (uint64, string, error) {
^
cli/command/network/prune.go:73:38: unused-parameter: parameter 'all' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func RunPrune(dockerCli command.Cli, all bool, filter opts.FilterOpt) (uint64, string, error) {
^
cli/command/volume/prune.go:78:38: unused-parameter: parameter 'all' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func RunPrune(dockerCli command.Cli, all bool, filter opts.FilterOpt) (uint64, string, error) {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These wrappers were added to abstract stack deploy to k8s and swarm. Now
that support for deploying to k8s was removed, we can remove these wrappers.
This deprecates:
- RunDeploy()
- RunPs()
- RunRemove()
- GetServices()
This also addresses some linting failers, due to these functions having
unused arguments:
cli/command/stack/deploy.go:51:39: unused-parameter: parameter 'flags' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func RunDeploy(dockerCli command.Cli, flags *pflag.FlagSet, config *composetypes.Config, opts options.Deploy) error {
^
cli/command/stack/ps.go:42:35: unused-parameter: parameter 'flags' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func RunPs(dockerCli command.Cli, flags *pflag.FlagSet, opts options.PS) error {
^
cli/command/stack/remove.go:35:39: unused-parameter: parameter 'flags' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func RunRemove(dockerCli command.Cli, flags *pflag.FlagSet, opts options.Remove) error {
^
cli/command/stack/list.go:37:14: unused-parameter: parameter 'cmd' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func RunList(cmd *cobra.Command, dockerCli command.Cli, opts options.List) error {
^
cli/command/stack/services.go:56:41: unused-parameter: parameter 'flags' seems to be unused, consider removing or renaming it as _ (revive)
func GetServices(dockerCli command.Cli, flags *pflag.FlagSet, opts options.Services) ([]swarmtypes.Service, error) {
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
cli/command/container/run.go:176:3: redefines-builtin-id: redefinition of the built-in function close (revive)
close, err := attachContainer(ctx, dockerCli, &errCh, config, createResponse.ID)
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Only show progress updates after a time threshold has elapsed in order
to reduce the number of writes to the terminal.
This improves readability of the progress.
Also moves cursor show/hide into the progress printer to reduce chances
if messing up the user's terminal in case of cancellation.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
- Instead of rewriting the entire line every time only clear and write
the parts that changed.
- Hide the cursor while writing progress
Both these things make the progress updates significantly easier to
read.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
This fixes a case where a non-tty will have control characters + the log
line for every single read operation.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
We are currently loading plugin command stubs for every
invocation which still has a significant performance hit.
With this change we are doing this operation only if cobra
completion arg request is found.
- 20.10.23: `docker --version` takes ~15ms
- 23.0.1: `docker --version` takes ~93ms
With this change `docker --version` takes ~9ms
Signed-off-by: CrazyMax <crazy-max@users.noreply.github.com>
This code depended on the registry Service interface, which has been removed,
so needed to be refactored. Digging further into the reason this code existed,
it looked like the Class=plugin was previously required on Docker Hub to handle
plugins, but this requirement is no longer there, so we can remove this special
handling.
This patch removes the special handling to both remove the use of the registry.Service
interface, as well as removing complexity that is no longer needed.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This function was deprecated in b4ca1c7368,
which is part of the v23.0 release, and is no longer used, so we can remove it.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The comment was not formatted correctly, and because of that not picked up as
being deprecated.
updates b4ca1c7368
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These tests were deliberately producing errors as part of the test, but
printing those errors could be confusing / make it more difficult to find
actual test-failures.
Before this patch:
=== RUN TestVolumeCreateErrors
Error: conflicting options: either specify --name or provide positional arg, not both
Error: "create" requires at most 1 argument.
See 'create --help'.
Usage: create [OPTIONS] [VOLUME] [flags]
Create a volume
Error: error creating volume
--- PASS: TestVolumeCreateErrors (0.00s)
PASS
With this patch applied:
=== RUN TestVolumeCreateErrors
--- PASS: TestVolumeCreateErrors (0.00s)
PASS
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Make the error more specific by stating that it's caused by a specific
environment variable and not an environment as a whole.
Also don't escape the variable to make it more readable.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
On Windows, ignore all variables that start with "=" when building an
environment variables map for stack.
For MS-DOS compatibility cmd.exe can set some special environment
variables that start with a "=" characters, which breaks the general
assumption that the first encountered "=" separates a variable name from
variable value and causes trouble when parsing.
These variables don't seem to be documented anywhere, but they are
described by some third-party sources and confirmed empirically on my
Windows installation.
Useful sources:
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20100506-00/?p=14133https://ss64.com/nt/syntax-variables.html
Known variables:
- `=ExitCode` stores the exit code returned by external command (in hex
format)
- `=ExitCodeAscii` - same as above, except the value is the ASCII
representation of the code (so exit code 65 (0x41) becomes 'A').
- `=::=::\` and friends - store drive specific working directory.
There is one env variable for each separate drive letter that was
accessed in the shell session and stores the working directory for that
specific drive.
The general format for these is:
`=<DRIVE_LETTER>:=<CWD>` (key=`=<DRIVE_LETTER>:`, value=`<CWD>`)
where <CWD> is a working directory for the drive that is assigned to
the letter <DRIVE_LETTER>
A couple of examples:
`=C:=C:\some\dir` (key: `=C:`, value: `C:\some\dir`)
`=D:=D:\some\other\dir` (key: `=C:`, value: `C:\some\dir`)
`=Z:=Z:\` (key: `=Z:`, value: `Z:\`)
`=::=::\` is the one that seems to be always set and I'm not exactly
sure what this one is for (what's drive `::`?). Others are set as
soon as you CD to a path on some drive. Considering that you start a
cmd.exe also has some working directory, there are 2 of these on start.
All these variables can be safely ignored because they can't be
deliberately set by the user, their meaning is only relevant to the
cmd.exe session and they're all are related to the MS-DOS/Batch feature
that are irrelevant for us.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
Tests mocking the output of GET images/json with fakeClient used an
array with one empty element as an empty response.
Change it to just an empty array.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
The error returned from "os/exec".Command when attempting to execute a
directory has been changed from syscall.EACCESS to syscall.EISDIR on
Go 1.20. 2b8f214094
Consequently, any runc runtime built against Go 1.20 will return an
error containing 'is a directory' and not 'permission denied'. Update
the string matching so the CLI exits with status code 126 on 'is a
directory' errors (EISDIR) in addition to 'permission denied' (EACCESS).
Signed-off-by: Cory Snider <csnider@mirantis.com>
This prevents us needing to attempt to reconstruct the exact indentation
registry side, which is not canonical - so may differ.
Signed-off-by: Justin Chadwell <me@jedevc.com>
This behavior should not break any more use cases than before.
Previously, if the mismatch occured, we would actually push a manifest
that we then never referred to in the manifest list! If this was done in
a new repository, the command would fail with an obscure error from the
registry - the content wouldn't exist with the descriptor we expect it
to.
Signed-off-by: Justin Chadwell <me@jedevc.com>
The additionalHelp message is printed at the end of the --help output;
To get more help with docker, check out our guides at https://docs.docker.com/go/guides/
PS>
As this message may contain an URL, users may copy/paste the URL to open it
in their browser, but can easily end up copying their prompt (as there's
no whitespace after it), and as a result end up on a broken URL, for example:
https://docs.docker.com/go/guides/PS
This patch adds an extra newline at the end to provide some whitespace
around the message, making it less error-prone to copy the URL;
To get more help with docker, check out our guides at https://docs.docker.com/go/guides/
PS>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This prevents the escape-characters being included when piping the
output, e.g. `docker --help > output.txt`, or `docker --help | something`.
These control-characters could cause issues if users copy/pasted the URL
from the output, resulting in them becoming part of the URL they tried
to visit, which would fail, e.g. when copying the output from:
To get more help with docker, check out our guides at https://docs.docker.com/go/guides/
Users ended up on URLs like;
https://docs.docker.com/go/guides/ESChttps://docs.docker.com/go/guides/%1B[0m
Before this patch, control characters ("bold") would be printed, even if
no TTY was attached;
docker --help > output.txt
cat output.txt | grep 'For more help' | od -c
0000000 033 [ 1 m F o r m o r e h e l
0000020 p o n h o w t o u s e
0000040 D o c k e r , h e a d t o
0000060 h t t p s : / / d o c s . d o c
0000100 k e r . c o m / g o / g u i d e
0000120 s / 033 [ 0 m \n
0000127
docker --help | grep 'For more help' | od -c
0000000 033 [ 1 m F o r m o r e h e l
0000020 p o n h o w t o u s e
0000040 D o c k e r , h e a d t o
0000060 h t t p s : / / d o c s . d o c
0000100 k e r . c o m / g o / g u i d e
0000120 s / 033 [ 0 m \n
0000127
With this patch, no control characters are included:
docker --help > output.txt
cat output.txt | grep 'For more help' | od -c
0000000 F o r m o r e h e l p o n
0000020 h o w t o u s e D o c k
0000040 e r , h e a d t o h t t p
0000060 s : / / d o c s . d o c k e r .
0000100 c o m / g o / g u i d e s / \n
0000117
docker --help | grep 'For more help' | od -c
0000000 F o r m o r e h e l p o n
0000020 h o w t o u s e D o c k
0000040 e r , h e a d t o h t t p
0000060 s : / / d o c s . d o c k e r .
0000100 c o m / g o / g u i d e s / \n
0000117
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The DockerCLI interface was repeating the Streams interface. Embed
the interface to make it more transparent that they're the same.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Synchronize append on the `removed` slice with mutex because
containerRemoveFunc is called in parallel for each removed container by
`container rm` cli command.
Also reduced the shared access area by separating the scopes of test
cases.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
This comment was added in 7929888214
when this code was still in the Moby repository. That comment doesn't appear
to apply to the CLI's usage of this struct though, as nothing in the CLI
sets this field (or uses it), so this should be safe to remove.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Libtrust was only used for pushing schema 2, v1 images, which is no longer
supported; this TODO was likely left from when the CLI and daemon were
in the same repository.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This allows the cli to be initialized with a (custom) API client.
Currently to be used for unit tests, but could be used for other
scenarios.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Make sure that the container has multiple port-mappings to illustrate
that only the given port is matched.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- use strings.Cut
- don't use nat.NewPort as we don't accept port ranges
- use an early return if there's no results
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
if a context is set (e.g. through DOCKER_CONTEXT or the CLI config file), but
wasn't found, then a "stub" context is added, including an error message that
the context doesn't exist.
DOCKER_CONTEXT=nosuchcontext docker context ls
NAME DESCRIPTION DOCKER ENDPOINT ERROR
default Current DOCKER_HOST based configuration unix:///var/run/docker.sock
nosuchcontext * context "nosuchcontext": context not found: …
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This updates `docker context ls` to:
- not abort listing contexts when failing one (or more) contexts
- instead, adding an ERROR column to inform the user there was
an issue loading the context.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This allows commands that don't require a client connection (such as `context use`)
to be functional, but still produces an error when trying to run a command that
needs to connect with the API;
mkdir -p ~/.docker/ && echo '{"currentContext":"nosuchcontext"}' > ~/.docker/config.json
docker version
Failed to initialize: unable to resolve docker endpoint: load context "nosuchcontext": context does not exist: open /root/.docker/contexts/meta/8bfef2a74c7d06add4bf4c73b0af97d9f79c76fe151ae0e18b9d7e57104c149b/meta.json: no such file or directory
docker context use default
default
Current context is now "default"
docker version
Client:
Version: 22.06.0-dev
API version: 1.42
...
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The "docker context show" command is intended to show the currently configured
context. While the context that's configured may not be valid (e.g., in case
an environment variable was set to configure the context, or if the context
was removed from the filesystem), we should still be able to _show_ the
context.
This patch removes the context validation, and instead only shows the context.
This can help in cases where the context is used to (e.g.) set the command-
prompt, but the user removed the context. With this change, the context name
can still be shown, but commands that _require_ the context will still fail.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This internalizes constructing the Client(), which allows us to provide
fallbacks when trying to determin the current API version.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Also move the resolveContextName() function together with the
method for easier cross-referencing.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
There's no strict need to perform this validation inside this function;
validating flags should happen earlier, to allow faster detecting of
configuration issues (we may want to have a central config "validate"
function though).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
resolveContextName() is used to find which context to use, based on the
available configuration options. Once resolved, the context name is
used to load the actual context, which will fail if the context doesn't
exist, so there's no need to produce an error at this stage; only
check priority of the configuration options to pick the context
with the highest priority.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
CommonOptions was inherited from when the cli and daemon were in the same
repository, and some options would be shared between them. That's no longer
the case, and some options are even "incorrect" (for example, while the
daemon can be configured to run on multiple hosts, the CLI can only connect
with a single host / connection). This patch does not (yet) address that,
but merges the CommonOptions into the ClientOptions.
An alias is created for the old type, although it doesn't appear there's
any external consumers using the CommonOptions type (or its constructor).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- Make the package-level configMergeTests local to the test itself.
- Rename fields to better describe intent
- Remove some redundant variables
- Reverse "expected" and "actual" fields for consistency
- Use assert.Check() to not fail early
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Various fixes:
- Don't capitalize error messages
- Rename variables that collided with imports or types
- Prefer assert.Check over assert.Assert to prevent tests covering multiple
cases from failing early
- Fix inconsistent order of expected <--> actual, which made it difficult to
check which output was the expected output.
- Fix formatting of some comments
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
When marshaling the type with `gopkg.in/yaml.v3`, unmarshaling would
recursively call the type's `MarshalYAML()` function, which ultimately
resulted in a crash:
runtime: goroutine stack exceeds 1000000000-byte limit
runtime: sp=0x140202e0430 stack=[0x140202e0000, 0x140402e0000]
fatal error: stack overflow
This applies a similar fix as was implemented in e7788d6f9a
for the `MarshalJSON()` implementation. An alternative would be to use
a type alias (to remove the `MarshalYAML()`), but keeping it simple.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The version was originally added in 570ee9cb54,
at the time the `expected` config did not have a `version:` field. A later
refactor in 0cf2e6353a updated the `expected`
config to have a `version:` included. However, the test was not updated,
which now resulted in the test using a compose file with a duplicate version
field:
version: '3.10'
version: "3.10"
services:
foo:
build:
This issue was masked by `yaml.Unmarshal()` from `gopkg.in/yaml.v2` which
silently ignores the duplicate, taking the value of the last occurrence. When
upgrading to `gopkg.in/yaml.v3`, the duplicate value resulted in an error:
yaml: unmarshal errors:
line 2: mapping key "version" already defined at line 1
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Looks like the linter uses an explicit -lang, which (for go1.19)
results in some additional formatting for octal values.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The existing `remove()` was unused, and using that as name makes it more
consistent with the metadata-store. Also renaming `removeAllEndpointData`
to just `removeEndpoint`, as it's part of the TLS-store, which should already
make it clear it's about (TLS)data.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
There's no reason to stop listing contexts if a context does not exist
while iterating over the directories,
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Go conventions are for interfaces to be defined on the receiver side,
and for producers to return concrete types. This patch changes the
constructor to return a concrete type.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The package defined various special errors; these errors existed for two reasons;
- being able to distinguish "not found" errors from other errors (as "not found"
errors can be ignored in various cases).
- to be able to update the context _name_ in the error message after the error
was created. This was needed in cases where the name was not available at the
location where the error was produced (e.g. only the "id" was present), and
the helpers to detect "not found" errors did not support wrapped errors (so
wrapping the error with a "name" could break logic); a `setContextName` interface
and corresponding `patchErrContextName()` utility was created for this (which
was a "creative", but not very standard approach).
This patch:
- Removes the special error-types, replacing them with errdefs definitions (which
is a more common approach in our code-base to detect error types / classes).
- Removes the internal utilities for error-handling, and deprecates the exported
utilities (to allow external consumers to adjust their code).
- Some errors have been enriched with detailed information (which may be useful
for debugging / problem solving).
- Note that in some cases, `patchErrContextName()` was called, but the code
producing the error would never return a `setContextName` error, so would
never update the error message.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This test was depending on the fact that contextDir's are a string,
and for the test is was using the context _name_ as a pseudo-ID.
This patch updates the test to be more explicit where ID's and where
names are used.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This allows callers to just pass the name, and handle the conversion to ID and
path internally. This also fixes a test which incorrectly used "names" as
pseudo-IDs.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Before this change, running `docker context rm --force` would fail if the context
did not exist. This behavior was different from other commands, which allowed
ignoring non-existing objects.
For example; when trying to remove a non-existing volume, the command would
fail without "force":
```bash
docker volume rm nosuchvolume
Error: No such volume: nosuchvolume
echo $?
1
```
But using the `-f` / `--force` option would make the command complete successfully
(the error itself is still printed for informational purposes);
```bash
docker volume rm -f nosuchvolume
nosuchvolume
echo $?
0
```
With this patch, `docker context rm` behaves the same:
```bash
docker context rm nosuchcontext
context "nosuchcontext" does not exist
echo $?
1
```
```bash
docker context rm -f nosuchcontext
nosuchcontext
echo $?
0
```
This patch also simplifies how we check if the context exists; previously we
would try to read the context's metadata; this could fail if a context was
corrupted, or if an empty directory was present. This patch now only checks
if the directory exists, without first validating the context's data.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Also removing redundant defer for env.PatchAll(), which is now automatically
handled in t.Cleanup()
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
cli/command/container/opts.go:928:2: assigned to src, but reassigned without using the value (wastedassign)
src := ""
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
While fixing, also updated errors without placeholders to `errors.New()`, and
updated some code to use pkg/errors if it was already in use in the file.
cli/command/config/inspect.go:59:10: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return fmt.Errorf("Cannot supply extra formatting options to the pretty template")
^
cli/command/node/inspect.go:61:10: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return fmt.Errorf("Cannot supply extra formatting options to the pretty template")
^
cli/command/secret/inspect.go:57:10: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return fmt.Errorf("Cannot supply extra formatting options to the pretty template")
^
cli/command/trust/common.go:77:74: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return []trustTagRow{}, []client.RoleWithSignatures{}, []data.Role{}, fmt.Errorf("No signatures or cannot access %s", remote)
^
cli/command/trust/common.go:85:73: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return []trustTagRow{}, []client.RoleWithSignatures{}, []data.Role{}, fmt.Errorf("No signers for %s", remote)
^
cli/command/trust/sign.go:137:10: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return fmt.Errorf("No tag specified for %s", imgRefAndAuth.Name())
^
cli/command/trust/sign.go:151:19: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return *target, fmt.Errorf("No tag specified")
^
cli/command/trust/signer_add.go:77:10: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return fmt.Errorf("Failed to add signer to: %s", strings.Join(errRepos, ", "))
^
cli/command/trust/signer_remove.go:52:10: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return fmt.Errorf("Error removing signer from: %s", strings.Join(errRepos, ", "))
^
cli/command/trust/signer_remove.go:67:17: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return false, fmt.Errorf("All signed tags are currently revoked, use docker trust sign to fix")
^
cli/command/trust/signer_remove.go:108:17: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return false, fmt.Errorf("No signer %s for repository %s", signerName, repoName)
^
opts/hosts.go:89:14: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return "", fmt.Errorf("Invalid bind address format: %s", addr)
^
opts/hosts.go💯14: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return "", fmt.Errorf("Invalid proto, expected %s: %s", proto, addr)
^
opts/hosts.go:119:14: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return "", fmt.Errorf("Invalid proto, expected tcp: %s", tryAddr)
^
opts/hosts.go:144:14: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return "", fmt.Errorf("Invalid bind address format: %s", tryAddr)
^
opts/hosts.go:155:14: ST1005: error strings should not be capitalized (stylecheck)
return "", fmt.Errorf("Invalid bind address format: %s", tryAddr)
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
We try to keep this package close to upstream golang's code, so suppress the
linter warning.
cli/command/formatter/tabwriter/tabwriter.go:200:1: ST1020: comment on exported method Init should be of the form "Init ..." (stylecheck)
// A Writer must be initialized with a call to Init. The first parameter (output)
^
cli/command/formatter/tabwriter/tabwriter.go:425:1: ST1022: comment on exported const Escape should be of the form "Escape ..." (stylecheck)
// To escape a text segment, bracket it with Escape characters.
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
cli/command/cli_options_test.go:29:2: os.Setenv() can be replaced by `t.Setenv()` in TestWithContentTrustFromEnv (tenv)
os.Setenv(envvar, "true")
^
cli/command/cli_options_test.go:31:2: os.Setenv() can be replaced by `t.Setenv()` in TestWithContentTrustFromEnv (tenv)
os.Setenv(envvar, "false")
^
cli/command/cli_options_test.go:33:2: os.Setenv() can be replaced by `t.Setenv()` in TestWithContentTrustFromEnv (tenv)
os.Setenv(envvar, "invalid")
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
cli/command/manifest/inspect_test.go:9:2: ST1019: package "github.com/docker/cli/cli/manifest/types" is being imported more than once (stylecheck)
"github.com/docker/cli/cli/manifest/types"
^
cli/command/manifest/inspect_test.go:10:2: ST1019(related information): other import of "github.com/docker/cli/cli/manifest/types" (stylecheck)
manifesttypes "github.com/docker/cli/cli/manifest/types"
^
cli/command/stack/swarm/deploy_composefile.go:14:2: ST1019: package "github.com/docker/docker/client" is being imported more than once (stylecheck)
apiclient "github.com/docker/docker/client"
^
cli/command/stack/swarm/deploy_composefile.go:15:2: ST1019(related information): other import of "github.com/docker/docker/client" (stylecheck)
dockerclient "github.com/docker/docker/client"
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
cli/command/image/build/context.go:238:23: "400" can be replaced by http.StatusBadRequest (usestdlibvars)
if resp.StatusCode < 400 {
^
cli/trust/trust.go:139:30: "GET" can be replaced by http.MethodGet (usestdlibvars)
req, err := http.NewRequest("GET", endpointStr, nil)
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Having the intermediate variable made it difficult to see if it was
possibly mutated and/or something special done with it, so just use
the cli's accessors to get its Err().
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
As it's just an alias for filepath.IsAbs. Also added a normalize step in
TrimBuildFilesFromExcludes, so that callers are not _required_ to first
normalize the path.
We are considering deprecating and/or removing this function in the archive
package, so removing it in the cli code helps transitioning if we decide to
deprecate and/or remove it.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
`NewDockerCli` was configuring the standard streams using local code; this patch
instead uses the available `WithStandardStreams()` option to do the same.
There is slight difference in the order of events;
Previously, user-provided options would be applied first, after which NewDockerCli
would check if any of "in", "out", or "err" were nil, and if so set them to the
default stream (or writer) for that output.
The new code unconditionally sets the defaults _before_ applying user-provided
options. In practive, howver, this makes no difference; the fields set are not
exported, and the only functions updating them are `WithStandardStreams`,
`WithInputStream`, and `WithCombinedStream`, neither of which checks the old
value (so always overrides).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Migrating these functions to allow them being shared between moby, docker/cli,
and containerd, and to allow using them without importing all of sys / system,
which (in containerd) also depends on hcsshim and more.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- moby: a60b458179...d2590dc3cd
- swarmkit: 6068d1894d...48dd89375d
The .Parent field for buildcache entries was deprecated, and replaced with a
.Parents (plural) field. This patch updates the code accordingly. Unlike the
change in buildx
9c3be32bc9
we continue to fall back to the old field (which will be set on older API
versions).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Note that this does not fully fix the referenced issue, but
at least makes sure that API clients don't hang forever on
the initialization step.
See: https://github.com/docker/cli/issues/3652
Signed-off-by: Nick Santos <nick.santos@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Avoid updating the config-file if nothing changed. This also prevents creating
the file and config-directory if the default is used and no config-file existed
yet.
`config.Save()` performs various steps (creating the directory, updating
or copying permissions, etc etc), which are not needed if the defaults are
used; a445d97c25/cli/config/configfile/file.go (L135-L176)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This code was handling validation and parsing, only to discard the
results if it was the default context.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Older versions of Go do not format these comments, so we can already
reformat them ahead of time to prevent gofmt linting failing once
we update to Go 1.19 or up.
Result of:
gofmt -s -w $(find . -type f -name '*.go' | grep -v "/vendor/")
With some manual adjusting.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Cobra allows for aliases to be defined for a command, but only allows these
to be defined at the same level (for example, `docker image ls` as alias for
`docker image list`). Our CLI has some commands that are available both as a
top-level shorthand as well as `docker <object> <verb>` subcommands. For example,
`docker ps` is a shorthand for `docker container ps` / `docker container ls`.
This patch introduces a custom "aliases" annotation that can be used to print
all available aliases for a command. While this requires these aliases to be
defined manually, in practice the list of aliases rarely changes, so maintenance
should be minimal.
As a convention, we could consider the first command in this list to be the
canonical command, so that we can use this information to add redirects in
our documentation in future.
Before this patch:
docker images --help
Usage: docker images [OPTIONS] [REPOSITORY[:TAG]]
List images
Options:
-a, --all Show all images (default hides intermediate images)
...
With this patch:
docker images --help
Usage: docker images [OPTIONS] [REPOSITORY[:TAG]]
List images
Aliases:
docker image ls, docker image list, docker images
Options:
-a, --all Show all images (default hides intermediate images)
...
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Before this change, specifying the `--pull` flag without a value, could
result in the flag after it, or the positional argument to be used as
value.
This patch makes sure that the value is an expected value;
docker create --pull --rm hello-world
docker: invalid pull option: '--rm': must be one of "always", "missing" or "never".
docker run --pull --rm hello-world
docker: invalid pull option: '--rm': must be one of "always", "missing" or "never".
docker run --pull hello-world
docker: invalid pull option: 'hello-world': must be one of "always", "missing" or "never".
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The default output for Cobra aliases only shows the subcommand as alias, which
is not very intuitive. This patch changes the output to print the full command
as it would be called by the user.
Note that there's still some improvements to be made; due to how aliases must be
set-up in Cobra, aliases at different "levels" are still not shown. So for example,
`docker ps --help` will not show `docker container ps` as alias, and vice-versa.
This will require additional changes, and can possibly be resolved using custom
metadata/annotations.
Before this patch:
docker container ls --help
Usage: docker container ls [OPTIONS]
List containers
Aliases:
ls, ps, list
After this patch:
docker container ls --help
Usage: docker container ls [OPTIONS]
List containers
Aliases:
docker container ls, docker container ps, docker container list
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- do an early check if a custom format is specified either through the
command-line, or through the cli's configuration, before adjusting
the options (to add "size" if needed).
- also removes a redundant `options.Size = opts.size` line, as this value is
already copied at the start of buildContainerListOptions()
- Update NewContainerFormat to use "table" format as a default if no format
was given.
Co-authored-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Signed-off-by: Phong Tran <tran.pho@northeastern.edu>
Ths prettyPrintServerInfo() was checking for the Labels property to be
nil, but didn't check for empty slices.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Add Secret sorting prior to request to prevent flakiness in CI
Signed-off-by: Phong Tran <tran.pho@northeastern.edu>
Co-authored-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <thaJeztah@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: Phong Tran <tran.pho@northeastern.edu>
This updates the pretty-print format of docker info to provide more
details on installed plugins, to help users find where a specific
plugin is installed (e.g. to update it, or to uninstall it).
Before this patch:
```bash
Client:
Context: desktop-linux
Debug Mode: false
Plugins:
buildx: Docker Buildx (Docker Inc., v0.8.2)
compose: Docker Compose (Docker Inc., v2.4.1)
sbom: View the packaged-based Software Bill Of Materials (SBOM) for an image (Anchore Inc., 0.6.0)
scan: Docker Scan (Docker Inc., v0.17.0)
Server:
...
```
With this patch applied:
```bash
docker info
Client:
Context: desktop-linux
Debug Mode: false
Plugins:
buildx: Docker Buildx (Docker Inc.)
Version: v0.8.2
Path: /usr/local/lib/docker/cli-plugins/docker-buildx
compose: Docker Compose (Docker Inc.)
Version: v2.4.1
Path: /usr/local/lib/docker/cli-plugins/docker-compose
sbom: View the packaged-based Software Bill Of Materials (SBOM) for an image (Anchore Inc.)
Version: 0.6.0
Path: /usr/local/lib/docker/cli-plugins/docker-sbom
scan: Docker Scan (Docker Inc.)
Version: v0.17.0
Path: /usr/local/lib/docker/cli-plugins/docker-scan
Server:
...
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This makes the containers have an expected console size not only for
`run` but also for `create`. Also remove the comment, as this is no
longer ignored on Linux daemon since e994efcf64c133de799f16f5cd6feb1fc41fade4
Signed-off-by: Paweł Gronowski <pawel.gronowski@docker.com>
Wording and documentation still need to be updated, but will do
so in a follow-up.
Also removing the default "10 seconds" from the timeout flags, as
this default is not actually used, and may not match the actual
default (which is defined on the daemon side).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Formatting stats runs in a loop to refresh the stats for each container. This
patch makes some small performance improvments by reducing the use of Sprintf
in favor of concatenating strings, and using strconv directly where possible.
Benchmark can be run with:
GO111MODULE=off go test -test.v -test.bench '^BenchmarkStatsFormat' -test.run '^$' ./cli/command/container/
Before/after:
BenchmarkStatsFormatOld-8 2655 428064 ns/op 62432 B/op 5600 allocs/op
BenchmarkStatsFormat-8 3338 335822 ns/op 52832 B/op 4700 allocs/op
Average of 5 runs;
benchstat old.txt new.txt
name old time/op new time/op delta
StatsFormat-8 432µs ± 1% 344µs ± 5% -20.42% (p=0.008 n=5+5)
name old alloc/op new alloc/op delta
StatsFormat-8 62.4kB ± 0% 52.8kB ± 0% -15.38% (p=0.000 n=5+4)
name old allocs/op new allocs/op delta
StatsFormat-8 5.60k ± 0% 4.70k ± 0% -16.07% (p=0.008 n=5+5)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
```
cli/command/container/hijack.go:188:1⚠️ nolint directive did not match any issue (nolint)
cli/command/image/trust.go:346:1⚠️ nolint directive did not match any issue (nolint)
cli/command/manifest/push.go:211:1⚠️ nolint directive did not match any issue (nolint)
cli/command/trust/signer_remove.go:79:1⚠️ nolint directive did not match any issue (nolint)
internal/pkg/containerized/snapshot.go:95:1⚠️ nolint directive did not match any issue (nolint)
internal/pkg/containerized/snapshot.go:138:1⚠️ nolint directive did not match any issue (nolint)
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This hides the flags when connecting to an older engine, or if
swarm is not enabled, and is also used to add badges in the
documentation.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- Prevent completion on "create" subcommands to prevent them
from completing with local filenames
- Add completion for "docker image save"
- Add completion for "docker image tag"
- Disable completion for "docker login"
- Exclude "paused" containers for "docker container attach" and
"docker container exec"
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Before this patch, the Server output would be printed even if we failed to
connect (including WARNINGS):
```bash
docker -H tcp://127.0.0.1:2375 info
Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at tcp://127.0.0.1:2375. Is the docker daemon running?
Client:
Context: default
Debug Mode: false
Plugins:
buildx: Docker Buildx (Docker Inc., v0.8.2)
compose: Docker Compose (Docker Inc., v2.4.1)
sbom: View the packaged-based Software Bill Of Materials (SBOM) for an image (Anchore Inc., 0.6.0)
scan: Docker Scan (Docker Inc., v0.17.0)
Server:
Containers: 0
Running: 0
Paused: 0
Stopped: 0
Images: 0
Plugins:
Volume:
Network:
Log:
Swarm:
NodeID:
Is Manager: false
Node Address:
CPUs: 0
Total Memory: 0B
Docker Root Dir:
Debug Mode: false
Experimental: false
Live Restore Enabled: false
WARNING: No memory limit support
WARNING: No swap limit support
WARNING: No oom kill disable support
WARNING: No cpu cfs quota support
WARNING: No cpu cfs period support
WARNING: No cpu shares support
WARNING: No cpuset support
WARNING: IPv4 forwarding is disabled
WARNING: bridge-nf-call-iptables is disabled
WARNING: bridge-nf-call-ip6tables is disabled
ERROR: Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at tcp://127.0.0.1:2375. Is the docker daemon running?
errors pretty printing info
```
With this patch;
```bash
docker -H tcp://127.0.0.1:2375 info
Client:
Context: default
Debug Mode: false
Plugins:
buildx: Docker Buildx (Docker Inc., v0.8.2)
compose: Docker Compose (Docker Inc., v2.4.1)
sbom: View the packaged-based Software Bill Of Materials (SBOM) for an image (Anchore Inc., 0.6.0)
scan: Docker Scan (Docker Inc., v0.17.0)
Server:
ERROR: Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at tcp://127.0.0.1:2375. Is the docker daemon running?
errors pretty printing info
```
And if a custom format is used:
```bash
docker -H tcp://127.0.0.1:2375 info --format '{{.Containers}}'
Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at tcp://127.0.0.1:2375. Is the docker daemon running?
0
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Before this change, the function could print an error in some cases, for example;
```bash
docker -H tcp://127.0.0.1:2375 info --format '{{.LoggingDriver}}'
template: :1:2: executing "" at <.LoggingDriver>: reflect: indirection through nil pointer to embedded struct field Info
```
With this patch applied, the error is handled gracefully, and when failing to
connect with the daemon, the error is logged;
```bash
docker -H tcp://127.0.0.1:2375 info --format '{{.LoggingDriver}}'
Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at tcp://127.0.0.1:2375. Is the docker daemon running?
docker -H tcp://127.0.0.1:2375 info --format '{{json .}}'
Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at tcp://127.0.0.1:2375. Is the docker daemon running?
{"ID":"","Containers":0,"..."}}
```
Note that the connection error is also included in the JSON `ServerErrors` field,
so that the information does not get lost, even if STDERR would be redirected;
```bash
docker -H tcp://127.0.0.1:2375 info --format '{{json .ServerErrors}}' 2> /dev/null
["Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at tcp://127.0.0.1:2375. Is the docker daemon running?"]
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This test is very flaky, the retry loop runs for 550ms and some more, 750ms is
cleary not enough for everything to set and for the cli to return the tty resize
error. A sleep of 1.5 seconds in this test should be enough for the retry loop to
finish.
Signed-off-by: Djordje Lukic <djordje.lukic@docker.com>
I some cases, for example if there is a heavy load, the initialization of the TTY size
would fail. This change makes the cli retry 10 times instead of 5 and we wait
incrementally from 10ms to 100ms
Relates to #3554
Signed-off-by: Djordje Lukic <djordje.lukic@docker.com>
These annotations were added because these options were not supported
when using kubernetes as an orchestrator. Now that this feature was
removed, we can remove these annotations.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
full diff: 616e8db4c3...6068d1894d
a replace rule was needed (similar as in github.com/docker/docker) to fix some
dependency issues;
github.com/docker/cli/cli/trust imports
github.com/theupdateframework/notary/trustpinning tested by
github.com/theupdateframework/notary/trustpinning.test imports
github.com/cloudflare/cfssl/helpers imports
github.com/google/certificate-transparency-go imports
go.etcd.io/etcd/v3 imports
go.etcd.io/etcd/tests/v3/integration imports
go.etcd.io/etcd/server/v3/embed imports
go.opentelemetry.io/otel/semconv: module go.opentelemetry.io/otel@latest found (v1.7.0), but does not contain package go.opentelemetry.io/otel/semconv
github.com/docker/cli/cli/trust imports
github.com/theupdateframework/notary/trustpinning tested by
github.com/theupdateframework/notary/trustpinning.test imports
github.com/cloudflare/cfssl/helpers imports
github.com/google/certificate-transparency-go imports
go.etcd.io/etcd/v3 imports
go.etcd.io/etcd/tests/v3/integration imports
go.etcd.io/etcd/server/v3/embed imports
go.opentelemetry.io/otel/exporters/otlp imports
go.opentelemetry.io/otel/sdk/metric/controller/basic imports
go.opentelemetry.io/otel/metric/registry: module go.opentelemetry.io/otel/metric@latest found (v0.30.0), but does not contain package go.opentelemetry.io/otel/metric/registry
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The code is similar to that used by the volume rm subcommand, however,
one difference I noticed was VolumeRemove takes the force flag/option
was a parameter. This isn't the case for NetworkRemove.
To get NetworkRemove to take a similar parameter, this would require
modifying the Docker daemon. For now this isn't a route I wish to take
when the code can be arrange to mimic the same behavior.
Co-authored-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Signed-off-by: Conner Crosby <conner@cavcrosby.tech>
pkg/urlutil (despite its poorly chosen name) is not really intended as a
generic utility to handle URLs, and should only be used by the builder to
handle (remote) build contexts.
The `IsURL()` function only does a very rudimentary check for `http(s)://`
prefixes, without any other validation, but due to its name may give
incorrect expectations.
As we're deprecating this package for uses other than for build-contexts,
this patch replaces this instance of the utility for a local function.
While changing, also cleaned up some intermediate variables, and made
the logic slightly more descriptive.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This check doesn't really make sense because the client doesn't know on what
OS the daemon is really running.
The daemon uses the console size on creation when available (on windows).
Signed-off-by: Djordje Lukic <djordje.lukic@docker.com>
Now that we no longer support kubernetes as orchestrator in the cli
itself, we may as well be using "Swarm" for these to make it clearer
what these commands are for :)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This adds a new annotation to commands that are known to be frequently
used, and allows setting a custom weight/order for these commands to
influence in what order they appear in the --help output.
I'm not entirely happy with the implementation (we could at least use
some helpers for this, and/or make it more generic to group commands
in output), but it could be a start.
For now, limiting this to only be used for the top-level --help, but
we can expand this to subcommands as well if we think it makes sense
to highlight "common" / "commonly used" commands.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These commands are commonly used, so removing them from the list of "legacy"
top-level commands that are hidden when setting DOCKER_HIDE_LEGACY_COMMANDS=1
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Before this change, the top-level flags, such as `--config` and `--tlscacert`,
were printed at the top of the `--help` output. These flags are not used
frequently, and putting them at the top, made the information that's more
relevant to most users harder to find.
This patch moves the top-level flags for the root command (`docker`) to the
bottom of the help output, putting the subcommands more prominent in view.
With this patch:
Usage: docker [OPTIONS] COMMAND
A self-sufficient runtime for containers
Management Commands:
builder Manage builds
buildx* Docker Buildx (Docker Inc., v0.7.1)
checkpoint Manage checkpoints
completion Generate the autocompletion script for the specified shell
container Manage containers
context Manage contexts
image Manage images
manifest Manage Docker image manifests and manifest lists
network Manage networks
plugin Manage plugins
stack Manage Swarm stacks
system Manage Docker
trust Manage trust on Docker images
volume Manage volumes
Orchestration Commands:
config Manage Swarm configs
node Manage Swarm nodes
secret Manage Swarm secrets
service Manage Swarm services
swarm Manage Swarm
Commands:
attach Attach local standard input, output, and error streams to a running container
build Build an image from a Dockerfile
commit Create a new image from a container's changes
cp Copy files/folders between a container and the local filesystem
create Create a new container
diff Inspect changes to files or directories on a container's filesystem
events Get real time events from the server
exec Run a command in a running container
export Export a container's filesystem as a tar archive
history Show the history of an image
images List images
import Import the contents from a tarball to create a filesystem image
info Display system-wide information
inspect Return low-level information on Docker objects
kill Kill one or more running containers
load Load an image from a tar archive or STDIN
login Log in to a Docker registry
logout Log out from a Docker registry
logs Fetch the logs of a container
pause Pause all processes within one or more containers
port List port mappings or a specific mapping for the container
ps List containers
pull Pull an image or a repository from a registry
push Push an image or a repository to a registry
rename Rename a container
restart Restart one or more containers
rm Remove one or more containers
rmi Remove one or more images
run Run a command in a new container
save Save one or more images to a tar archive (streamed to STDOUT by default)
search Search the Docker Hub for images
start Start one or more stopped containers
stats Display a live stream of container(s) resource usage statistics
stop Stop one or more running containers
tag Create a tag TARGET_IMAGE that refers to SOURCE_IMAGE
top Display the running processes of a container
unpause Unpause all processes within one or more containers
update Update configuration of one or more containers
version Show the Docker version information
wait Block until one or more containers stop, then print their exit codes
Global Options:
--config string Location of client config files (default "/root/.docker")
-c, --context string Name of the context to use to connect to the daemon (overrides DOCKER_HOST env var and default context set with "docker context use")
-D, --debug Enable debug mode
-H, --host list Daemon socket(s) to connect to
-l, --log-level string Set the logging level ("debug"|"info"|"warn"|"error"|"fatal") (default "info")
--tls Use TLS; implied by --tlsverify
--tlscacert string Trust certs signed only by this CA (default "/root/.docker/ca.pem")
--tlscert string Path to TLS certificate file (default "/root/.docker/cert.pem")
--tlskey string Path to TLS key file (default "/root/.docker/key.pem")
--tlsverify Use TLS and verify the remote
-v, --version Print version information and quit
Run 'docker COMMAND --help' for more information on a command.
To get more help with docker, check out our guides at https://docs.docker.com/go/guides/
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This groups all swarm-related subcommands to their own section in the --help
output, to make it clearer which commands require swarm to be enabled
With this change:
Usage: docker [OPTIONS] COMMAND
A self-sufficient runtime for containers
Options:
--config string Location of client config files (default "/Users/sebastiaan/.docker")
-c, --context string Name of the context to use to connect to the daemon (overrides DOCKER_HOST env var and default context set with "docker context use")
-D, --debug Enable debug mode
-H, --host list Daemon socket(s) to connect to
-l, --log-level string Set the logging level ("debug"|"info"|"warn"|"error"|"fatal") (default "info")
--tls Use TLS; implied by --tlsverify
--tlscacert string Trust certs signed only by this CA (default "/Users/sebastiaan/.docker/ca.pem")
--tlscert string Path to TLS certificate file (default "/Users/sebastiaan/.docker/cert.pem")
--tlskey string Path to TLS key file (default "/Users/sebastiaan/.docker/key.pem")
--tlsverify Use TLS and verify the remote
-v, --version Print version information and quit
Management Commands:
builder Manage builds
buildx* Docker Buildx (Docker Inc., v0.8.1)
checkpoint Manage checkpoints
completion Generate the autocompletion script for the specified shell
compose* Docker Compose (Docker Inc., v2.3.3)
container Manage containers
context Manage contexts
image Manage images
manifest Manage Docker image manifests and manifest lists
network Manage networks
plugin Manage plugins
scan* Docker Scan (Docker Inc., v0.17.0)
system Manage Docker
trust Manage trust on Docker images
volume Manage volumes
Orchestration Commands:
config Manage Swarm configs
node Manage Swarm nodes
secret Manage Swarm secrets
service Manage Swarm services
stack Manage Swarm stacks
swarm Manage Swarm
Commands:
attach Attach local standard input, output, and error streams to a running container
build Build an image from a Dockerfile
commit Create a new image from a container's changes
cp Copy files/folders between a container and the local filesystem
create Create a new container
diff Inspect changes to files or directories on a container's filesystem
events Get real time events from the server
exec Run a command in a running container
export Export a container's filesystem as a tar archive
history Show the history of an image
images List images
import Import the contents from a tarball to create a filesystem image
info Display system-wide information
inspect Return low-level information on Docker objects
kill Kill one or more running containers
load Load an image from a tar archive or STDIN
login Log in to a Docker registry
logout Log out from a Docker registry
logs Fetch the logs of a container
pause Pause all processes within one or more containers
port List port mappings or a specific mapping for the container
ps List containers
pull Pull an image or a repository from a registry
push Push an image or a repository to a registry
rename Rename a container
restart Restart one or more containers
rm Remove one or more containers
rmi Remove one or more images
run Run a command in a new container
save Save one or more images to a tar archive (streamed to STDOUT by default)
search Search the Docker Hub for images
start Start one or more stopped containers
stats Display a live stream of container(s) resource usage statistics
stop Stop one or more running containers
tag Create a tag TARGET_IMAGE that refers to SOURCE_IMAGE
top Display the running processes of a container
unpause Unpause all processes within one or more containers
update Update configuration of one or more containers
version Show the Docker version information
wait Block until one or more containers stop, then print their exit codes
Run 'docker COMMAND --help' for more information on a command.
To get more help with docker, check out our guides at https://docs.docker.com/go/guides/
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Configuration (enabling/disabling) of Experimental client features
was deprecated in Docker 19.03, and removed in 20.10. Experimental
CLI features are now always enabled. In Docker 20.10, the Experimental
field in `docker version` was kept (but always true).
This patch removes the field from the output (both "pretty" output
and the JSON struct).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Make use of existing modules and functions in order to output the merged configs.
Added skip interpolation flag of variables, so that you can pipe the output back to stack deploy without much hassle.
Signed-off-by: Stoica-Marcu Floris-Andrei <floris.sm@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These warnings were for features that are no longer supported (overlay
on a backingFS without d_type support), or related to the deprecated
devicemapper storage driver.
Removing this function for that reason.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The `~/.dockercfg` file was replaced by `~/.docker/config.json` in 2015
(github.com/docker/docker/commit/18c9b6c6455f116ae59cde8544413b3d7d294a5e),
but the CLI still falls back to checking if this file exists if no current
(`~/.docker/config.json`) file was found.
Given that no version of the CLI since Docker v1.7.0 has created this file,
and if such a file exists, it means someone hasn't re-authenticated for
5 years, it's probably safe to remove this fallback.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Remove "Docker" from registry, as the registry specification is no
longer docker-specific, but part of the OCI distribution spec.
Also removed "Register" from one of the docs pages, as the login
command hasn't supported creating a new acccount on Docker Hub for
a long time.
I'm wondering if we should be more explicit about what log in / out
does (effectively; authenticate, and on success store the credentials
or token, and on log out; remove credentials/token).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This test uses two subtests that were sharing the same variable.
Subtests run in a goroutine, which could lead to them concurrently
accessing the variable, resulting in a panic:
=== FAIL: cli/command/container TestRemoveForce/without_force (0.00s)
Error: Error: No such container: nosuchcontainer
--- FAIL: TestRemoveForce/without_force (0.00s)
panic: runtime error: invalid memory address or nil pointer dereference [recovered]
panic: runtime error: invalid memory address or nil pointer dereference
[signal SIGSEGV: segmentation violation code=0x1 addr=0x0 pc=0x40393f]
goroutine 190 [running]:
testing.tRunner.func1.2({0xb76380, 0x124c9a0})
/usr/local/go/src/testing/testing.go:1389 +0x24e
testing.tRunner.func1()
/usr/local/go/src/testing/testing.go:1392 +0x39f
panic({0xb76380, 0x124c9a0})
/usr/local/go/src/runtime/panic.go:838 +0x207
sort.StringSlice.Less(...)
/usr/local/go/src/sort/sort.go:319
sort.insertionSort({0xd87380, 0xc00051b3b0}, 0x0, 0x2)
/usr/local/go/src/sort/sort.go:40 +0xb1
sort.quickSort({0xd87380, 0xc00051b3b0}, 0x18?, 0xb4f060?, 0xc000540e01?)
/usr/local/go/src/sort/sort.go:222 +0x171
sort.Sort({0xd87380, 0xc00051b3b0})
/usr/local/go/src/sort/sort.go:231 +0x53
sort.Strings(...)
/usr/local/go/src/sort/sort.go:335
github.com/docker/cli/cli/command/container.TestRemoveForce.func2(0xc0005389c0?)
/go/src/github.com/docker/cli/cli/command/container/rm_test.go:36 +0x125
testing.tRunner(0xc00053e4e0, 0xc00051b140)
/usr/local/go/src/testing/testing.go:1439 +0x102
created by testing.(*T).Run
/usr/local/go/src/testing/testing.go:1486 +0x35f
=== FAIL: cli/command/container TestRemoveForce (0.00s)
This patch changes the test to use to separate variables.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This function was not used anywhere, and the error type already satisfied
the github.com/docker/docker/errdefs.ErrNotFound interface, so let's remove
this utility and (if needed at some point) use errdefs.IsNotFound() instead.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This was added in fd2f1b3b66 as part of
the `docker engine` sub-commands, which were deprecated, and removed in
43b2f52d0c.
This function is not used by anyone, so safe to remove.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This was added in fd2f1b3b66 as part of
the `docker engine` sub-commands, which were deprecated, and removed
in 43b2f52d0c.
This function is not used by anyone, so safe to remove.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
It's slightly more verbose, but helps finding the purpose of each
of the environment variables. In tests, I kept the fixed strings.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The daemon (and registry) already have a default limit. This patch
removes the default from the client side, to not duplicate setting
these defaults.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These tests were creating a stub container, using the current timestamp as
created date. However, if CI was slow to run the test, `Less than a second ago`
would change into `1 second ago`, causing the test to fail:
--- FAIL: TestContainerListNoTrunc (0.00s)
list_test.go:198: assertion failed:
--- expected
+++ actual
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
-container_id busybox:latest "top" Less than a second ago Up 1 second c1
-container_id busybox:latest "top" Less than a second ago Up 1 second c2,foo/bar
+CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
+container_id busybox:latest "top" 1 second ago Up 1 second c1
+container_id busybox:latest "top" 1 second ago Up 1 second c2,foo/bar
This patch changes the "created" time of the container to be a minute ago. This
will result in `About a minute ago`, with a margin of 1 minute.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- updated the default value for `--limit` on `docker search` as the const has been
removed (added a todo to remove it)
- updated some fixtures to account for `KernelMemoryTCP` no longer being included
in the output.
full diff: 83b51522df...8941dcfcc5
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
cli/compose/interpolation/interpolation.go:102:4: error-strings: error strings should not be capitalized or end with punctuation or a newline (revive)
"invalid interpolation format for %s: %#v. You may need to escape any $ with another $.",
^
cli/command/stack/loader/loader.go:30:30: error-strings: error strings should not be capitalized or end with punctuation or a newline (revive)
return nil, errors.Errorf("Compose file contains unsupported options:\n\n%s\n",
^
cli/command/formatter/formatter.go:76:30: error-strings: error strings should not be capitalized or end with punctuation or a newline (revive)
return tmpl, errors.Errorf("Template parsing error: %v\n", err)
^
cli/command/formatter/formatter.go:97:24: error-strings: error strings should not be capitalized or end with punctuation or a newline (revive)
return errors.Errorf("Template parsing error: %v\n", err)
^
cli/command/image/build.go:257:25: error-strings: error strings should not be capitalized or end with punctuation or a newline (revive)
return errors.Errorf("error checking context: '%s'.", err)
^
cli/command/volume/create.go:35:27: error-strings: error strings should not be capitalized or end with punctuation or a newline (revive)
return errors.Errorf("Conflicting options: either specify --name or provide positional arg, not both\n")
^
cli/command/container/create.go:160:24: error-strings: error strings should not be capitalized or end with punctuation or a newline (revive)
return errors.Errorf("failed to remove the CID file '%s': %s \n", cid.path, err)
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The CLI currenly calls the `/info` endpoint to get the address
of the default registry to use.
This functionality was added as part of the initial Windows implementation
of the engine. For legal reasons, Microsoft Windows (and thus Docker images
based on Windows) were not allowed to be distributed through non-Microsoft
infrastructure. As a temporary solution, a dedicated "registry-win-tp3.docker.io"
registry was created to serve Windows images.
As a result, the default registry was no longer "fixed", so a helper function
(`ElectAuthServer`) was added to allow the CLI to get the correct registry
address from the daemon. (docker/docker PR's/issues 18019, 19891, 19973)
Using separate registries was not an ideal solution, and a more permanent
solution was created by introducing "foreign image layers" in the distribution
spec, after which the "registry-win-tp3.docker.io" ceased to exist, and
removed from the engine through docker/docker PR 21100.
However, the `ElectAuthServer` was left in place, quoting from that PR;
> make the client check which default registry the daemon uses is still
> more correct than leaving it up to the client, even if it won't technically
> matter after this PR. There may be some backward compatibility scenarios
> where `ElectAuthServer` [sic] is still helpful.
That comment was 5 years ago, and given that the engine and cli are
released in tandem, and the default registry is not configurable, we
can save the extra roundtrip to the daemon by using a fixed value.
This patch deprecates the `ElectAuthServer` function, and makes it
return the default registry without calling (potentially expensie)
`/info` API endpoint.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
With this change all `inspect` commands will output a compact JSON
representation of the elements, the default format (indented JSON) stays the
same.
Signed-off-by: Djordje Lukic <djordje.lukic@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
including all the directives and a link to the documentation.
Signed-off-by: Silvin Lubecki <silvin.lubecki@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Once upon a time, there was a website named ["The Docker index"][2]; a complimentary
service for users of Docker, provided by dotCloud. The Docker Index was the place
to find and explore pre-made container images, and allowed you to [share your
images and download them][1]. The Docker Index evolved rapidly, and gained new
features, such as [Trusted Images][3], and "stars" to rank your favorite images.
The website also provided an API, which allowed you to search images, even from
the comfort of your `docker` CLI. Things moved fast in container-land, and while
there was an API to use, it was still a work in progress. While the Docker Index
allowed users to "star" images, the search API did not rank results accordingly.
As any engineer knows, there's no problem that can't be solved with some elbow-
grease and a piece of Duct tape, so while the Docker Index team worked on making
the search API better, the `docker` engine [fixed the problem on the client side][4]
Years went by, and the Docker Index API became the "registry V1" specification,
including search. The registry got a major "v2" rewrite and became the [OCI Distribution
Spec][5], and Docker Index became Docker Hub, which included V2 and V3 search APIs.
The V1 search API continued to be supported, as it was the only documented API
for registries, but improvements were made, including ranking of search results.
Duct tape is durable, and even though improvements were made, the Docker client
continued to sort the results as well. Unfortunately, this meant that search
results on the command-line were ranked different from their equivalent on the
registry (such as Docker Hub).
This patch removes the client-side sorting of results, using the order in which
the search API returned them to (finally) celebrate the work of the engineers
working on the search API, also when used from the command-line.
[1]: https://web.archive.org/web/20130708004229/http://docker.io/
[2]: https://web.archive.org/web/20130623223614/https://index.docker.io/
[3]: https://web.archive.org/web/20140208001647/https://index.docker.io/
[4]: 1669b802cc
[5]: https://github.com/opencontainers/distribution-spec
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
With this change it is now possible to give a relative path to the --volume and
--mount flags.
$ docker run --mount type=bind,source=./,target=/test ...
$ docker run -v .:/test ...
Fixes#1203
Signed-off-by: Djordje Lukic <djordje.lukic@docker.com>
Changed `matcher.Matches(file)` to `matcher.MatchesOrParentMatches(file)`:
cli/command/image/build/context.go:95:9: SA1019: matcher.Matches is deprecated: This implementation is buggy (it only checks a single parent dir against the pattern) and will be removed soon. Use either MatchesOrParentMatches or MatchesUsingParentResults instead. (staticcheck)
return matcher.Matches(file)
^
And updated a test to match the JSON omitting empty RootFS.Type fields (in
practice, this field should never be empty in real situations, and always
be "layer"). Changed the test to use subtests to easier find which case
is failing.
full diff: 343665850e...83b51522df
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The information in this struct was basically fixed (there's
some discrepancy around the "DefaultVersion" which, probably,
should never vary, and always be set to the Default (maximum)
API version supported by the client.
Experimental is now always enabled, so this information did
not require any dynamic info as well.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This was there for historic reasons (I think `goimports` expected this,
and we used to have a linter that wanted it), but it's not needed, so
let's remove it (to make my IDE less complaining about unneeded aliases)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Not a fan of aliases, but unfortunately they're sometimes needed. We import both
docker/docker/registry and docker/registry and api/types/registry, so I looked
for which one to continue using an alias, and this was the one "least" used,
and which already used this alias everywhere, except for two places.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Just `config` as name for the package should work; this also revealed that one
file was importing the same package twice.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Previously, `version: "3"` was equivalent to `version: "3.0"`, which
caused confusion for many users, as they expected it to be "3.x".
docker-compose and docker compose (v2) have adopted the compose-spec
(https://compose-spec.io), which no longer has a version field in
the compose file, and always picks the "latest" supported version.
This changes how `docker stack` interprets "major" version numbers
specified in compose-files:
When only the major version ("3") is specified, it is now equivalent
to "3.x" (latest supported v3 schema).
Compose-files that specify both major and minor version (e.g. "3.0"
or "3.1") continue to use the existing behavior; validation is down-
graded to the specified version and will produce an error if options
are used that are not supported in that schema version. This allows
users to locally verify that a composse-file does not use options
that are not supported in the intended deployment environment (for
example if the deploy environment only supports older versions of
the schema).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Remove various tests and utilities related to testing kubernetes support
Also removing the Kubernetes and DefaultStackOrchestrator from CreateOptions
and UpdateOptions, instead updating the flags to not be bound to a variable.
This might break some consumers of those options, but given that they've become
non-functional, that's probably ok (otherwise they may ignore the deprecation
warning and end up with non-functional code).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Removes the --kubeconfig flag, and the corresponding ExportOptions.Kubeconfig,
as well as special handling for kubeconfig export, as it's no longer used.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The compose spec (https://compose-spec.io) defines the version to be optional,
and implementations of the spec to check for supported attributes instead.
While this change does not switch the `docker stack` implementation to use the
compose-spec, it makes it function more similar. Previously, omitting a version
number would either produce an error (as the field was required), or switched
the handling to assume it was version 1.0 (which is deprecated).
With this change, compose files without a version number will be handled as
the latest version supported by `docker stack` (currently 3.10). This allows
users that work with docker-compose or docker compose (v2) to deploy their
compose file, without having to re-add a version number. Fields that are
not supported by stackes (schema 3.10) will still produce an error.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Adding a copy of the 3.9 schema, with only the version-string changed.
This makes it easier to find changes since 3.9, which are added after
this.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
With this change:
echo 'FROM busybox' | DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1 docker build -
ERROR: BuildKit is enabled but the buildx component is missing or broken.
Install the buildx component to build images with BuildKit:
https://docs.docker.com/go/buildx/
echo 'FROM busybox' | docker build -
DEPRECATED: The legacy builder is deprecated and will be removed in a future release.
Install the buildx component to build images with BuildKit:
https://docs.docker.com/go/buildx/
Sending build context to Docker daemon 2.048kB
...
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
> Legacy PEM encryption as specified in RFC 1423 is insecure by design. Since
> it does not authenticate the ciphertext, it is vulnerable to padding oracle
> attacks that can let an attacker recover the plaintext
From https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/264159
> It's unfortunate that we don't implement PKCS#8 encryption so we can't
> recommend an alternative but PEM encryption is so broken that it's worth
> deprecating outright.
This feature allowed using an encrypted private key with a supplied password,
but did not provide additional security as the encryption is known to be broken,
and the key is sitting next to the password in the filesystem. Users are recommended
to decrypt the private key, and store it un-encrypted to continue using it.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This commit fixes spelling mistakes (typos) at a few places in the codebase.
Signed-off-by: Amey Shrivastava <72866602+AmeyShrivastava@users.noreply.github.com>
The DefaultStopSignal const has been deprecated, because the daemon already
handles a default value. The current code did not actually send the default
value unless the flag was set, which also made the flag description incorrect,
because in that case, the _daemon's_ default would be used, which could
potentially be different as was specified here.
This patch removes the default value from the flag, leaving it to the daemon
to set a default.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Locking was removed in https://github.com/docker/cli/pull/3025 which
allows for parallel calls to config.Load to modify global state.
The consequence in this case is innocuous, but it does trigger a
`DATA RACE` exception when tests run with `-race` option.
Signed-off-by: coryb <cbennett@netflix.com>
This allows us to drop the `//go:generate` and use of the github.com/mjibson/esc
utility.
worth noting that Go's native "embed" does not compress files. We could compress
these files as part of a build / validate step (which would add some complexity
when updating these files) if this is a concern, but not sure if the additional
complexity is warranted.
Comparing before/after sizes (see below);
macOS: 54125840 - 54005264 = 120576 (+120.58 kB)
Linux: 52393231 - 52277701 = 115530 (+115.53 kB)
Before:
ls -l build/
total 208736
lrwxr-xr-x 1 sebastiaan staff 19 Aug 15 09:36 docker@ -> docker-linux-amd64
-rwxr-xr-x 1 sebastiaan staff 54005264 Aug 15 09:35 docker-darwin-amd64*
-rwxr-xr-x 1 sebastiaan staff 52277701 Aug 15 09:36 docker-linux-amd64*
After:
ls -l build/
total 208960
lrwxr-xr-x 1 sebastiaan staff 18 Aug 15 09:32 docker@ -> docker-linux-amd64
-rwxr-xr-x 1 sebastiaan staff 54125840 Aug 15 09:31 docker-darwin-amd64*
-rwxr-xr-x 1 sebastiaan staff 52393231 Aug 15 09:32 docker-linux-amd64*
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Commit 73aef6edfe
modified archive.ReplaceFileTarWrapper to set the Name field in the tar header,
if the field was not set.
That change exposed an issue in how a Dockerfile from stdin was sent to the daemon.
When attempting to build using a build-context, and a Dockerfile from stdin, the
following happened:
```bash
mkdir build-stdin && cd build-stdin && echo hello > hello.txt
DOCKER_BUILDKIT=0 docker build --no-cache -t foo -f- . <<'EOF'
FROM alpine
COPY . .
EOF
Sending build context to Docker daemon 2.607kB
Error response from daemon: dockerfile parse error line 1: unknown instruction: .DOCKERIGNORE
```
Removing the `-t foo`, oddly lead to a different failure:
```bash
DOCKER_BUILDKIT=0 docker build --no-cache -f- . <<'EOF'
FROM alpine
COPY . .
EOF
Sending build context to Docker daemon 2.581kB
Error response from daemon: Cannot locate specified Dockerfile: .dockerfile.701d0d71fb1497d6a7ce
```
From the above, it looks like the tar headers got mangled, causing (in the first
case) the daemon to use the build-context tar as a plain-text file, and therefore
parsing it as Dockerfile, and in the second case, causing it to not being able to
find the Dockerfile in the context.
I noticed that both TarModifierFuncs were using the same `hdrTmpl` struct, which
looks to caused them to step on each other's toes. Changing them to each initialize
their own struct made the issue go away.
After this change:
```bash
DOCKER_BUILDKIT=0 docker build --no-cache -t foo -f- . <<'EOF'
FROM alpine
COPY . .
EOF
Sending build context to Docker daemon 2.607kB
Step 1/2 : FROM alpine
---> d4ff818577bc
Step 2/2 : COPY . .
---> 556f745e6938
Successfully built 556f745e6938
Successfully tagged foo:latest
DOCKER_BUILDKIT=0 docker build --no-cache -f- . <<'EOF'
FROM alpine
COPY . .
EOF
Sending build context to Docker daemon 2.607kB
Step 1/2 : FROM alpine
---> d4ff818577bc
Step 2/2 : COPY . .
---> aaaee43bec5e
Successfully built aaaee43bec5e
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This warning will be moved to the daemon-side, similar to how it returns
other warnings. There's work in progress to change the name of the default
profile, so we may need to backport this change to prevent existing clients
from printing an incorrect warning if they're connecting to a newer daemon.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
It's the only use of this function, and it's better to check that
the client actually sends the header.
This also simplifies some asserts, and makes sure that "actual" and "expected"
are in the correct order.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Golang uses a `sync.Once` when determining the proxy to use. This means
that it's not possible to test the proxy configuration in unit tests,
because the proxy configuration will be "fixated" the first time Golang
detects the proxy configuration.
This patch changes TestNewAPIClientFromFlagsWithHttpProxyEnv to an e2e
test so that we can verify the CLI picks up the proxy configuration.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
> Legacy PEM encryption as specified in RFC 1423 is insecure by design. Since
> it does not authenticate the ciphertext, it is vulnerable to padding oracle
> attacks that can let an attacker recover the plaintext
From https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/264159
> It's unfortunate that we don't implement PKCS#8 encryption so we can't
> recommend an alternative but PEM encryption is so broken that it's worth
> deprecating outright.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
From https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/264159
> It's unfortunate that we don't implement PKCS#8 encryption so we can't
> recommend an alternative but PEM encryption is so broken that it's worth
> deprecating outright.
When linting on Go 1.16:
cli/context/docker/load.go:69:6: SA1019: x509.IsEncryptedPEMBlock is deprecated: Legacy PEM encryption as specified in RFC 1423 is insecure by design. Since it does not authenticate the ciphertext, it is vulnerable to padding oracle attacks that can let an attacker recover the plaintext. (staticcheck)
if x509.IsEncryptedPEMBlock(pemBlock) {
^
cli/context/docker/load.go:70:20: SA1019: x509.DecryptPEMBlock is deprecated: Legacy PEM encryption as specified in RFC 1423 is insecure by design. Since it does not authenticate the ciphertext, it is vulnerable to padding oracle attacks that can let an attacker recover the plaintext. (staticcheck)
keyBytes, err = x509.DecryptPEMBlock(pemBlock, []byte(c.TLSPassword))
^
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Support for ALL_PROXY as default build-arg was added recently in
buildkit and the classic builder.
This patch adds the `ALL_PROXY` environment variable to the list of
configurable proxy variables, and updates the documentation.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Errors always need to go to stderr.
This also fixes a test in moby/moby's integration-cli which is checking
to see if errors connecting to the daemon are output on stderr.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The docker info output contains both "local" and "remote" (daemon-side) information.
The API endpoint to collect daemon information (`/info`) is known to be "heavy",
and (depending on what information is needed) not needed.
This patch checks if the template (`--format`) used requires information from the
daemon, and if not, omits making an API request.
This will improve performance if (for example), the current "context" is requested
from `docker info` or if only plugin information is requested.
Before:
time docker info --format '{{range .ClientInfo.Plugins}}Plugin: {{.Name}}, {{end}}'
Plugin: buildx, Plugin: compose, Plugin: scan,
________________________________________________________
Executed in 301.91 millis fish external
usr time 168.64 millis 82.00 micros 168.56 millis
sys time 113.72 millis 811.00 micros 112.91 millis
time docker info --format '{{json .ClientInfo.Plugins}}'
time docker info --format '{{.ClientInfo.Context}}'
default
________________________________________________________
Executed in 334.38 millis fish external
usr time 177.23 millis 93.00 micros 177.13 millis
sys time 124.90 millis 927.00 micros 123.97 millis
docker context use remote-ssh-daemon
time docker info --format '{{.ClientInfo.Context}}'
remote-ssh-daemon
________________________________________________________
Executed in 1.22 secs fish external
usr time 116.93 millis 110.00 micros 116.82 millis
sys time 144.36 millis 887.00 micros 143.47 millis
And daemon logs:
Jul 06 12:42:12 remote-ssh-daemon dockerd[14377]: time="2021-07-06T12:42:12.139529947Z" level=debug msg="Calling HEAD /_ping"
Jul 06 12:42:12 remote-ssh-daemon dockerd[14377]: time="2021-07-06T12:42:12.140772052Z" level=debug msg="Calling HEAD /_ping"
Jul 06 12:42:12 remote-ssh-daemon dockerd[14377]: time="2021-07-06T12:42:12.163832016Z" level=debug msg="Calling GET /v1.41/info"
After:
time ./build/docker info --format '{{range .ClientInfo.Plugins}}Plugin: {{.Name}}, {{end}}'
Plugin: buildx, Plugin: compose, Plugin: scan,
________________________________________________________
Executed in 139.84 millis fish external
usr time 76.53 millis 62.00 micros 76.46 millis
sys time 69.25 millis 723.00 micros 68.53 millis
time ./build/docker info --format '{{.ClientInfo.Context}}'
default
________________________________________________________
Executed in 136.94 millis fish external
usr time 74.61 millis 74.00 micros 74.54 millis
sys time 65.77 millis 858.00 micros 64.91 millis
docker context use remote-ssh-daemon
time ./build/docker info --format '{{.ClientInfo.Context}}'
remote-ssh-daemon
________________________________________________________
Executed in 1.02 secs fish external
usr time 74.25 millis 76.00 micros 74.17 millis
sys time 65.09 millis 643.00 micros 64.44 millis
And daemon logs:
Jul 06 12:42:55 remote-ssh-daemon dockerd[14377]: time="2021-07-06T12:42:55.313654687Z" level=debug msg="Calling HEAD /_ping"
Jul 06 12:42:55 remote-ssh-daemon dockerd[14377]: time="2021-07-06T12:42:55.314811624Z" level=debug msg="Calling HEAD /_ping"
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Commit 330a003533
introduced "synchronous" service update and rollback, using progress bars to show
current status for each task.
As part of that change, progress bars were "reversed" when doing a rollback, to
indicate that status was rolled back to a previous state.
Reversing direction is somewhat confusing, as progress bars now return to their
"initial" state to indicate it was "completed"; for an "automatic" rollback, this
may be somewhat clear (progress bars "move to the right", then "roll back" if the
update failed), but when doing a manual rollback, it feels counter-intuitive
(rolling back is the _expected_ outcome).
This patch removes the code to reverse the direction of progress-bars, and makes
progress-bars always move from left ("start") to right ("finished").
Before this patch
----------------------------------------
1. create a service with automatic rollback on failure
$ docker service create --update-failure-action=rollback --name foo --tty --replicas=5 nginx:alpine
9xi1w3mv5sqtyexsuh78qg0cb
overall progress: 5 out of 5 tasks
1/5: running [==================================================>]
2/5: running [==================================================>]
3/5: running [==================================================>]
4/5: running [==================================================>]
5/5: running [==================================================>]
verify: Waiting 2 seconds to verify that tasks are stable...
2. update the service, making it fail after 3 seconds
$ docker service update --entrypoint="/bin/sh -c 'sleep 3; exit 1'" foo
overall progress: rolling back update: 2 out of 5 tasks
1/5: running [==================================================>]
2/5: running [==================================================>]
3/5: starting [============================================> ]
4/5: running [==================================================>]
5/5: running [==================================================>]
3. Once the service starts failing, automatic rollback is started; progress-bars now move in the reverse direction;
overall progress: rolling back update: 3 out of 5 tasks
1/5: ready [===========> ]
2/5: ready [===========> ]
3/5: running [> ]
4/5: running [> ]
5/5: running [> ]
4. When the rollback is completed, the progressbars are at the "start" to indicate they completed;
overall progress: rolling back update: 5 out of 5 tasks
1/5: running [> ]
2/5: running [> ]
3/5: running [> ]
4/5: running [> ]
5/5: running [> ]
rollback: update rolled back due to failure or early termination of task bndiu8a998agr8s6sjlg9tnrw
verify: Service converged
After this patch
----------------------------------------
Progress bars always go from left to right; also in a rollback situation;
After updating to the "faulty" entrypoint, task are deployed:
$ docker service update --entrypoint="/bin/sh -c 'sleep 3; exit 1'" foo
foo
overall progress: 1 out of 5 tasks
1/5:
2/5: running [==================================================>]
3/5: ready [======================================> ]
4/5:
5/5:
Once tasks start failing, rollback is started, and presented the same as a regular
update; progress bars go from left to right;
overall progress: rolling back update: 3 out of 5 tasks
1/5: ready [======================================> ]
2/5: starting [============================================> ]
3/5: running [==================================================>]
4/5: running [==================================================>]
5/5: running [==================================================>]
rollback: update rolled back due to failure or early termination of task c11dxd7ud3d5pq8g45qkb4rjx
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This extends #2929 to Darwin as well as Linux.
Running the example in https://github.com/golang/go/issues/37942
I see lots of:
```
dave@m1 sigurg % uname -ms
Darwin arm64
dave@m1 sigurg % go run main.go
received urgent I/O condition: 2021-05-21 16:03:03.482211 +0100 BST m=+0.014553751
received urgent I/O condition: 2021-05-21 16:03:03.507171 +0100 BST m=+0.039514459
```
Signed-off-by: David Scott <dave@recoil.org>
The kernel memory limit is deprecated in Docker 20.10.0,
and its support was removed in runc v1.0.0-rc94.
So, this warning can be safely removed.
Relevant: b8ca7de823
Signed-off-by: Akihiro Suda <akihiro.suda.cz@hco.ntt.co.jp>
- use var/const blocks when declaring a list of variables
- use const where possible
TestCheckKubernetesConfigurationRaiseAnErrorOnInvalidValue:
- use keys when assigning values
- make sure test is dereferenced in the loop
- use subtests
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Some tests were using domain names that were intended to be "fake", but are
actually registered domain names (such as mycorp.com).
Even though we were not actually making connections to these domains, it's
better to use domains that are designated for testing/examples in RFC2606:
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2606
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
New solution is not hardcoded to amd64 but integrates
with the cross toolchain and support creating arm binaries.
Go has been updated so that ASLR works
Signed-off-by: Tonis Tiigi <tonistiigi@gmail.com>
Relates to the deprecation, added in 3c0a167ed5
The docker CLI up until v1.7.0 used the `~/.dockercfg` file to store credentials
after authenticating to a registry (`docker login`). Docker v1.7.0 replaced this
file with a new CLI configuration file, located in `~/.docker/config.json`. When
implementing the new configuration file, the old file (and file-format) was kept
as a fall-back, to assist existing users with migrating to the new file.
Given that the old file format encourages insecure storage of credentials
(credentials are stored unencrypted), and that no version of the CLI since
Docker v1.7.0 has created this file, the file is marked deprecated, and support
for this file will be removed in a future release.
This patch adds a deprecation warning, which is printed if the CLI falls back
to using the deprecated ~/.dockercfg file.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
We refactorted `ForwardAllSignals` so it blocks but did not update the
call in `start` to call it in a goroutine.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Commit fff164c22e modified ForwardAllSignals to
take `SIGURG` signals into account, which can be generated by the Go runtime
on Go 1.14 and up as an interrupt to support pre-emptable system calls on Linux.
With the updated code, the signal (`s`) would sometimes be `nil`, causing spurious
(but otherwise harmless) warnings to be printed;
Unsupported signal: <nil>. Discarding.
To debug this issue, I patched v20.10.4 to handle `nil`, and added a debug line
to print the signal in all cases;
```patch
diff --git a/cli/command/container/signals.go b/cli/command/container/signals.go
index 06e4d9eb6..0cb53ef06 100644
--- a/cli/command/container/signals.go
+++ b/cli/command/container/signals.go
@@ -22,8 +22,9 @@ func ForwardAllSignals(ctx context.Context, cli command.Cli, cid string, sigc <-
case <-ctx.Done():
return
}
+ fmt.Fprintf(cli.Err(), "Signal: %v\n", s)
if s == signal.SIGCHLD || s == signal.SIGPIPE {
```
When running a cross-compiled macOS binary with Go 1.13 (`make -f docker.Makefile binary-osx`):
# regular "docker run" (note that the `<nil>` signal only happens "sometimes"):
./build/docker run --rm alpine/git clone https://github.com/docker/getting-started.git
Cloning into 'getting-started'...
Signal: <nil>
# when cancelling with CTRL-C:
./build/docker run --rm alpine/git clone https://github.com/docker/getting-started.git
^CSignal: interrupt
Cloning into 'getting-started'...
error: could not lock config file /git/getting-started/.git/config: No such file or directory
fatal: could not set 'core.repositoryformatversion' to '0'
Signal: <nil>
Signal: <nil>
When running a macOS binary built with Go 1.15 (`DISABLE_WARN_OUTSIDE_CONTAINER=1 make binary`):
# regular "docker run" (note that the `<nil>` signal only happens "sometimes"):
# this is the same as on Go 1.13
./build/docker run --rm alpine/git clone https://github.com/docker/getting-started.git
Cloning into 'getting-started'...
Signal: <nil>
# when cancelling with CTRL-C:
./build/docker run --rm alpine/git clone https://github.com/docker/getting-started.git
Cloning into 'getting-started'...
^CSignal: interrupt
Signal: urgent I/O condition
Signal: urgent I/O condition
fatal: --stdin requires a git repository
fatal: index-pack failed
Signal: <nil>
Signal: <nil>
This patch checks if the channel is closed, and removes the warning (to prevent warnings if new
signals are added that are not in our known list of signals)
We should also consider updating `notfiyAllSignals()`, which currently forwards
_all_ signals (`signal.Notify(sigc)` without passing a list of signals), and
instead pass it "all signals _minus_ the signals we don't want forwarded":
35f023a7c2/cli/command/container/signals.go (L55)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
On Windows, the os/exec.{Command,CommandContext,LookPath} functions
resolve command names that have neither path separators nor file extension
(e.g., "git") by first looking in the current working directory before
looking in the PATH environment variable.
Go maintainers intended to match cmd.exe's historical behavior.
However, this is pretty much never the intended behavior and as an abundance of precaution
this patch prevents that when executing commands.
Example of commands that docker.exe may execute: `git`, `docker-buildx` (or other cli plugin), `docker-credential-wincred`, `docker`.
Note that this was prompted by the [Go 1.15.7 security fixes](https://blog.golang.org/path-security), but unlike in `go.exe`,
the windows path lookups in docker are not in a code path allowing remote code execution, thus there is no security impact on docker.
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
Prior to this change, progressbars would sometimes be hidden, and the function
would return early. In addition, the direction of the progressbars would sometimes
be "incrementing" (similar to "docker service update"), and sometimes be "decrementing"
(to indicate a "rollback" is being performed).
This fix makes sure that we always proceed with the "verifying" step, and now
prints a message _after_ the verifying stage was completed;
$ docker service rollback foo
foo
overall progress: rolling back update: 5 out of 5 tasks
1/5: running [> ]
2/5: starting [===========> ]
3/5: starting [===========> ]
4/5: running [> ]
5/5: running [> ]
verify: Service converged
rollback: rollback completed
$ docker service rollback foo
foo
overall progress: rolling back update: 1 out of 1 tasks
1/1: running [> ]
verify: Service converged
rollback: rollback completed
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Before this change:
--------------------------------------------
$ docker service create --replicas=1 --name foo -p 8080:80 nginx:alpine
t33qvykv8y0zbz266rxynsbo3
overall progress: 1 out of 1 tasks
1/1: running [==================================================>]
verify: Service converged
$ echo $?
0
$ docker service update --replicas=5 foo
foo
overall progress: 5 out of 5 tasks
1/5: running [==================================================>]
2/5: running [==================================================>]
3/5: running [==================================================>]
4/5: running [==================================================>]
5/5: running [==================================================>]
verify: Service converged
$ echo $?
0
$ docker service rollback foo
foo
rollback: manually requested rollback
overall progress: rolling back update: 1 out of 1 tasks
1/1: running [> ]
verify: Service converged
$ echo $?
0
$ docker service rollback foo
foo
service rolled back: rollback completed
$ echo $?
1
After this change:
--------------------------------------------
$ docker service create --replicas=1 --name foo -p 8080:80 nginx:alpine
t33qvykv8y0zbz266rxynsbo3
overall progress: 1 out of 1 tasks
1/1: running [==================================================>]
verify: Service converged
$ echo $?
0
$ docker service update --replicas=5 foo
foo
overall progress: 5 out of 5 tasks
1/5: running [==================================================>]
2/5: running [==================================================>]
3/5: running [==================================================>]
4/5: running [==================================================>]
5/5: running [==================================================>]
verify: Waiting 1 seconds to verify that tasks are stable...
$ echo $?
0
$ docker service rollback foo
foo
rollback: manually requested rollback
overall progress: rolling back update: 1 out of 1 tasks
1/1: running [> ]
verify: Service converged
$ echo $?
0
$ docker service rollback foo
foo
service rolled back: rollback completed
$ echo $?
0
$ docker service ps foo
ID NAME IMAGE NODE DESIRED STATE CURRENT STATE ERROR PORTS
4dt4ms4c5qfb foo.1 nginx:alpine docker-desktop Running Running 2 minutes ago
Remaining issues with reconciliation
--------------------------------------------
Note that both before, and after this change, the command sometimes terminates
early, and does not wait for the service to reconcile; this is most apparent
when rolling back is scaling up (so more tasks are deployed);
$ docker service rollback foo
foo
service rolled back: rollback completed
$ docker service rollback foo
foo
rollback: manually requested rollback
overall progress: rolling back update: 1 out of 5 tasks
1/5: pending [=================================> ]
2/5: running [> ]
3/5: pending [=================================> ]
4/5: pending [=================================> ]
5/5: pending [=================================> ]
service rolled back: rollback completed
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
commit c2626a8270 replaced the use of
github.com/docker/docker/pkg/homedir with Golang's os.UserHomeDir().
This change was partially reverted in 7a279af43d
to account for situations where `$HOME` is not set.
In situations where no configuration file is present in `~/.config/`, the CLI
falls back to looking for the (deprecated) `~/.dockercfg` configuration file,
which was still using `os.UserHomeDir()`, which produces an error/warning if
`$HOME` is not set.
This patch introduces a helper function and a global variable to get the user's
home-directory. The global variable is used to prevent repeatedly looking up
the user's information (which, depending on the setup can be a costly operation).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Commit f32731f902 fixed a potential panic
when an error was returned while trying to get existing credentials.
However, other code paths currently use the result of `GetDefaultAuthConfig()`
even in an error condition; this resulted in a panic, because a `nil` was
returned.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
full diff: 75b288015a...c1f2f97bff
relevant changes:
- pkcs12: document that we use the wrong PEM type
- pkcs12: drop PKCS#12 attributes with unknown OIDs
- ocsp: Improve documentation for ParseResponse and ParseResponseForCert
other changes (not in vendor);
- ssh: improve error message for KeyboardInteractiveChallenge
- ssh: remove slow unnecessary diffie-hellman-group-exchange primality check
- ssh/terminal: replace with a golang.org/x/term wrapper
- Deprecates ssh/terminal in favor of golang.org/x/term
- ssh/terminal: add support for zos
- ssh/terminal: bump x/term dependency to fix js/nacl
- nacl/auth: use Size instead of KeySize for Sum output
- sha3: remove go:nocheckptr annotation
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Will display when user types `docker help` or `docker --help`, but not for `docker run --help`.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Tardif <guillaume.tardif@gmail.com>
This hack was added in an attempt to continue supporting the experimental
(non-buildkit) `--platform` option, by dynamically updating the API version
required if buildkit isn't enabled.
This hack didn't work, however, because at the moment the override is
added, the command is not yet attached to the "root" (`docker`) command,
and because of that, the command itself is the `root` command;
`cmd.Root()` returned the `build` command.
As a result, validation steps defined as `PersistentPreRunE` on the root
command were not executed, causing invalid flags/options to not producing
an error.
Attempts to use an alternative approach (for example, cobra supports both
a `PersistentPreRun` and `PersistentPreRunE`) did not work either, because
`PersistentPreRunE` takes precedence over `PersistentPreRun`, and only one
will be executed.
Now that `--platform` should be supported for other cases than just for
experimental (LCOW), let's remove the 'experimental' check, and just assume
it's supported for API v1.32 and up.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
While performance will be worse, we can safely ignore the --stream
option when used, and print a deprecation warning instead of failing
the build.
With this patch:
echo -e "FROM scratch\nLABEL foo=bar" | docker build --stream -
DEPRECATED: The experimental --stream flag has been removed and the build context
will be sent non-streaming. Enable BuildKit instead with DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1
to stream build context, see https://docs.docker.com/go/buildkit/
Sending build context to Docker daemon 2.048kB
Step 1/2 : FROM scratch
--->
Step 2/2 : LABEL foo=bar
---> Running in 99e4021085b6
Removing intermediate container 99e4021085b6
---> 1a7a41be241f
Successfully built 1a7a41be241f
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The CLI disabled experimental features by default, requiring users
to set a configuration option to enable them.
Disabling experimental features was a request from Enterprise users
that did not want experimental features to be accessible.
We are changing this policy, and now enable experimental features
by default. Experimental features may still change and/or removed,
and will be highlighted in the documentation and "usage" output.
For example, the `docker manifest inspect --help` output now shows:
EXPERIMENTAL:
docker manifest inspect is an experimental feature.
Experimental features provide early access to product functionality. These features
may change between releases without warning or can be removed entirely from a future
release. Learn more about experimental features: https://docs.docker.com/go/experimental/
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
All output of the usage / --help output uses spaces, and having a tab
in the output can be somewhat cumbersome (e.g. our YAML docs generator
doesn't like them, and copy/pasing the output in iTerm produces a warning).
This patch changes the output to use two spaces instead.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
When initializing the API client, the User-Agent was added to any custom
HTTPHeaders that were configured. However, because the map was not properly
dereferenced, the original map was modified, causing the User-Agent to also
be saved to config.json after `docker login` and `docker logout`:
Before this change;
$ cat ~/.docker/config.json
cat: can't open '/root/.docker/config.json': No such file or directory
$ docker login -u myusername
Password:
...
Login Succeeded
$ cat ~/.docker/config.json
{
"auths": {
"https://index.docker.io/v1/": {
"auth": "<base64 auth>"
}
},
"HttpHeaders": {
"User-Agent": "Docker-Client/19.03.12 (linux)"
}
}
$ docker logout
{
"auths": {},
"HttpHeaders": {
"User-Agent": "Docker-Client/19.03.12 (linux)"
}
}
After this change:
$ cat ~/.docker/config.json
cat: can't open '/root/.docker/config.json': No such file or directory
$ docker login -u myusername
Password:
...
Login Succeeded
$ cat ~/.docker/config.json
{
"auths": {
"https://index.docker.io/v1/": {
"auth": "<base64 auth>"
}
}
}
$ docker logout
Removing login credentials for https://index.docker.io/v1/
$ cat ~/.docker/config.json
{
"auths": {}
}
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This implements a special "RESET" value that can be used to reset the
list of capabilities to add/drop when updating a service.
Given the following service;
| CapDrop | CapAdd |
| -------------- | ------------- |
| CAP_SOME_CAP | |
When updating the service, and applying `--cap-drop RESET`, the "drop" list
is reset to its default:
| CapDrop | CapAdd |
| -------------- | ------------- |
| | |
When updating the service, and applying `--cap-drop RESET`, combined with
`--cap-add CAP_SOME_CAP` and `--cap-drop CAP_SOME_OTHER_CAP`:
| CapDrop | CapAdd |
| -------------- | ------------- |
| CAP_FOO_CAP | CAP_SOME_CAP |
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Adding/removing capabilities when updating a service is considered a tri-state;
- if the capability was previously "dropped", then remove it from "CapabilityDrop",
but do NOT add it to "CapabilityAdd". However, if the capability was not yet in
the service's "CapabilityDrop", then simply add it to the service's "CapabilityAdd"
- likewise, if the capability was previously "added", then remove it from
"CapabilityAdd", but do NOT add it to "CapabilityDrop". If the capability was
not yet in the service's "CapabilityAdd", then simply add it to the service's
"CapabilityDrop".
In other words, given a service with the following:
| CapDrop | CapAdd |
| -------------- | ------------- |
| CAP_SOME_CAP | |
When updating the service, and applying `--cap-add CAP_SOME_CAP`, the previously
dropped capability is removed:
| CapDrop | CapAdd |
| -------------- | ------------- |
| | |
When updating the service a second time, applying `--cap-add CAP_SOME_CAP`,
capability is now added:
| CapDrop | CapAdd |
| -------------- | ------------- |
| | CAP_SOME_CAP |
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
When creating and updating services, we need to avoid unneeded service churn.
The interaction of separate lists to "add" and "drop" capabilities, a special
("ALL") capability, as well as a "relaxed" format for accepted capabilities
(case-insensitive, `CAP_` prefix optional) make this rather involved.
This patch updates how we handle `--cap-add` / `--cap-drop` when _creating_ as
well as _updating_, with the following rules/assumptions applied:
- both existing (service spec) and new (values passed through flags or in
the compose-file) are normalized and de-duplicated before use.
- the special "ALL" capability is equivalent to "all capabilities" and taken
into account when normalizing capabilities. Combining "ALL" capabilities
and other capabilities is therefore equivalent to just specifying "ALL".
- adding capabilities takes precedence over dropping, which means that if
a capability is both set to be "dropped" and to be "added", it is removed
from the list to "drop".
- the final lists should be sorted and normalized to reduce service churn
- no validation of capabilities is handled by the client. Validation is
delegated to the daemon/server.
When deploying a service using a docker-compose file, the docker-compose file
is *mostly* handled as being "declarative". However, many of the issues outlined
above also apply to compose-files, so similar handling is applied to compose
files as well to prevent service churn.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The tabwriter was configured to have a min-width for columns of 20 positions.
This seemed quite wide, and caused smaller columns to be printed with a large
gap between.
Before:
docker container stats
CONTAINER ID NAME CPU % MEM USAGE / LIMIT MEM % NET I/O BLOCK I/O PIDS
29184b3ae391 amazing_shirley 0.00% 800KiB / 1.944GiB 0.04% 1.44kB / 0B 0B / 0B 1
403c101bad56 agitated_swartz 0.15% 34.31MiB / 1.944GiB 1.72% 10.2MB / 206kB 0B / 0B 51
0dc4b7f6c6be container2 0.00% 1.012MiB / 1.944GiB 0.05% 12.9kB / 0B 0B / 0B 5
2d99abcc6f62 container99 0.00% 972KiB / 1.944GiB 0.05% 13kB / 0B 0B / 0B 5
9f9aa90173ac foo 0.00% 820KiB / 1.944GiB 0.04% 13kB / 0B 0B / 0B 5
docker container ls
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
29184b3ae391 docker-cli-dev "ash" 4 hours ago Up 4 hours amazing_shirley
403c101bad56 docker-dev:master "hack/dind bash" 3 days ago Up 3 days agitated_swartz
0dc4b7f6c6be nginx:alpine "/docker-entrypoint.…" 4 days ago Up 4 days 80/tcp container2
2d99abcc6f62 nginx:alpine "/docker-entrypoint.…" 4 days ago Up 4 days 80/tcp container99
9f9aa90173ac nginx:alpine "/docker-entrypoint.…" 4 days ago Up 4 days 80/tcp foo
docker image ls
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
docker-cli-dev latest 5f603caa04aa 4 hours ago 610MB
docker-cli-native latest 9dd29f8d387b 4 hours ago 519MB
docker-dev master 8132bf7a199e 3 days ago 2.02GB
docker-dev improve-build-errors 69e208994b3f 11 days ago 2.01GB
docker-dev refactor-idtools 69e208994b3f 11 days ago 2.01GB
After:
docker container stats
CONTAINER ID NAME CPU % MEM USAGE / LIMIT MEM % NET I/O BLOCK I/O PIDS
29184b3ae391 amazing_shirley 0.14% 5.703MiB / 1.944GiB 0.29% 1.44kB / 0B 0B / 0B 10
403c101bad56 agitated_swartz 0.15% 56.97MiB / 1.944GiB 2.86% 10.2MB / 206kB 0B / 0B 51
0dc4b7f6c6be container2 0.00% 1016KiB / 1.944GiB 0.05% 12.9kB / 0B 0B / 0B 5
2d99abcc6f62 container99 0.00% 956KiB / 1.944GiB 0.05% 13kB / 0B 0B / 0B 5
9f9aa90173ac foo 0.00% 980KiB / 1.944GiB 0.05% 13kB / 0B 0B / 0B 5
docker container ls
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
29184b3ae391 docker-cli-dev "ash" 12 minutes ago Up 12 minutes amazing_shirley
403c101bad56 docker-dev:master "hack/dind bash" 3 days ago Up 3 days agitated_swartz
0dc4b7f6c6be nginx:alpine "/docker-entrypoint.…" 4 days ago Up 4 days 80/tcp container2
2d99abcc6f62 nginx:alpine "/docker-entrypoint.…" 4 days ago Up 4 days 80/tcp container99
9f9aa90173ac nginx:alpine "/docker-entrypoint.…" 4 days ago Up 4 days 80/tcp foo
docker image ls
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
docker-cli-dev latest 5f603caa04aa 4 hours ago 610MB
docker-cli-native latest 9dd29f8d387b 4 hours ago 519MB
docker-dev master 8132bf7a199e 3 days ago 2.02GB
docker-dev improve-build-errors 69e208994b3f 11 days ago 2.01GB
docker-dev refactor-idtools 69e208994b3f 11 days ago 2.01GB
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The vanity domain is down, and the project has moved
to a new location.
vendor check started failing because of this:
Collecting initial packages
Download dependencies
unrecognized import path "vbom.ml/util" (https fetch: Get https://vbom.ml/util?go-get=1: dial tcp: lookup vbom.ml on 169.254.169.254:53: no such host)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
When using `docker rm` / `docker container rm` with the `-f` / `--force` option, attempts to remove non-existing containers should print a warning, but should return a zero exit code ("successful").
Currently, a non-zero exit code is returned, marking the removal as "failed";
$ docker rm -fv 798c9471b695
Error: No such container: 798c9471b695
$ echo $?
1
The command should match the behavior of `rm` / `rm -f`, with the exception that
a warning is printed (instead of silently ignored):
Running `rm` with `-f` silences output and returns a zero exit code:
touch some-file && rm -f no-such-file some-file; echo exit code: $?; ls -la
# exit code: 0
# total 0
# drwxr-xr-x 2 sebastiaan staff 64 Aug 14 12:17 .
# drwxr-xr-x 199 sebastiaan staff 6368 Aug 14 12:13 ..
mkdir some-directory && rm -rf no-such-directory some-directory; echo exit code: $?; ls -la
# exit code: 0
# total 0
# drwxr-xr-x 2 sebastiaan staff 64 Aug 14 12:17 .
# drwxr-xr-x 199 sebastiaan staff 6368 Aug 14 12:13 ..
Note that other reasons for a delete to fail should still result in a non-zero
exit code, matching the behavior of `rm`. For instance, in the example below,
the `rm` failed because directories can only be removed if the `-r` option is used;
touch some-file && mkdir some-directory && rm -f some-directory no-such-file some-file; echo exit code: $?; ls -la
# rm: some-directory: is a directory
# exit code: 1
# total 0
# drwxr-xr-x 3 sebastiaan staff 96 Aug 14 14:15 .
# drwxr-xr-x 199 sebastiaan staff 6368 Aug 14 12:13 ..
# drwxr-xr-x 2 sebastiaan staff 64 Aug 14 14:15 some-directory
This patch updates the `docker rm` / `docker container rm` command to not produce
an error when attempting to remove a missing containers, and instead only print
the error, but return a zero (0) exit code.
With this patch applied:
docker create --name mycontainer busybox \
&& docker rm nosuchcontainer mycontainer; \
echo exit code: $?; \
docker ps -a --filter name=mycontainer
# df23cc8573f00e97d6e948b48d9ea7d75ce3b4faaab4fe1d3458d3bfa451f39d
# mycontainer
# Error: No such container: nosuchcontainer
# exit code: 0
# CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Combining `-add` and `-rm` flags on `docker service update` should
be usable to explicitly replace existing options. The current order
of processing did not allow this, causing the `-rm` flag to remove
properties that were specified in `-add`. This behavior was inconsistent
with (for example) `--host-add` and `--host-rm`.
This patch updates the behavior to first remove properties, then
add new properties.
Note that there's still some improvements to make, to make the removal
more granulas (e.g. to make `--label-rm label=some-value` only remove
the label if value matches `some-value`); these changes are left for
a follow-up.
Before this change:
-----------------------------
Create a service with two env-vars
```bash
docker service create --env FOO=bar --env BAR=baz --name=test nginx:alpine
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.ContainerSpec.Env }}' test | jq .
[
"FOO=bar",
"BAR=baz"
]
```
Update the service, with the intent to replace the value of `FOO` for a new value
```bash
docker service update --env-rm FOO --env-add FOO=updated-foo test
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.ContainerSpec.Env }}' test | jq .
[
"BAR=baz"
]
```
Create a service with two labels
```bash
docker service create --label FOO=bar --label BAR=baz --name=test nginx:alpine
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.Labels }}' test | jq .
{
"BAR": "baz",
"FOO": "bar"
}
```
Update the service, with the intent to replace the value of `FOO` for a new value
```bash
docker service update --label-rm FOO --label-add FOO=updated-foo test
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.Labels }}' test | jq .
{
"BAR": "baz"
}
```
Create a service with two container labels
```bash
docker service create --container-label FOO=bar --container-label BAR=baz --name=test nginx:alpine
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.ContainerSpec.Labels }}' test | jq .
{
"BAR": "baz",
"FOO": "bar"
}
```
Update the service, with the intent to replace the value of `FOO` for a new value
```bash
docker service update --container-label-rm FOO --container-label-add FOO=updated-foo test
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.ContainerSpec.Labels }}' test | jq .
{
"BAR": "baz",
}
```
With this patch applied:
--------------------------------
Create a service with two env-vars
```bash
docker service create --env FOO=bar --env BAR=baz --name=test nginx:alpine
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.ContainerSpec.Env }}' test | jq .
[
"FOO=bar",
"BAR=baz"
]
```
Update the service, and replace the value of `FOO` for a new value
```bash
docker service update --env-rm FOO --env-add FOO=updated-foo test
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.ContainerSpec.Env }}' test | jq .
[
"BAR=baz",
"FOO=updated-foo"
]
```
Create a service with two labels
```bash
docker service create --label FOO=bar --label BAR=baz --name=test nginx:alpine
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.Labels }}' test | jq .
{
"BAR": "baz",
"FOO": "bar"
}
```
Update the service, and replace the value of `FOO` for a new value
```bash
docker service update --label-rm FOO --label-add FOO=updated-foo test
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.Labels }}' test | jq .
{
"BAR": "baz",
"FOO": "updated-foo"
}
```
Create a service with two container labels
```bash
docker service create --container-label FOO=bar --container-label BAR=baz --name=test nginx:alpine
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.ContainerSpec.Labels }}' test | jq .
{
"BAR": "baz",
"FOO": "bar"
}
```
Update the service, and replace the value of `FOO` for a new value
```bash
docker service update --container-label-rm FOO --container-label-add FOO=updated-foo test
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.ContainerSpec.Labels }}' test | jq .
{
"BAR": "baz",
"FOO": "updated-foo"
}
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
When doing `docker service inspect --pretty` on services without
`TaskTemplate.Resources` or `TaskTemplate.Resources.Limits`, the command
fails. This is due to a missing check on ResourceLimitPids().
This bug has been introduced by 395a6d560d
and produces following error message:
```
Template parsing error: template: :139:10: executing "" at <.ResourceLimitPids>: error calling ResourceLimitPids: runtime error: invalid memory address or nil pointer dereference
```
Signed-off-by: Albin Kerouanton <albin@akerouanton.name>
Both libaries provide similar functionality. We're currently using
Google Shlex in more places, so prefering that one for now, but we
could decide to switch to mattn/go-shellwords in future if that
library is considered better (it looks to be more actively maintained,
but that may be related to it providing "more features").
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
In situations where `~/.docker/config.json` was a symlink, saving
the file would replace the symlink with a file, instead of updating
the target file location;
mkdir -p ~/.docker
touch ~/real-config.json
ln -s ~/real-config.json ~/.docker/config.json
ls -la ~/.docker/config.json
# lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 22 Jun 23 12:34 /root/.docker/config.json -> /root/real-config.json
docker login
# Username: thajeztah
# Password:
# Login Succeeded
ls -la ~/.docker/config.json
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 229 Jun 23 12:36 /root/.docker/config.json
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The wrapping made the code harder to read (and in some cases destracted
from the actual code flow).
Some of these functions take too many arguments; instead of hiding that,
it probably better to make it apparent that something needs to be done
(and fix it :-)).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- change `validateResolveImageFlag()` to only perform _validation_,
and not combine it with modifying the option.
- use a `switch` instead of `if` in `validateResolveImageFlag()`
- `deployServices()`: break up some `switch` cases to make them
easier to read/understand the logic.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- TestParseRunAttach: use subtests to reduce cyclomatic complexity
- TestParseRunWithInvalidArgs: use subtests, and check if the expected
error is returned.
- Removed parseMustError() as it was mostly redundant
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These tests failed when running natively on macOS;
unknown server OS: darwin
Skipping them, like we do on Windows
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Before this change, a warning would be printed if the `~/.docker/config.json`
file was empty:
mkdir -p ~/.docker && touch ~/.docker/config.json
docker pull busybox
WARNING: Error loading config file: /root/.docker/config.json: EOF
Using default tag: latest
....
Given that we also accept an empty "JSON" file (`{}`), it should be
okay to ignore an empty file, as it's effectively a configuration file
with no custom options set.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
I'm not sure if this fixes anything, however I have seen some weird
behavior on Windows where temp config files are left around and there
doesn't seem to be any errors reported.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Previously, if a registry AuthInfo was not present in the CLI config file, docker logout could not be used
to ask the credential helper to forget about it. It causes problem for people working with
multiple alternative config files, and it causes problems for cases like Docker Desktop w/ WSL 2, as
it uses the same win32 credential helper as the Windows CLI, but a different config file, leading to
bugs where I cannot logout from a registry from wsl2 if I logged in from Windows and vice-versa.
Signed-off-by: Simon Ferquel <simon.ferquel@docker.com>
There's no need to perform an `os.Stat()` first, because
`os.Open()` also returns the same errors if the file does
not exist, or couldn't be opened for other reasons.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This prevents inconsistent errors when using a symlink, or when renaming
the binary;
Before this change;
ln -s $(which docker) toto
./toto rune
docker: 'rune' is not a docker command.
./toto run daslkjadslkjdaslkj
Unable to find image 'adslkjadslakdsj:latest' locally
./toto: Error response from daemon: pull access denied for adslkjadslakdsj, repository does not exist or may require 'docker login': denied: requested access to the resource is denied.
After this change:
ln -s $(which docker) toto
./toto rune
docker: 'rune' is not a docker command.
./toto run daslkjadslkjdaslkj
Unable to find image 'adslkjadslakdsj:latest' locally
docker: Error response from daemon: pull access denied for adslkjadslakdsj, repository does not exist or may require 'docker login': denied: requested access to the resource is den>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Previously we only set the platform when performing a pull, which is
only initiated if pull always is set, or if the image reference does not
exist in the daemon.
The daemon now supports specifying which platform you wanted on
container create so it can validate the image reference is the platform
you thought you were getting.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>