The current validation only checked for the
number of elements in the volume-spec, however,
did not validate if the elements were empty.
Because of this, an empty volume-spec (""),
or volume spec only containing separators ("::")
would not be invalidated.
This adds a simple check for empty elements in
the volume-spec, and returns an error if
the spec is invalid.
A unit-test is also added to verify the behavior.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
the `convertVolumeToMount()` function did not take
anonymous volumes into account when converting
volume specifications to bind-mounts.
this resulted in the conversion to try to
look up an empty "source" volume, which
lead to an error;
undefined volume:
this patch distinguishes "anonymous"
volumes from bind-mounts and named-volumes,
and skips further processing if no source
is defined (i.e. the volume is "anonymous").
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
While looking into `docker stats <c1> <c2> ...` I noticed that
the error output is quite long, especially if there are multiple errors:
```sh
ubuntu@ubuntu:~/docker$ docker stats nofound
: Error response from daemon: No such container: nofound
ubuntu@ubuntu:~/docker$ docker stats nofound foo bar
: Error response from daemon: No such container: nofound, : Error response from daemon: No such container: foo, : Error response from daemon: No such container: bar
```
There are several issues,
1. There is an extra `: ` at the beginning. That is because if container is not found,
the name will not be available from the daemon.
2. Multiple errors are concatenated with `, ` which will be quite long.
This fix:
1. Only prient out the error from daemon.
2. Multiple errors are printed out line by line.
Below is the new output:
```sh
ubuntu@ubuntu:~/docker$ docker stats nofound
Error response from daemon: No such container: nofound
ubuntu@ubuntu:~/docker$ docker stats nofound foo bar
Error response from daemon: No such container: nofound
Error response from daemon: No such container: foo
Error response from daemon: No such container: bar
```
Signed-off-by: Yong Tang <yong.tang.github@outlook.com>
check to see if the node is part of a swarm, and if so, if it is unlocked first.
If neither of these are true, abort the command.
Signed-off-by: Ying Li <ying.li@docker.com>
In cases where there is high latency (ie, not-local network)
`waitExitOrRemoved` was not receiving events for short-lived containers.
This caused the client to hang while waiting for a notification that the
container has stopped.
This happens because `client.Events()` returns immediately and spins a
goroutine up to process events. The problem here is it returns before
the request to the events endpoint is even made.
Even without high-latency issues, there is no guarantee that the
goroutine is even scheduled by the time the function returns.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
the "docker swarm leave" command description
mentioned that the command can only be used
for workers, however, the command can also
be used for managers (using the `-f` / `--force`
option).
this patch removes the "(workers only)" part
of the command description.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The top-level `docker inspect` command could return
an error if the nodes Swarm certificates were expired.
In situations where the user did not explicitly
ask for an object-type (`--type=foo`), we should
ignore these errors, and consider them equal to
"node is not a swarm manager".
This change makes `docker inspect` ignore these
errors if no type was specified.
As a further optimization, the "swarm status"
result is now stored in a variable, so that
other swarm-specific API calls can be skipped.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This fix tries to address the issue raised in 28581 and 28927
where it is not possible to create a secret from a file (only
through STDIN).
This fix add a flag `--file` to `docker secret create` so that
it is possible to create a secret from a file with:
```
docker secret create --file secret.in secret.name
```
or
```
echo TEST | docker secret create --file - secret.name
```
Related docs has been updated.
An integration test has been added to cover the changes.
This fix fixes 28581.
This fix is related to 28927.
Signed-off-by: Yong Tang <yong.tang.github@outlook.com>
This fix tries to address the issue raised in 24352. Previously,
when `docker swarm update` has no flags, the output is
```
Swarm updated.
```
even though nothing was updated. This could be misleading for
users.
This fix tries to address the issue by adding a `PreRunE` function
in the command so that in case no flag is provided (`cmd.Flags().NFlag() == 0`),
the usage will be outputed instead.
An integration has been added to cover the changes.
This fix fixes 24352.
Signed-off-by: Yong Tang <yong.tang.github@outlook.com>
`--publish-add 8081:81 --publish-add 8082:82 --publish-rm 80
--publish-rm 81/tcp --publish-rm 82/tcp` would thus result in 81 and
82 to be published.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Demeester <vincent@sbr.pm>
This reverts 26103. 26103 was trying to make it so that if someone did:
docker build --build-arg FOO .
and FOO wasn't set as an env var then it would pick-up FOO from the
Dockerfile's ARG cmd. However, it went too far and removed the ability
to specify a build arg w/o any value. Meaning it required the --build-arg
param to always be in the form "name=value", and not just "name".
This PR does the right fix - it allows just "name" and it'll grab the value
from the env vars if set. If "name" isn't set in the env then it still needs
to send "name" to the server so that a warning can be printed about an
unused --build-arg. And this is why buildArgs in the options is now a
*string instead of just a string - 'nil' == mentioned but no value.
Closes#29084
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
This reverts 26103. 26103 was trying to make it so that if someone did:
docker build --build-arg FOO .
and FOO wasn't set as an env var then it would pick-up FOO from the
Dockerfile's ARG cmd. However, it went too far and removed the ability
to specify a build arg w/o any value. Meaning it required the --build-arg
param to always be in the form "name=value", and not just "name".
This PR does the right fix - it allows just "name" and it'll grab the value
from the env vars if set. If "name" isn't set in the env then it still needs
to send "name" to the server so that a warning can be printed about an
unused --build-arg. And this is why buildArgs in the options is now a
*string instead of just a string - 'nil' == mentioned but no value.
Closes#29084
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
- Display the ID column
- Do not append the task ID in the name column
- (NEW): Truncate task IDs, unless --no-trunc is specified
Signed-off-by: Andrea Luzzardi <aluzzardi@gmail.com>
This removes some very old vestigial code that really should have been
removed during the content addressability transition. It implements
something called "reference" but it behaves differently from the actual
reference package. This was only used by client-side content trust code,
and is relatively easy to extricate.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
This fix tries to address the issue in 28884 where
it is possible to mask the secret ID by name.
The reason was that searching a secret is based on name.
However, searching a secret should be done based on:
- Full ID
- Full Name
- Partial ID (prefix)
This fix addresses the issue by changing related implementation
in `getCliRequestedSecretIDs()`
An integration test has been added to cover the changes.
This fix fixes 28884
Signed-off-by: Yong Tang <yong.tang.github@outlook.com>