This allows setting the ip/ipv6 address as an option in the
advanced `--network` syntax;
```
docker run --network name=mynetwork,ip=172.20.88.22,ip6=2001:db8::8822
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This refactors the way networking options are parsed, and makes the
client able to pass options for multiple networks. Currently, the
daemon does not yet accept multiple networks when creating a container,
and will produce an error.
For backward-compatibility, the following global networking-related
options are associated with the first network (in case multiple
networks are set);
- `--ip`
- `--ip6`
- `--link`
- `--link-local-ip`
- `--network-alias`
Not all of these options are supported yet in the advanced notation,
but for options that are supported, setting both the per-network option
and the global option will produce a "conflicting options" error.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The commit contains cli changes to support driver options for a network in
docker run and docker network connect cli's. The driver-opt, aliases is now
supported in the form of csv as per network option in service commands in
swarm mode since docker/cli#62 . This commit extends this support to docker
run command as well.
For docker connect command `--driver-opt` is added to pass driver specific
options for the network the container is connecting to.
Signed-off-by: Abhinandan Prativadi <abhi@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
--from creates a context from a named context.
By default `context create` will create a context from the current context.
Replaced "from-current=" docker/kubernetes option with "from=" to allow specifying which context to copy the settings from.
Signed-off-by: Nick Adcock <nick.adcock@docker.com>
Old selector was wrong (it watched for the label we applied to child
resources when reconciling the stack, instead of the stack itself)
This should be back-ported to older version of the CLI
Signed-off-by: Simon Ferquel <simon.ferquel@docker.com>
bump required:
- replacing vendor ghodss/yaml with sigs.k8s.io/yaml
- adding vendor k8s.io/klog and github.com/evanphx
- compose-on-kubernetes
removed 'IncludeUninitialized' from watch as it have been removed from k8s
Signed-off-by: Nick Adcock <nick.adcock@docker.com>
Instead of using an `if else if else`, switch to a sequence of independent
`if` blocks containing a `return`.
Instead of defining a return variable and updating it in the `if` blocks
and returning at the end, make each `if` block return the desired value
independenly.
Signed-off-by: David Scott <dave.scott@docker.com>
Previously if the Docker engine was not running the behaviour of
commands would vary depending on whether the --debug flag was provided.
For example, consider `docker logout`:
$ docker logout
Not logged in to
-- note the missing server URL
$ docker --debug logout
Warning: failed to get default registry endpoint from daemon (Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at unix:///var/run/docker.sock. Is the docker daemon running?). Using system default: https://index.docker.io/v1/
Not logged in to https://index.docker.io/v1/
-- note the server URL is present
This patch makes only the debug printing conditional on the `--debug` flag,
not the return value.
Signed-off-by: David Scott <dave.scott@docker.com>
In the initial implementation I thought it would be good to not pass on the
deprecation to plugins (since they are new). However it turns out this causes
`docker helloworld -h` to print a spurious "pflag: help requested" line:
$ docker helloworld -h
pflag: help requested
See 'docker helloworld --help'.
Usage: docker helloworld [OPTIONS] COMMAND
A basic Hello World plugin for tests
...
Compared with:
$ docker ps -h
Flag shorthand -h has been deprecated, please use --help
Usage: docker ps [OPTIONS]
This is in essence because having the flag undefined hits a different path
within cobra, causing `c.execute()` to return early due to getting an error
(`flag.ErrHelp`) from `c.ParseFlags`, which launders the error through our
`FlagErrorFunc` which wraps it in a `StatusError` which in turn defeats an `if
err == flag.ErrHelp` check further up the call chain. If the flag is defined we
instead hit a path which returns a bare `flag.ErrHelp` without wrapping it.
I considered updating our `FlagErrorFunc` to not wrap `flag.ErrHelp` (and then
following the chain to the next thing) however while doing that I realised that
the code for `-h` (and `--help`) is deeply embedded into cobra (and its flags
library) such that actually using `-h` as a plugin argument meaning something
other than `help` is basically impossible/impractical. Therefore we may as well
have plugins behave identically to the monolithic CLI and support (deprecated)
the `-h` argument.
With this changed the help related blocks of `SetupRootCommand` and
`SetupPluginRootCommand` are now identical, so consolidate into
`setupCommonRootCommand`.
Tests are updated to check `-h` in a variety of scenarios, including the happy
case here.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
As pointed out in #1459, docker cli fails to detect that the input is a tarball,
in case it is generated by `git archive --format=tgz`.
This happens because `git archive` adds some metadata to the initial tar header,
and so it is more than 1 block (of 512 bytes) long, while we only provide 1 block
to archive/tar.Next() and it fails.
To fix, give it 2 blocks :)
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
This adds validation to `docker container run` / `docker container create`;
Validation of labels provided through flags was removed in 31dc5c0a9a,
after the validation was changed to fix labels without values, and to prevent
labels from being expanded with environment variables in 2b17f4c8a8
However, now empty label names from _files_ (`--label-file`) followed different
validation rules than labels passed through `--label`.
This patch adds back minimal validation for labels passed through the command-line
Before this patch:
```bash
docker container create \
--name label \
--label==with-leading-equal-sign \
--label=without-value \
--label=somelabel=somevalue \
--label " = " \
--label=with-quotes-in-value='{"foo"}' \
--label='with"quotes"in-key=test' \
busybox
docker container inspect --format '{{json .Config.Labels}}' label
```
```json
{
"": "with-leading-equal-sign",
" ": " ",
"somelabel": "somevalue",
"with\"quotes\"in-key": "test",
"with-quotes-in-value": "{\"foo\"}",
"without-value": ""
}
```
After this patch:
```bash
docker container create \
--name label \
--label==with-leading-equal-sign \
--label=without-value \
--label=somelabel=somevalue \
--label " = " \
--label=with-quotes-in-value='{"foo"}' \
--label='with"quotes"in-key=test' \
busybox
invalid argument "=with-leading-equal-sign" for "-l, --label" flag: invalid label format: "=with-leading-equal-sign"
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This patch fixes a bug where labels use the same behavior as `--env`, resulting
in a value to be copied from environment variables with the same name as the
label if no value is set (i.e. a simple key, no `=` sign, no value).
An earlier pull request addressed similar cases for `docker run`;
2b17f4c8a8, but this did not address the
same situation for (e.g.) `docker service create`.
Digging in history for this bug, I found that use of the `ValidateEnv`
function for labels was added in the original implementation of the labels feature in
abb5e9a077 (diff-ae476143d40e21ac0918630f7365ed3cR34)
However, the design never intended it to expand environment variables,
and use of this function was either due to either a "copy/paste" of the
equivalent `--env` flags, or a misunderstanding (the name `ValidateEnv` does
not communicate that it also expands environment variables), and the existing
`ValidateLabel` was designed for _engine_ labels (which required a value to
be set).
Following the initial implementation, other parts of the code followed
the same (incorrect) approach, therefore leading the bug to be introduced
in services as well.
This patch:
- updates the `ValidateLabel` to match the expected validation
rules (this function is no longer used since 31dc5c0a9a),
and the daemon has its own implementation)
- corrects various locations in the code where `ValidateEnv` was used instead of `ValidateLabel`.
Before this patch:
```bash
export SOME_ENV_VAR=I_AM_SOME_ENV_VAR
docker service create --label SOME_ENV_VAR --tty --name test busybox
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.Labels}}' test
{"SOME_ENV_VAR":"I_AM_SOME_ENV_VAR"}
```
After this patch:
```bash
export SOME_ENV_VAR=I_AM_SOME_ENV_VAR
docker service create --label SOME_ENV_VAR --tty --name test busybox
docker container inspect --format '{{json .Config.Labels}}' test
{"SOME_ENV_VAR":""}
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This maps the `--template-driver` flag on secret and config creation.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The warning, printed before running `docker system prune` was printing the
filters in JSON format.
This patch attempts to make the output human readable;
- updating the code, and template to print filters individually
- reducing the indentation (which was quite deep)
Before this patch was applied;
```
docker system prune --filter until=24h --filter label=hello-world --filter label!=foo=bar --filter label=bar=baz
WARNING! This will remove:
- all stopped containers
- all networks not used by at least one container
- all dangling images
- all dangling build cache
- Elements to be pruned will be filtered with:
- label={"label":{"bar=baz":true,"hello-world":true},"label!":{"foo=bar":true},"until":{"24h":true}}
Are you sure you want to continue? [y/N]
```
With this patch applied;
```
WARNING! This will remove:
- all stopped containers
- all networks not used by at least one container
- all dangling images
- all dangling build cache
Items to be pruned will be filtered with:
- label!=foo=bar
- label!=never=remove-me
- label=bar=baz
- label=hello-world
- label=remove=me
- until=24h
Are you sure you want to continue? [y/N]
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The warning, printed before runing docker system prune was missing any filter
that was set in the configuration file. In addition, the warning prefixes the
filters with `label=`, which is no longer accurate, now that the prune command
also supports "until" as a filter.
Before this change, only the filters set on the command-line were shown,
and any filter set in the configuration file was missing;
```
mkdir -p ./test-config
echo '{"pruneFilters": ["label!=never=remove-me", "label=remove=me"]}' > test-config/config.json
docker --config=./test-config system prune --filter until=24h --filter label=hello-world --filter label!=foo=bar --filter label=bar=baz
WARNING! This will remove:
- all stopped containers
- all networks not used by at least one container
- all dangling images
- all dangling build cache
- Elements to be pruned will be filtered with:
- label={"label":{"bar=baz":true,"hello-world":true},"label!":{"foo=bar":true},"until":{"24h":true}}
Are you sure you want to continue? [y/N]
```
With this patch applied, both options from the commandline and options set
in the configuration file are shown;
```
mkdir -p ./test-config
echo '{"pruneFilters": ["label!=never=remove-me", "label=remove=me"]}' > test-config/config.json
docker --config=./test-config system prune --filter until=24h --filter label=hello-world --filter label!=foo=bar --filter label=bar=baz
WARNING! This will remove:
- all stopped containers
- all networks not used by at least one container
- all dangling images
- all dangling build cache
- Elements to be pruned will be filtered with:
- filter={"label":{"bar=baz":true,"hello-world":true,"remove=me":true},"label!":{"foo=bar":true,"never=remove-me":true},"until":{"24h":true}}
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- when using "--context default" parameter
- when printing the list of contexts
- when exporting the default context to a tarball
Signed-off-by: Jean-Christophe Sirot <jean-christophe.sirot@docker.com>
(+1 squashed commit)
Squashed commits:
[20670495] Fix CLI initialization for the `docker stack deploy --help` command and ensure that the dockerCli.CurrentContext() always returns a non empty context name (default as a fallback)
Remove now obsolete code handling empty string context name
Minor code cleanup
Signed-off-by: Jean-Christophe Sirot <jean-christophe.sirot@docker.com>
This makes things more idempotent, rather than relying on undoing the
interspersed settings.
Note that the underlying `Flag`s remain shared, it's just the `FlagSet` which
is duplicated.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
The issue with plugin options clashing with globals is that when cobra is
parsing the command line and it comes across an argument which doesn't start
with a `-` it (in the absence of plugins) distinguishes between "argument to
current command" and "new subcommand" based on the list of registered sub
commands.
Plugins breaks that model. When presented with `docker -D plugin -c foo` cobra
parses up to the `plugin`, sees it isn't a registered sub-command of the
top-level docker (because it isn't, it's a plugin) so it accumulates it as an
argument to the top-level `docker` command. Then it sees the `-c`, and thinks
it is the global `-c` (for AKA `--context`) option and tries to treat it as
that, which fails.
In the specific case of the top-level `docker` subcommand we know that it has
no arguments which aren't `--flags` (or `-f` short flags) and so anything which
doesn't start with a `-` must either be a (known) subcommand or an attempt to
execute a plugin.
We could simply scan for and register all installed plugins at start of day, so
that cobra can do the right thing, but we want to avoid that since it would
involve executing each plugin to fetch the metadata, even if the command wasn't
going to end up hitting a plugin.
Instead we can parse the initial set of global arguments separately before
hitting the main cobra `Execute` path, which works here exactly because we know
that the top-level has no non-flag arguments.
One slight wrinkle is that the top-level `PersistentPreRunE` is no longer
called on the plugins path (since it no longer goes via `Execute`), so we
arrange for the initialisation done there (which has to be done after global
flags are parsed to handle e.g. `--config`) to happen explictly after the
global flags are parsed. Rather than make `newDockerCommand` return the
complicated set of results needed to make this happen, instead return a closure
which achieves this.
The new functionality is introduced via a common `TopLevelCommand` abstraction
which lets us adjust the plugin entrypoint to use the same strategy for parsing
the global arguments. This isn't strictly required (in this case the stuff in
cobra's `Execute` works fine) but doing it this way avoids the possibility of
subtle differences in behaviour.
Fixes#1699, and also, as a side-effect, the first item in #1661.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
This happens on Windows when dialing a named pipe (a path which is used by CLI
plugins), in that case some debugging shows:
DEBU[0000] conn is a *winio.win32MessageBytePipe
DEBU[0000] conn is a halfReadCloser: false
DEBU[0000] conn is a halfWriteCloser: true
the raw stream connection does not implement halfCloser
In such cases we can simply wrap with a nop function since closing for read
isn't too critical.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
Setting `Setsid` is needed for SSH connection helper with `ProxyCommand`
config, so as to detach TTY.
e.g.
$ cat ~/.ssh/config
Host foo
Hostname foo
ProxyCommand ssh -W %h:%p bastion
$ DOCKER_HOST=ssh://foo docker run -it --rm alpine
/ #
Fix#1707
Signed-off-by: Akihiro Suda <suda.akihiro@lab.ntt.co.jp>
After switching to Go 1.12, the format-string causes an error;
```
=== Errors
cli/config/config_test.go:154:3: Fatalf format %q has arg config of wrong type *github.com/docker/cli/cli/config/configfile.ConfigFile
cli/config/config_test.go:217:3: Fatalf format %q has arg config of wrong type *github.com/docker/cli/cli/config/configfile.ConfigFile
cli/config/config_test.go:253:3: Fatalf format %q has arg config of wrong type *github.com/docker/cli/cli/config/configfile.ConfigFile
cli/config/config_test.go:288:3: Fatalf format %q has arg config of wrong type *github.com/docker/cli/cli/config/configfile.ConfigFile
cli/config/config_test.go:435:3: Fatalf format %q has arg config of wrong type *github.com/docker/cli/cli/config/configfile.ConfigFile
cli/config/config_test.go:448:3: Fatalf format %q has arg config of wrong type *github.com/docker/cli/cli/config/configfile.ConfigFile
DONE 1115 tests, 2 skipped, 6 errors in 215.984s
make: *** [Makefile:22: test-coverage] Error 2
Exited with code 2
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The `conn` here is `*winio.win32MessageBytePipe` which does not have a
`CloseRead` method (it does have `CloseWrite`) resulting in:
docker@WIN-NUC0 C:\Users\docker>.\docker-windows-amd64.exe system dial-stdio
the raw stream connection does not implement halfCloser
Also disable the path which uses this for cli-plugins on Windows.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
Plugins are expected to be management commands ("docker <object> <verb>").
This patch modified the usage output to shown plugins in the "Management commands"
section.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This is a bit manual (as the unit test attests) so we may find we want to add
some helpers/accessors, but this is enough to let plugins use it and to
preserve the information through round-trips.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
- The placement of the vendor is now in the end of the line.
- A '*' is now added as suffix of plugins' top level commands.
Signed-off-by: Ulysses Souza <ulysses.souza@docker.com>
This means that plugins can use whatever methods the monolithic CLI supports,
which is good for consistency.
This relies on `os.Args[0]` being something which can be executed again to
reach the same binary, since it is propagated (via an envvar) to the plugin for
this purpose. This essentially requires that the current working directory and
path are not modified by the monolithic CLI before it launches the plugin nor
by the plugin before it initializes the client. This should be the case.
Previously the fake apiclient used by `TestExperimentalCLI` was not being used,
since `cli.Initialize` was unconditionally overwriting it with a real one
(talking to a real daemon during unit testing, it seems). This wasn't expected
nor desirable and no longer happens with the new arrangements, exposing the
fact that no `pingFunc` is provided, leading to a panic. Add a `pingFunc` to
the fake client to avoid this.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
Fairly straight forward. It became necessary to wrap `Plugin.Err` with a type
which implements `encoding.MarshalText` in order to have that field rendered
properly in the `docker info -f '{{json}}'` output.
Since I changed the type somewhat I also added a unit test for `formatInfo`.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
To do this we add a stub `cobra.Command` for each installed plugin (only when
invoking `help`, not for normal running).
This requires a function to list all available plugins so that is added here.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
Also includes the scaffolding for finding a validating plugin candidates.
Argument validation is moved to RunE to support this, so `noArgs` is removed.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
- The `/build/prune` endpoint was added in API v1.31
- The `/network` endpoints were added in API v1.21
This patch hides these commands on older API versions
Before this change:
```
DOCKER_API_VERSION=1.0 docker
...
Management Commands:
builder Manage builds
container Manage containers
image Manage images
manifest Manage Docker image manifests and manifest lists
network Manage networks
system Manage Docker
trust Manage trust on Docker images
```
After this change
```
DOCKER_API_VERSION=1.0 docker
...
Management Commands:
container Manage containers
image Manage images
manifest Manage Docker image manifests and manifest lists
system Manage Docker
trust Manage trust on Docker images
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
That is, the helper to be used from the plugin's `main`.
Also add a `helloworld` plugin example and build integration.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
I authored this for `contentTrustEnabled` prior to 7f207f3f95, so this now
tests the funcation argument version.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
This helps to avoid circular includes, by separating the pure data out from the
actual functionality in the cli subpackage, allowing other code which is
imported to access the data.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
... and expose. I would like to use this from another site.
This implies also moving (and exposing) the `visitAll` helper.
Unit test them while I'm here.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
All of the current callers follow the pattern:
dockerPreRun(opts)
err := dockerCli.Initialize(opts) ...
So there is no semantic change into merging the content of `dockerPreRun` into the head of `Initialize`.
I'm about to add a new caller outside of the `cmd/docker` package and this
seems preferable exporting `DockerPreRun`.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
This will allow plugins to have custom typed endpoints, as well as
create/remove/update contexts with the exact same results as the main
CLI (thinking of things like `docker ee login https://my-ucp-server
--context ucp-prod)`
Signed-off-by: Simon Ferquel <simon.ferquel@docker.com>
That is, reindent the two sections by one space.
While the code was done by hand the `.golden` files had the extra space
inserted with emacs' `string-insert-rectangle` macro to (try to) avoid possible
manual errors. The docs were edited the same way.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
Right now the only client side info we have is whether debug is enabled, but we
expect more in the future.
We also preemptively prepare for the possibility of multiple errors when
gathering both daemon and client info.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
Last batch of modifications to the context switch implementation missed
some documentation updates. This is an update to the CLI reference and
the store implementation Godoc.
Signed-off-by: Simon Ferquel <simon.ferquel@docker.com>
Proxies configured in config.json were only taking effect
when using `docker run`, but were being ignored when
using `docker create`.
Before this change:
echo '{"proxies":{"default":{"httpProxy":"httpProxy","httpsProxy":"httpsProxy","noProxy":"noProxy","ftpProxy":"ftpProxy"}}}' > config.json
docker inspect --format '{{.Config.Env}}' $(docker --config=./ create busybox)
[PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin]
With this change applied:
echo '{"proxies":{"default":{"httpProxy":"httpProxy","httpsProxy":"httpsProxy","noProxy":"noProxy","ftpProxy":"ftpProxy"}}}' > config.json
docker inspect --format '{{.Config.Env}}' $(docker --config=./ create busybox)
[NO_PROXY=noProxy no_proxy=noProxy FTP_PROXY=ftpProxy ftp_proxy=ftpProxy HTTP_PROXY=httpProxy http_proxy=httpProxy HTTPS_PROXY=httpsProxy https_proxy=httpsProxy PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin]
Reported-by: Silvano Cirujano Cuesta <Silvanoc@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The `DOCKER_HIDE_LEGACY_COMMANDS` environment variable allows hiding legacy
top-level commands that are now available under `docker <object> <verb>`. The
`docker deploy` top-level command is experimental, and replaced by
`docker stack deploy`.
This patch hides the top-level `docker deploy` if the `DOCKER_HIDE_LEGACY_COMMANDS`
environment variable is set.
Before this change:
DOCKER_HIDE_LEGACY_COMMANDS=1 docker --help
...
Commands:
build Build an image from a Dockerfile
deploy Deploy a new stack or update an existing stack
login Log in to a Docker registry
logout Log out from a Docker registry
run Run a command in a new container
search Search the Docker Hub for images
version Show the Docker version information
...
With this patch applied:
DOCKER_HIDE_LEGACY_COMMANDS=1 docker --help
...
Commands:
build Build an image from a Dockerfile
login Log in to a Docker registry
logout Log out from a Docker registry
run Run a command in a new container
search Search the Docker Hub for images
version Show the Docker version information
...
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This PR adds a store to the CLI, that can be leveraged to persist and
retrieve credentials for various API endpoints, as well as
context-specific settings (initially, default stack orchestrator, but we
could expand that).
This comes with the logic to persist and retrieve endpoints configs
for both Docker and Kubernetes APIs.
Signed-off-by: Simon Ferquel <simon.ferquel@docker.com>
Add `--quiet` to the `docker image pull` subcommand that will not pull
the image quietly.
```
$ docker pull -q golang
Using default tag: latest
```
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Previously, these errors were only printed when using `docker run`, but were
omitted when using `docker container create` and `docker container start`
separately.
Given that these warnings apply to both situations, this patch moves generation
of these warnings to `docker container create` (which is also called by
`docker run`)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
A while ago, Docker split the "Domainname" field out from the "Hostname"
field for the container configuration. There was no real user-visible
change associated with this (and under the hood "Domainname" was mostly
left unused from the command-line point of view). We now add this flag
in order to match other proposed changes to allow for setting the NIS
domainname of a container.
This also includes a fix for the --hostname parsing tests (they would
not error out if only one of .Hostname and .Domainname were incorrectly
set -- which is not correct).
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
This PR chnages allow user to configure data path
port number. By default we use 4789 port number. But this commit
will allow user to configure port number during swarm init.
Data path port can't be modified after swarm init.
Signed-off-by: selansen <elango.siva@docker.com>
A recent change in moby/moby made tests with missing client mocks fail with panic.
This adds those missing mocks for the impacted tests.
Signed-off-by: Simon Ferquel <simon.ferquel@docker.com>
- make it possible to extract the formatter implementation from the
"common" code, that way, the formatter package stays small
- extract some formatter into their own packages
This is essentially moving the "formatter" implementation of each type
in their respective packages. The *main* reason to do that, is to be
able to depend on `cli/command/formatter` without depending of the
implementation detail of the formatter. As of now, depending on
`cli/command/formatter` means we depend on `docker/docker/api/types`,
`docker/licensing`, … — that should not be the case. `formatter`
should hold the common code (or helpers) to easily create formatter,
not all formatter implementations.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Avoid testing for session support in non-buildkit builder to support
servers that falsely report as `1.39` compatible
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
gofmt/goimports changed some heuristics in 1.11 and the code is now
formatted slightly differently.
No functional change, just whitespace.
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
Fix this warning from go-1.11
> cli/registry/client/fetcher.go:234: Debugf format %s has arg
> repoEndpoint of wrong type client.repositoryEndpoint
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
Unlike `docker build --secret`, `docker build --ssh` allows the build container to
use SSH keys with passphrases.
$ eval $(ssh-agent)
$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
(Input your passphrase here)
$ docker build --ssh default=$SSH_AUTH_SOCK ...
This feature requires the daemon with `CapExecMountSSH` build capability (moby/moby#37973) .
Currently, the official Dockerfile frontend does not provide the syntax for using the SSH forwarder.
However, the experimental `RUN --mount=type=ssh` syntax can be enabled by using
the Dockerfile frontend image built with the `BUILDTAGS="dfrunmount dfssh"`, via the `# syntax =` "shebang".
The Dockerfile for the Dockerfile frontend is available at github.com/moby/buildkit/frontend/dockerfile/cmd/dockerfile-frontend)
The pre-built image is also available as `tonistiigi/dockerfile:ssh20181002` .
An example Dockerfile with `RUN --mount=type=ssh`:
# syntax = tonistiigi/dockerfile:ssh20181002
FROM alpine
RUN apk add --no-cache openssh-client
RUN mkdir -p -m 0700 ~/.ssh && ssh-keyscan gitlab.com >> ~/.ssh/known_hosts
RUN --mount=type=ssh ssh git@gitlab.com | tee /hello
# "Welcome to GitLab, @GITLAB_USERNAME_ASSOCIATED_WITH_SSHKEY" should be printed here
More info available at moby/buildkit#608, moby/buildkit#655
Signed-off-by: Akihiro Suda <suda.akihiro@lab.ntt.co.jp>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
(cherry picked from commit 92932647d3)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
Prior refactoring passes missed a corner case.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
(cherry picked from commit dee37936e5)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
During the refactoring for 18.09 the activate/update flows no longer
restart the engine explicitly but let the user do that when they're ready,
so the health check logic is no longer required.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
(cherry picked from commit f2b2061cc3)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This is a follow up PR to #1381 to address some of the review comments
we didn't get to.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
(cherry picked from commit c12e23a4c1)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
Help the user understand which license they're about
to load in case they have multiple licenses they need to
figure out.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
(cherry picked from commit 5a97a93ae1)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
Due to a typo, substitution would not work if the given
environment-variable was set.
Given the following docker compose file;
```yaml
version: "3.7"
services:
app:
image: nginx:${version:-latest}
```
Deploying a stack with `$version` set would ignore the `$version`
environment variable, and use the default value instead;
```bash
version=alpine docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml foobar
Creating network foobar_default
Creating service foobar_app
docker service ls
ID NAME MODE REPLICAS IMAGE PORTS
rskkjxe6sm0w foobar_app replicated 1/1 nginx:latest
```
This patch also fixes "soft default" not detecting empty environment variables,
only non-set environment variables.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
(cherry picked from commit 6004d74b1f)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
Address code review comemnts and purge additional dead code.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
(cherry picked from commit f250152bf4)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
Adapt the CLI to the host install model for 18.09.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
(cherry picked from commit 342afe44fb)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <crosbymichael@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit cfec8027ed)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
If, for some reason, the certs directory has permissions that are
inaccessible by docker, we should still be able to fetch manifests using
the `insecure` flag.
Since the cli doesn't access the engine's list of insecure registries,
the registry client should make a singleton list of the registry being queried with the
`insecure` flag.
Closes#1358
Signed-off-by: Christy Norman <christy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
The integration test TestExportContainerWithOutputAndImportImage in moby/moby is the same as TestExportContainerAndImportImage,
except for the output file option. Adding a unit test to cover the output file option of the export command here allows
the removal of the redundant integration test TestExportContainerWithOutputAndImportImage.
Signed-off-by: Arash Deshmeh <adeshmeh@ca.ibm.com>
The config file was being truncated first, which created a window during
which it was empty, causing concurrent uses of the `docker` command to
potentially fail with:
WARNING: Error loading config file: /var/lib/jenkins/.docker/config.json: EOF
Error response from daemon: Get https://registry/v2/foo/manifests/latest: no basic auth credentials
Signed-off-by: Benoit Sigoure <tsunanet@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
(cherry picked from commit 68be7cb376)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
Warnings are now generated by the daemon, and returned as
part of the /info API response.
If warnings are returned by the daemon; use those instead
of generating them locally.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This feature brings new attribute/option for swarm init command.
default-addr-pool will take string input which can be in below format.
"CIDR,CIDR,CIDR...:SUBNET-SIZE".
Signed-off-by: selansen <elango.siva@docker.com>
This new collection of commands supports initializing a local
engine using containerd, updating that engine, and activating
the EE product
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
This patch adds a new builder subcommand, allowing to add more builder-related
commands in the future. Unfortunately `build` expects an argument so could not
be used as a subcommand.
This also implements `docker builder prune`, which is needed to prune the builder
cache manually without having to call `docker system prune`.
Today when relying on the legacy builder, users are able to prune dangling images
(used as build cache) by running `docker image prune`. This patch allows the
same usecase with buildkit.
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
This patch implements `docker build --secret id=mysecret,src=/secret/file`
for buildkit frontends that request the mysecret secret.
It is currently implemented in the tonistiigi/dockerfile:secrets20180808
frontend via RUN --mount=type=secret,id=mysecret
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
This changes the experimental --console flag to --progress following
feedback indicating avoidable confusion.
In addition to naming changes, the help output now has an additional
clarification, specifically: container output during builds are only
shown when progress output is set to plain. Not mentioning this was also
a big cause of confusion.
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
… as it is possible to do it when interpolating. It also fixes when
there is 2 variables on the same *value* (in the composefile, on the
same line)
Finaly, renaming the default, used in cli, pattern to `defaultPattern`
to not be shadowed unintentionally.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
e.g. docker -H ssh://me@server
The `docker` CLI also needs to be installed on the remote host to
provide `docker system dial-stdio`, which proxies the daemon socket to stdio.
Please refer to docs/reference/commandline/dockerd.md .
Signed-off-by: Akihiro Suda <suda.akihiro@lab.ntt.co.jp>
It allows to get easily all the variables defined in a
composefile (the `map[string]interface{}` representation that
`loader.ParseYAML` returns at least) and their default value too.
This commit also does some small function extract on substitution
funcs to reduce a tiny bit duplication.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
PersistentPreRunE needs to be called within the help function to initialize all the flags (notably the orchestrator flag)
Add an e2e test as regression test
Signed-off-by: Silvin Lubecki <silvin.lubecki@docker.com>
This should make it easier for people to write custom composefile
parser without duplicating too much code. It takes the default
transformers and any additional number of transformer for any
types. That way it's possible to transform a `cli/compose` map into a
custom type that would use some of `cli/compose` types and its own.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
This flag was added in Docker 17.06, API version 1.31 through
moby@8dc8cd4719f165c01c98e7d3ce1d6cea6a8f60b8, but didn't add
API-version annotations.
This patch adds the missing annotations to hide this flag if
the CLI is connected to an older version of the daemon that
doesn't support that API.
Before this patch:
DOCKER_API_VERSION=1.30 docker swarm init --help | grep data-path-addr
--data-path-addr string Address or interface to use for data path traffic (format: <ip|interface>)
DOCKER_API_VERSION=1.31 docker swarm init --help | grep data-path-addr
--data-path-addr string Address or interface to use for data path traffic (format: <ip|interface>)
With this patch applied:
DOCKER_API_VERSION=1.30 docker swarm init --help | grep data-path-addr
# (no result)
DOCKER_API_VERSION=1.31 docker swarm init --help | grep data-path-addr
--data-path-addr string Address or interface to use for data path traffic (format: <ip|interface>)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- Use `Contains` instead of `Include`
- Use `ToJSON` instead of `ToParam`
- Remove usage of `ParseFlag` as it is deprecated too
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Even though those fields are not supported by `docker stack deploy`
they are defined in versions `3.x` of compose schema, so the `compose`
package should be able to marshal/unmarshal them.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Clarified ambiguous error message
Update kubernetes/cli.go
Infromed user of why the error was caused when file is not there
Signed-off-by: Justyn Temme <justyntemme@gmail.com>
- remove some hints that are no longer needed
- added a nolint: unparam for removeSingleSigner() (return bool is only used in tests)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
in swarm.
Also, fix some CLI command confusions:
1. If the --external-ca flag is provided, require a --ca-cert flag as well, otherwise
the external CA is set but the CA certificate is actually rotated to an internal
cert
2. If a --ca-cert flag is provided, require a --ca-key or --external-ca flag be
provided as well, otherwise either the server will say that the request is
invalid, or if there was previously an external CA corresponding to the cert, it
will succeed. While that works, it's better to require the user to explicitly
set all the parameters of the new desired root CA.
This also changes the `swarm update` function to set the external CA's CACert field,
which while not strictly necessary, makes the CA list more explicit.
Signed-off-by: Ying Li <ying.li@docker.com>
'CheckInitialized' in the credential-helper library actually invokes
`pass`, which isn't desirable (see #699).
This moves the check to be simpler, and then pass will only be invoked
when it's needed (such as for `docker login` or when pulling from a
private registry).
This logic could also reasonably live in the credential-helper library,
but it's simple enough it seems fine in either location.
Signed-off-by: Euan Kemp <euank@euank.com>
Stores complete OCI descriptor instead of digest and platform
fields. This includes the size which was getting lost by not
storing the original manifest bytes.
Attempt to support existing cached files, if not output
the filename with the incorrect content.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net>
It makes it easier to get the correct stack from a compose config
struct without requiring the client (and thus talking to k8s API)
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
- Handle `bundlefile` directly in the `top-level`
command. `bundlefile` is still experimental and will be deprecated
in future version — this should make be easier to remove it.
- Validate the `stack` name in all cases (i.e. whatever the
orchestrator is used)
- Load the composefile ahead of choosing the orchestrator. This
removes some slight duplication.
- Makes `RunDeploy` easier to use from outside packages (like
`docker/app`) with a preloaded configuration.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
- Add the possibility to skip interpolation
- Add the possibility to skip schema validation
- Allow customizing the substitution function, to add special cases.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
> Run an init inside the container that forwards signals and reaps
processes
This is supported on `run` and now on Swarm services too, so it's also
possible to have in on a composefile :).
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
That field is automaticaly populated with any `x-*` field in the yaml.
And marshalling the compose config struct put them back into place.
This make it possible to get those extra fields without re-inventing
the wheel (i.e. reimplementing 80% of the `cli/compose/*` packages.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
The output of this information can be confusing,
so removing until we have a better design for this.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
* Renaming DOCKER_ORCHESTRATOR to DOCKER_STACK_ORCHESTRATOR
* Renaming config file option "orchestrator" to "stackOrchestrator"
* "--orchestrator" flag is no more global but local to stack command and subcommands
* Cleaning all global orchestrator code
* Replicating Hidden flags in help and Supported flags from root command to stack command
Signed-off-by: Silvin Lubecki <silvin.lubecki@docker.com>
Unfortunately, this is for now the only way to see the output of RUN commands when using buildkit.
It is equivalent to `DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1 docker build . 2>&1 | cat`
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
With this patch the following become true even with buildkit enabled:
1. `docker build -q .` only outputs the created image's sha256 ID.
2. `docker build -q .` outputs as if no `-q` was specified, if error occurred
3. `docker build . &> out` outputs JSON (instead of TTY characters)
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
This commit brings a more pedantic change in the following ambiguous case:
cat Dockerfile | docker build -f otherDockerfile -
The legacy builder does not error out and prefers the Dockerfile from stdin
while the buildkit-based one errors out.
Note that this is only in the case where stdin is a Dockerfile (not an archive)
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
* Kubernetes native filtering (server side) is an exact match, now filtering on name is made client-side to add prefix-matching
Signed-off-by: Silvin Lubecki <silvin.lubecki@docker.com>
This patch adds annotations to mark the checkpoint commands as Linux only, which
hides them if the daemon is running a non-matching operating-system type;
Before:
docker
Usage: docker COMMAND
A self-sufficient runtime for containers
...
Management Commands:
config Manage Docker configs
container Manage containers
image Manage images
After:
docker
Usage: docker COMMAND
A self-sufficient runtime for containers
...
Management Commands:
checkpoint Manage checkpoints
config Manage Docker configs
container Manage containers
image Manage images
This change also prints errors when attempting to use checkpoint commands or
flags if the feature is not supported by the Daemon's operating system;
$ docker checkpoint --help
docker checkpoint is only supported on a Docker daemon running on linux, but the Docker daemon is running on windows
$ docker checkpoint create --help
docker checkpoint create is only supported on a Docker daemon running on linux, but the Docker daemon is running on windows
$ docker checkpoint ls --help
docker checkpoint ls is only supported on a Docker daemon running on linux, but the Docker daemon is running on windows
$ docker checkpoint rm --help
docker checkpoint rm is only supported on a Docker daemon running on linux, but the Docker daemon is running on windows
$ docker container start --checkpoint=foo mycontainer
"--checkpoint" requires the Docker daemon to run on linux, but the Docker daemon is running on windows
$ docker container start --checkpoint-dir=/foo/bar mycontainer
"--checkpoint-dir" requires the Docker daemon to run on linux, but the Docker daemon is running on windows
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This fixes the help template so that if a command
includes a Long form help message that is displayed instead
of ignoring it and always showing the Short message.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
As for top-level key, any 3rd-level key which starts with `x-` will be
ignored by compose. This allows for users to:
* include additional metadata in their compose files
* create YAML anchor objects that can be re-used in other parts of the config
This matches a similar feature in the swagger spec definition:
https://swagger.io/specification/#specificationExtensions
This means a composefile like the following is valid
```
verison: "3.7"
services:
foo:
image: foo/bar
x-foo: bar
network:
bar:
x-bar: baz
```
It concerns services, volumes, networks, configs and secrets.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Add validation for stack names to prevent an empty name resulting in _all_
stacks to be returned after filtering, which can result in removal of services
for all stacks if `--prune`, or `docker stack rm` is used.
Before this change;
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml one
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml two
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml three
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml --prune ''
Removing service one_web
Removing service two_web
Removing service three_web
After this change:
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml one
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml two
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml three
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml --prune ''
invalid stack name: ""
Other stack commands were updated as well:
Before this change;
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml ''
Creating network _default
failed to create network _default: Error response from daemon: rpc error: code = InvalidArgument desc = name must be valid as a DNS name component
docker stack ps ''
nothing found in stack:
docker stack rm ''
Removing service one_web
Removing service three_web
Removing service two_web
After this change:
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml ''
invalid stack name: ""
docker stack ps ''
invalid stack name: ""
docker stack rm ''
invalid stack name: ""
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- Don't wrap the code to be slightly more readable
- Rename `getServiceFilter()` to `getStackServiceFilter()` to be
consistent with other helper functions.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
* Add "kubernetes" struct in config file with "allNamespaces" option, to opt-out this behavior when set as "disabled"
Signed-off-by: Mathieu Champlon <mathieu.champlon@docker.com>
`docker stack services --filter=label=foo=bar --filter=label=foo=baz my-stack` with Swarm gets handled as `filter on (a label named foo with value bar) AND (a label named foo with value baz).
This obviously yields an empty result set every time, but if and how this should be changed is out of scope here, so simply align Kubernetes with Swarm for now.
Signed-off-by: Mathieu Champlon <mathieu.champlon@docker.com>
Before this change:
----------------------------------------------------
Create a service with reservations and limits for memory and cpu:
docker service create --name test \
--limit-memory=100M --limit-cpu=1 \
--reserve-memory=100M --reserve-cpu=1 \
nginx:alpine
Verify the configuration
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.Resources}}' test
{
"Limits": {
"NanoCPUs": 1000000000,
"MemoryBytes": 104857600
},
"Reservations": {
"NanoCPUs": 1000000000,
"MemoryBytes": 104857600
}
}
Update just CPU limit and reservation:
docker service update --limit-cpu=2 --reserve-cpu=2 test
Notice that the memory limit and reservation is not preserved:
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.Resources}}' test
{
"Limits": {
"NanoCPUs": 2000000000
},
"Reservations": {
"NanoCPUs": 2000000000
}
}
Update just Memory limit and reservation:
docker service update --limit-memory=200M --reserve-memory=200M test
Notice that the CPU limit and reservation is not preserved:
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.Resources}}' test
{
"Limits": {
"MemoryBytes": 209715200
},
"Reservations": {
"MemoryBytes": 209715200
}
}
After this change:
----------------------------------------------------
Create a service with reservations and limits for memory and cpu:
docker service create --name test \
--limit-memory=100M --limit-cpu=1 \
--reserve-memory=100M --reserve-cpu=1 \
nginx:alpine
Verify the configuration
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.Resources}}' test
{
"Limits": {
"NanoCPUs": 1000000000,
"MemoryBytes": 104857600
},
"Reservations": {
"NanoCPUs": 1000000000,
"MemoryBytes": 104857600
}
}
Update just CPU limit and reservation:
docker service update --limit-cpu=2 --reserve-cpu=2 test
Confirm that the CPU limits/reservations are updated, but memory limit and reservation are preserved:
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.Resources}}' test
{
"Limits": {
"NanoCPUs": 2000000000,
"MemoryBytes": 104857600
},
"Reservations": {
"NanoCPUs": 2000000000,
"MemoryBytes": 104857600
}
}
Update just Memory limit and reservation:
docker service update --limit-memory=200M --reserve-memory=200M test
Confirm that the Mempry limits/reservations are updated, but CPU limit and reservation are preserved:
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.TaskTemplate.Resources}}' test
{
"Limits": {
"NanoCPUs": 2000000000,
"MemoryBytes": 209715200
},
"Reservations": {
"NanoCPUs": 2000000000,
"MemoryBytes": 209715200
}
}
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This patch hides the [flags] in the usage output of commands, using the
new `.DisableFlagsInUseLine` option, instead of the temporary workaround
added in 8e600e10f7
Before this change:
docker run
"docker run" requires at least 1 argument.
See 'docker run --help'.
Usage: docker run [OPTIONS] IMAGE [COMMAND] [ARG...] [flags]
Run a command in a new container
After this change:
docker run
"docker run" requires at least 1 argument.
See 'docker run --help'.
Usage: docker run [OPTIONS] IMAGE [COMMAND] [ARG...]
Run a command in a new container
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The `docker version` output now uses a tabwriter, so use single
tabs to print the output.
Before this change:
Server:
Engine:
Version: 18.05.0-ce
API version: 1.37 (minimum version 1.12)
Go version: go1.10.1
Git commit: f150324
Built: Wed May 9 22:20:16 2018
OS/Arch: linux/amd64
Experimental: true
Kubernetes:
Version: v1.9.6
StackAPI: v1beta2
After this change:
Server:
Engine:
Version: 18.05.0-ce
API version: 1.37 (minimum version 1.12)
Go version: go1.10.1
Git commit: f150324
Built: Wed May 9 22:20:16 2018
OS/Arch: linux/amd64
Experimental: true
Kubernetes:
Version: v1.9.6
StackAPI: v1beta2
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Switch from x/net/context to context made "go vet" see the previously
unseen errors:
> cli/command/container/start.go:57::error: the cancelFun function is
> not used on all paths (possible context leak) (vet)
> cli/command/container/start.go:63::error: this return statement may be
> reached without using the cancelFun var defined on line 57 (vet)
> cli/command/container/run.go:159::error: the cancelFun function is not
> used on all paths (possible context leak) (vet)
> cli/command/container/run.go:164::error: this return statement may be
> reached without using the cancelFun var defined on line 159 (vet)
Do call the cancel function.
Note we might end up calling it twice which is fine as long as I can see
from the Go 1.10 source code.
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
Since go 1.7, "context" is a standard package. Since go 1.9,
x/net/context merely provides some types aliased to those in
the standard context package.
The changes were performed by the following script:
for f in $(git ls-files \*.go | grep -v ^vendor/); do
sed -i 's|golang.org/x/net/context|context|' $f
goimports -w $f
for i in 1 2; do
awk '/^$/ {e=1; next;}
/\t"context"$/ {e=0;}
{if (e) {print ""; e=0}; print;}' < $f > $f.new && \
mv $f.new $f
goimports -w $f
done
done
[v2: do awk/goimports fixup twice]
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
Removing a host by `<host>:<ip>` should only remove occurences of the host with
a matching IP-address, instead of removing all entries for that host.
In addition, combining `--host-rm` and `--host-add` for the same host should
result in the new host being added.
This patch fixes the way the diff is calculated to allow combining
removing/adding, and to support entries having both a canonical, and aliases.
Aliases cannot be added by the CLI, but are supported in the Service spec, thus
should be taken into account:
Entries can be removed by either a specific `<host-name>:<ip-address>`
mapping, or by `<host>` alone:
- If both IP-address and host-name is provided, only remove the hostname
from entries that match the given IP-address.
- If only a host-name is provided, remove the hostname from any entry it
is part of (either as _canonical_ host-name, or as _alias_).
- If, after removing the host-name from an entry, no host-names remain in
the entry, the entry itself should be removed.
For example, the list of host-entries before processing could look like this:
hosts = &[]string{
"127.0.0.2 host3 host1 host2 host4",
"127.0.0.1 host1 host4",
"127.0.0.3 host1",
"127.0.0.1 host1",
}
Removing `host1` removes every occurrence:
hosts = &[]string{
"127.0.0.2 host3 host2 host4",
"127.0.0.1 host4",
}
Whereas removing `host1:127.0.0.1` only remove the host if the IP-address matches:
hosts = &[]string{
"127.0.0.2 host3 host1 host2 host4",
"127.0.0.1 host4",
"127.0.0.3 host1",
}
Before this patch:
$ docker service create --name my-service --host foo:127.0.0.1 --host foo:127.0.0.2 --host foo:127.0.0.3 nginx:alpine
$ docker service update --host-rm foo:127.0.0.1 --host-add foo:127.0.0.4 my-service
$ docker service inspect --format '{{.Spec.TaskTemplate.ContainerSpec.Hosts}}' my-service
[]
After this patch is applied:
$ docker service create --name my-service --host foo:127.0.0.1 --host foo:127.0.0.2 --host foo:127.0.0.3 nginx:alpine
$ docker service update --host-rm foo:127.0.0.1 --host-add foo:127.0.0.5 my-service
$ docker service inspect --format '{{.Spec.TaskTemplate.ContainerSpec.Hosts}}' my-service
[127.0.0.2 foo 127.0.0.3 foo 127.0.0.4 foo]
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The "update" and "rollback" configurations were cross-wired, as a result, setting
`--rollback-*` options would override the service's update-options.
Creating a service with both update, and rollback configuration:
docker service create \
--name=test \
--update-failure-action=pause \
--update-max-failure-ratio=0.6 \
--update-monitor=3s \
--update-order=stop-first \
--update-parallelism=3 \
--rollback-failure-action=continue \
--rollback-max-failure-ratio=0.5 \
--rollback-monitor=4s \
--rollback-order=start-first \
--rollback-parallelism=2 \
--tty \
busybox
Before this change:
docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.UpdateConfig}}' test \
&& docker service inspect --format '{{json .Spec.RollbackConfig}}' test
Produces:
{"Parallelism":3,"FailureAction":"pause","Monitor":3000000000,"MaxFailureRatio":0.6,"Order":"stop-first"}
{"Parallelism":3,"FailureAction":"pause","Monitor":3000000000,"MaxFailureRatio":0.6,"Order":"stop-first"}
After this change:
{"Parallelism":3,"FailureAction":"pause","Monitor":3000000000,"MaxFailureRatio":0.6,"Order":"stop-first"}
{"Parallelism":2,"FailureAction":"continue","Monitor":4000000000,"MaxFailureRatio":0.5,"Order":"start-first"}
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This ensures Windows paths are handled correctly as explained in the path package documentation.
Signed-off-by: Mathieu Champlon <mathieu.champlon@docker.com>
It will be helpful to expose the pull implementation which supports
pulling private images for other CLI commands that rely on helper images.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel.hiltgen@docker.com>
When creating manifest lists, don't use "*" as the permission when
creating the token handler. This causes problems with gitlab's repos.
Fixes https://github.com/docker/cli/issues/1010
Signed-off-by: Christy Norman <christy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
- Some of them don't make sense anymore
- Some are deprecated and removed from the engine since a few versions
already.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
… and other cases too. Updating mergo fixes the bugs (but introduced a
slight behaviour change that had to be fixed too)
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
When updating a service with the `--force` option, the `ForceUpdate`
property of the taskspec is incremented.
Stack deploy did not take this into account, and reset this
field to its default value (0), causing the service to be
re-deployed.
This patch copies the existing value before updating the service.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
> HasAvailableFlags checks if the command contains any flags (local
> plus persistent from the entire structure) which are not hidden or
> deprecated.
This fix the `--help` display when the `Options` is empty (but
showing), like on `docker trust key`
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
- `replaceDockerfileForContentTrust` is only used when content trust is
enabled, so remove the boolean.
- rename `isContentTrustEnabled` to `contentTrustEnabled`
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Some of them are skipped for now (because the feature is not supported
or needs more work), some of them are fixed.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Fix tests that failed when using cmp.Compare()
internal/test/testutil/assert
InDelta
Fix DeepEqual with kube metav1.Time
Convert some ErrorContains to assert
Signed-off-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@docker.com>
Overriding is the incorrect part of speech for this sentence. It is more common to state that the values are overridden instead.
Other options would include:
```golang
// ldflags is overriding these values
```
```golang
// These values will be overridden by ldflags
```
etc.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Kirsche <kevin.kirsche@verizon.com>
Commit 2b17f4c8a8 fixed the way empty labels
are taken into account (i.e. not interpolated from environment variable),
but it created a regression.
`ValidateLabel` functions doesn't allow empty label value, but it has
always been possible to pass an empty label via the cli (`docker run --label foo`).
This fixes that by not validating the label flag.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Includes:
- [client] Remove duplicate NewClient functions
- Add API support for templated secrets and configs
- Adjust minimum API version for templated configs/secrets
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- Add `Version` to `types.Config`
- Add a new `Services` types (that is just `[]ServiceConfig`) and add
`MarshalYAML` method on it.
- Clean other top-level custom marshaling as `Services` is the only one
required.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Historically, the Dockerfile had to be insde the build-context, because it was
sent as part of the build-context.
3f6dc81e10
added support for passing the Dockerfile through stdin, in which case the
contents of the Dockerfile is injected into the build-context.
This patch uses the same mechanism for situations where the location of the
Dockerfile is passed, and its path is outside of the build-context.
Before this change:
$ mkdir -p myproject/context myproject/dockerfiles && cd myproject
$ echo "hello" > context/hello
$ echo -e "FROM busybox\nCOPY /hello /\nRUN cat /hello" > dockerfiles/Dockerfile
$ docker build --no-cache -f $PWD/dockerfiles/Dockerfile $PWD/context
unable to prepare context: the Dockerfile (/Users/sebastiaan/projects/test/dockerfile-outside/myproject/dockerfiles/Dockerfile) must be within the build context
After this change:
$ mkdir -p myproject/context myproject/dockerfiles && cd myproject
$ echo "hello" > context/hello
$ echo -e "FROM busybox\nCOPY /hello /\nRUN cat /hello" > dockerfiles/Dockerfile
$ docker build --no-cache -f $PWD/dockerfiles/Dockerfile $PWD/context
Sending build context to Docker daemon 2.607kB
Step 1/3 : FROM busybox
---> 6ad733544a63
Step 2/3 : COPY /hello /
---> 9a5ae1c7be9e
Step 3/3 : RUN cat /hello
---> Running in 20dfef2d180f
hello
Removing intermediate container 20dfef2d180f
---> ce1748f91bb2
Successfully built ce1748f91bb2
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This adds the Engine version to `docker node ls`, and `.EngineVersion` as a
template option.
With this patch applied:
docker node ls
ID HOSTNAME STATUS AVAILABILITY MANAGER STATUS ENGINE VERSION
wp9231itoqsh4rqceojqo01vp * linuxkit-025000000001 Ready Active Leader 18.01.0-ce
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
backend.
Currently, the timeout is set to 0, which means no timeout. Set it to a
sane default timeout of 30 seconds.
Signed-off-by: Anusha Ragunathan <anusha.ragunathan@docker.com>
To ensure we are loading the composefile the same wether we are pointing
to swarm or kubernetes, we need to share the loading code between both.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
`--label-file` has the exact same behavior as `--env-file`, meaning any
placeholder (i.e. a simple key, no `=` sign, no value), it will get the
value from the environment variable.
For `--label-file` it should just add an empty label.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Prefer "strict" values for orchestrator, as it's
easier to add aliases (if we think it's needed) than
to remove them later.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
When adding a network using `docker service update --network-add`,
the new network was added by _name_.
Existing entries in a service spec are listed by network ID, which
resulted in the CLI not detecting duplicate entries for the same
network.
This patch changes the behavior to always use the network-ID,
so that duplicate entries are correctly caught.
Before this change;
$ docker network create -d overlay foo
$ docker service create --name=test --network=foo nginx:alpine
$ docker service update --network-add foo test
$ docker service inspect --format '{{ json .Spec.TaskTemplate.Networks}}' test
[
{
"Target": "9ot0ieagg5xv1gxd85m7y33eq"
},
{
"Target": "9ot0ieagg5xv1gxd85m7y33eq"
}
]
After this change:
$ docker network create -d overlay foo
$ docker service create --name=test --network=foo nginx:alpine
$ docker service update --network-add foo test
service is already attached to network foo
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Enable inspection (aka "shallow pull") of images' manifest info, and
also the creation of manifest lists (aka "fat manifests").
The workflow for creating a manifest list will be:
`docker manifest create new-list-ref-name image-ref [image-ref...]`
`docker manifest annotate new-list-ref-name image-ref --os linux --arch
arm`
`docker manifest push new-list-ref-name`
The annotate step is optional. Most architectures are fine by default.
There is also a `manifest inspect` command to allow for a "shallow pull"
of an image's manifest: `docker manifest inspect
manifest-or-manifest_list`.
To be more in line with the existing external manifest tool, there is
also a `-v` option for inspect that will show information depending on
what the reference maps to (list or single manifest).
Signed-off-by: Christy Perez <christy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@docker.com>
- More strict on orchestrator flag
- Make orchestrator flag more explicit as experimental
- Add experimentalCLI annotation on kubernetes flags
- Better kubeconfig error message
- Prefix service name with stackname in ps and services stack subcommands
- Fix yaml documentation
- Fix code coverage ignoring generated code
Signed-off-by: Silvin Lubecki <silvin.lubecki@docker.com>
* Refactor tests on version and kubernetes switch
* Fix rebase errors
* Refactor for gocyclo linter
Signed-off-by: Silvin Lubecki <silvin.lubecki@docker.com>
Services do not support custom "pid"-modes (e.g. `--pid=host`), but this
option was ignored silently when deploying a stack.
This patch adds `pid` to the list of unsupported options so that a warning
is printed;
With this patch applied:
$ docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml foobar
Ignoring unsupported options: pid
Creating network foobar_default
Creating service foobar_test
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
- Define command and subcommands only once
- Use annotations for k8s or swarm specific flags or subcommands
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
- Add support for kubernetes for docker stack command
- Update to go 1.9
- Add kubernetes to vendors
- Print orchestrator in docker version command
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
Signed-off-by: Silvin Lubecki <silvin.lubecki@docker.com>
Allow to mark some commands and flags experimental on cli (i.e. not
depending to the state of the daemon). This will allow more flexibility
on experimentation with the cli.
Marking `docker trust` as cli experimental as it is documented so.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
If container wait has failed, show an error from the engine
and return an appropriate exit code.
This requires engine changes from https://github.com/moby/moby/pull/34999
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
The Server section of version output is now composed of an Engine
component and potentially more, based on what the /version endpoint
returns.
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: John Howard <jhoward@microsoft.com>
This is the CLI updates for the document discussed in https://github.com/moby/moby/issues/34617
to support Linux Containers on Windows. It adds --platform= as CLI flags to the four
commands listed above. Import still to be completed (needs daemon changes).
Fix 19 typos, grammatical errors and duplicated words.
These fixes have minimal impact on the code as these are either in the
doc files or in comments inside the code files.
Signed-off-by: Abdur Rehman <abdur_rehman@mentor.com>
Extra hosts (`extra_hosts` in compose-file, or `--hosts` in services) adds
custom host/ip mappings to the container's `/etc/hosts`.
The current implementation used a `map[string]string{}` as intermediate
storage, and sorted the results alphabetically when converting to a service-spec.
As a result, duplicate hosts were removed, and order of host/ip mappings was not
preserved (in case the compose-file used a list instead of a map).
According to the **host.conf(5)** man page (http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man5/host.conf.5.html)
multi Valid values are on and off. If set to on, the resolver
library will return all valid addresses for a host that
appears in the /etc/hosts file, instead of only the first.
This is off by default, as it may cause a substantial
performance loss at sites with large hosts files.
Multiple entries for a host are allowed, and even required for some situations,
for example, to add mappings for IPv4 and IPv6 addreses for a host, as illustrated
by the example hosts file in the **hosts(5)** man page (http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man5/hosts.5.html):
# The following lines are desirable for IPv4 capable hosts
127.0.0.1 localhost
# 127.0.1.1 is often used for the FQDN of the machine
127.0.1.1 thishost.mydomain.org thishost
192.168.1.10 foo.mydomain.org foo
192.168.1.13 bar.mydomain.org bar
146.82.138.7 master.debian.org master
209.237.226.90 www.opensource.org
# The following lines are desirable for IPv6 capable hosts
::1 localhost ip6-localhost ip6-loopback
ff02::1 ip6-allnodes
ff02::2 ip6-allrouters
This patch changes the intermediate storage format to use a `[]string`, and only
sorts entries if the input format in the compose file is a mapping. If the input
format is a list, the original sort-order is preserved.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The `--host-add` flag adds a new `host:ip` mapping. Even though
adding an entry is idempotent (adding the same mapping multiple
times does not update the service's definition), it does not
_update_ an existing mapping with a new IP-address (multiple
IP-addresses can be defined for a host).
This patch removes the "or update" part from the flag's
description.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
and enable the new WarnUnmatchedDirective to warn if a nolint is unnecessary.
remove some unnecessary nolint
Signed-off-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@docker.com>
When deploying a stack from a compose file, the output did not show
that a secret or config was created. This patch adds messages for these.
Create a configuration file and compose file:
$ cat > config.yml <<EOF
hello: world
EOF
$ cat > secret.txt <<EOF
p@ssw0rd
EOF
$ cat > docker-compose.yml <<EOF
version: "3.3"
services:
test:
image: nginx:alpine
configs:
- source: myconfig
target: /my-config.yml
secrets:
- source: mysecret
target: /my-secret.txt
configs:
myconfig:
file: ./config.yml
secrets:
mysecret:
file: ./secret.txt
EOF
Before this patch is applied:
$ docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml example
Creating network example_default
Creating service example_test
After this patch is applied:
$ docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml example
Creating network example_default
Creating secret example_mysecret
Creating config example_myconfig
Creating service example_test
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Port mappings in `docker service ls` are quite verbose, and occupy a lot of
space when ranges of ports are published.
This patch improves the output by reconstructing ranges of ports.
Given the following service;
$ docker service create \
-p 60-61:60-61 \
-p 62:61 \
-p 80:80 \
-p 81:80 \
-p 90-95:90-95 \
-p 90-92:90-92/udp \
-p 93-96:93-96/udp \
--name foo \
nginx:alpine
Before this patch is applied:
$ docker service ls
ID NAME MODE REPLICAS IMAGE PORTS
u1kwguv841qg foo replicated 1/1 nginx:alpine *:60->60/tcp,*:61->61/tcp,*:62->61/tcp,*:80->80/tcp,*:81->80/tcp,*:90->90/tcp,*:91->91/tcp,*:92->92/tcp,*:93->93/tcp,*:94->94/tcp,*:95->95/tcp,*:90->90/udp,*:91->91/udp,*:92->92/udp,*:93->93/udp,*:94->94/udp,*:95->95/udp,*:96->96/udp
After this patch is applied:
$ docker service ls
ID NAME MODE REPLICAS IMAGE PORTS
u1kwguv841qg foo replicated 1/1 nginx:alpine *:60-62->60-61/tcp,*:80-81->80/tcp,*:90-95->90-95/tcp,*:90-96->90-96/udp
Additional enhancements can still be made, and marked as TODO in this change;
- combine non-consecutive ports mapped to a single port (`80->80`, `81->80`,
`84->80`, `86->80`, `87->80`); to be printed as `*:80-81,84,86-87->80`.
- combine `tcp` and `udp` mappings if their port-mapping is the same;
print `*:80-81->80-81/tcp+udp` instead of `*:80-81->80-81/tcp, *:80-81->80-81/udp`
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Running `docker service ps --quiet` should print the
full, non-truncated ID, even if the `--no-trunc` option
is not set.
This patch disables truncation if the `--quiet` flag
is set.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The `docker container stats` output has a column (`CONTAINER`), that shows either
the container _id_ or container _name_, depending on the arguments given.
For example, running `docker container stats foobar` shows:
CONTAINER CPU % MEM USAGE / LIMIT MEM % NET I/O BLOCK I/O PIDS
foobar 0.00% 1.938MiB / 1.952GiB 0.10% 782B / 0B 4.11MB / 0B 2
Whereas `docker container stats 67b2525d8ad1` (`67b2525d8ad1` being the ID for
container `foobar`) shows:
CONTAINER CPU % MEM USAGE / LIMIT MEM % NET I/O BLOCK I/O PIDS
67b2525d8ad1 0.00% 1.938MiB / 1.952GiB 0.10% 916B / 0B 4.11MB / 0B 2
This behavior is confusing.
This patch updates the default output format for `docker stats` to use separate
columns for container ID and container Name (similar to `docker container ls`).
With this patch applied, both commands show the same output:
$ docker container stats foobar
CONTAINER ID NAME CPU % MEM USAGE / LIMIT MEM % NET I/O BLOCK I/O PIDS
67b2525d8ad10bb236a49960e93c09993b0baabeef12c2d46cd5f4fbb6f4808c foobar 0.00% 1.938MiB / 1.952GiB 0.10% 1.25kB / 0B 4.11MB / 0B 2
$ docker container stats 67b2525d8ad1
CONTAINER ID NAME CPU % MEM USAGE / LIMIT MEM % NET I/O BLOCK I/O PIDS
67b2525d8ad10bb236a49960e93c09993b0baabeef12c2d46cd5f4fbb6f4808c foobar 0.00% 1.938MiB / 1.952GiB 0.10% 1.31kB / 0B 4.11MB / 0B 2
Users that want to use the old format can configure a custom format in the
cli configuration file (`~/.docker/config.json`);
on Linux:
{
"statsFormat" : "table {{.Container}}\t{{.CPUPerc}}\t{{.MemUsage}}\t{{.MemPerc}}\t{{.NetIO}}\t{{.BlockIO}}\t{{.PIDs}}"
}
on Windows:
{
"statsFormat" : "table {{.Container}}\t{{.CPUPerc}}\t{{.MemUsage}}\t{{.NetIO}}\t{{.BlockIO}}"
}
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>