Currently, there's no way to restart the tasks of a service without
making an actual change to the service. This leads to us giving awkward
workarounds as in
https://github.com/docker/docker.github.io/pull/178/files, where we tell
people to scale a service up and down to restore balance, or make
unnecessary changes to trigger a restart.
This change adds a --force option to "docker service update", which
forces the service to be updated even if no changes require that.
Since rolling update parameters are respected, the user can use
"docker service --force" to do a rolling restart. For example, the
following is supported:
docker service update --force --update-parallelism 2 \
--update-delay 5s myservice
Since the default value of --update-parallelism is 1, the default
behavior is to restart the service one task at a time.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
Keeping the current behavior for exec, i.e., inheriting
variables from main process. New variables will be added
to current ones. If there's already a variable with that
name it will be overwritten.
Example of usage: docker exec -it -e TERM=vt100 <container> top
Closes#24355.
Signed-off-by: Jonh Wendell <jonh.wendell@redhat.com>
This adds support for two enhancements to swarm service rolling updates:
- Failure thresholds: In Docker 1.12, a service update could be set up
to either pause or continue after a single failure occurs. This adds
an --update-max-failure-ratio flag that controls how many tasks need to
fail to update for the update as a whole to be considered a failure. A
counterpart flag, --update-monitor, controls how long to monitor each
task for a failure after starting it during the update.
- Rollback flag: service update --rollback reverts the service to its
previous version. If a service update encounters task failures, or
fails to function properly for some other reason, the user can roll back
the update.
SwarmKit also has the ability to roll back updates automatically after
hitting the failure thresholds, but we've decided not to expose this in
the Docker API/CLI for now, favoring a workflow where the decision to
roll back is always made by an admin. Depending on user feedback, we may
add a "rollback" option to --update-failure-action in the future.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
When sending a build context to a remote server it may be
(significantly) advantageous to compress the build context. This commit
adds support for gz compression when constructing a build context
using a command like "docker build --compress ."
Signed-off-by: Paul Kehrer <paul.l.kehrer@gmail.com>
New driver options:
- `splunk-gzip` - gzip compress all requests to Splunk HEC
(enabled by default)
- `splunk-gzip-level` - change compression level.
Messages are sent in batches by 1000, with frequency of 5 seconds.
Maximum buffer is 10,000 events. If HEC will not be available, Splunk
Logging Driver will keep retrying while it can hold messages in buffer.
Added unit tests for driver.
Signed-off-by: Denis Gladkikh <denis@gladkikh.email>
`--log-opt splunk-format=inline|json|raw` allows to change how logging
driver sends data to Splunk, where
`inline` - default value, format used before, message is injected as a
line in JSON payload
`json` - driver will try to parse each line as a JSON object and embed it
inside of the JSON payload
`raw` - driver will send Raw payload instead of JSON, tag and attributes
will be prefixed before the message
`--log-opt splunk-verify-connection=true|false` - allows to skip
verification for Splunk Url
Signed-off-by: Denis Gladkikh <denis@gladkikh.email>