Add a test to verify that killing the docker CLI forwards
the signal to the container. Test-case for moby/moby 28872
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This partially reverts e0b59ab52b,
and does not automatically disable proxying signals in TTY-mode
Before this change:
------------------------------------
Start a container with a TTY in one shell:
```
docker run -it --init --name repro-28872 busybox sleep 30
```
then, in another shell, kill the docker cli:
```
kill `pgrep -f repro-28872`
```
Notice that the CLI was killed, but the signal not forwarded to the container;
the container continues running
```
docker container inspect --format '{{ .State.Status }}' repro-28872
running
docker container rm -f repro-28872
```
After this change:
------------------------------------
Start a container with a TTY in one shell:
```
docker run -it --init --name repro-28872 busybox sleep 30
```
then, in another shell, kill the docker cli:
```
kill `pgrep -f repro-28872`
```
Verify that the signal was forwarded to the container, and the container exited
```
docker container inspect --format '{{ .State.Status }}' repro-28872
exited
docker container rm -f repro-28872
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
For backward compatibility: if no custom options are provided for the network,
and only a single network is specified, omit the endpoint-configuration
on the client (the daemon will still create it when creating the container)
This fixes an issue on older versions of legacy Swarm, which did not support
`NetworkingConfig.EndpointConfig`.
This was introduced in 5bc09639cc (#1767)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Co-Authored-By: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Hsu <andrewhsu@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Adds capabilities to import a .zip file with importZip.
Detects the content type of source by checking bytes & DetectContentType.
Adds LimitedReader reader, a fork of io.LimitedReader,
was needed for better error messaging instead of just getting back EOF.
We are using limited reader to avoid very big files causing memory issues.
Adds a new file size limit for context imports,
this limit is used for the main file for .zip & .tar and individual compressed
files for .zip.
Added TestImportZip that will check the import content type
Then will assert no err on Importing .zip file
Signed-off-by: Goksu Toprak <goksu.toprak@docker.com>
To test, add $(pwd)/build/plugins-linux-amd64 to "cliPluginsExtraDirs" config and run:
make plugins
make binary
HELLO_EXPERIMENTAL=1 docker helloworld
To show it enabled:
HELLO_EXPERIMENTAL=1 DOCKER_CLI_EXPERIMENTAL=enabled docker helloworld
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
This is less of a layering violation and removes some ugly hardcoded
`"kubernetes"` strings which were needed to avoid an import loop.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
This removes the need for the core context code to import
`github.com/docker/cli/cli/context/kubernetes` which in turn reduces the
transitive import tree in this file to not pull in all of Kubernetes.
Note that this means that any calling code which is interested in the
kubernetes endpoint must import `github.com/docker/cli/cli/context/kubernetes`
itself somewhere in order to trigger the dynamic registration. In practice
anything which is interested in Kubernetes must import that package (e.g.
`./cli/command/context.list` does for the `EndpointFromContext` function) to do
anything useful, so this restriction is not too onerous.
As a special case a small amount of Kubernetes related logic remains in
`ResolveDefaultContext` to handle error handling when the stack orchestrator
includes Kubernetes. In order to avoid a circular import loop this hardcodes
the kube endpoint name.
Similarly to avoid an import loop the existing `TestDefaultContextInitializer`
cannot continue to unit test for the Kubernetes case, so that aspect of the
test is carved off into a very similar test in the kubernetes context package.
Lastly, note that the kubernetes endpoint is now modifiable via
`WithContextEndpointType`.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
These are needed by any dynamically registered (via
`RegisterDefaultStoreEndpoints`) endpoint type to write a useful/sensible unit
test.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
Previously an endpoint registered using `RegisterDefaultStoreEndpoints` would
not be taken into consideration by `resolveDefaultContext` and so could not
provide any details.
Resolve this by passing a `store.Config` to `resolveDefaultContext` and using
it to iterate over all registered endpoints. Any endpoint can ensure that their
type implements the new `EndpointDefaultResolver` in order to provide a default.
The Docker and Kubernetes endpoints are special cased, shortly the Kubernetes
one will be refactored to be dynamically registered.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
I'm about to refactor the code which includes the Kubernetes support in a way
which relies on something vendoring `./cli/context/kubernetes/` in order to
trigger the inclusion of support for the Kubernetes endpoint in the final
binary.
In practice anything which is interested in Kubernetes must import that package
(e.g. `./cli/command/context.list` does for the `EndpointFromContext`
function). However if it was somehow possible to build without that import then
the `KUBERNETES ENDPOINT` column would be mysteriously empty.
Out of an abundance of caution add a specific check on the final binary.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
This reverts commit 59defcb34d which caused #1892
since the timeout applied not only to the dial phase but to everything, so it
would kill `docker logs -f ...` if the container was not chatty enough.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>
The comment on `github.com/docker/cli/kubernetes.NewKubernetesConfig` said:
// Deprecated: Use github.com/docker/compose-on-kubernetes/api.NewKubernetesConfig instead
By making this switch in `github.com/docker/cli/context/kubernetes/load.go` we
break a vendoring chain:
`github.com/docker/cli/cli/command`
→ `vendor/github.com/docker/cli/cli/context/kubernetes/load.go`
→ `vendor/github.com/docker/cli/kubernetes`
→ `github.com/docker/compose-on-kubernetes/api/compose/...`
This means that projects which just want `github.com/docker/cli/cli/command`
(which is itself pulled in transitively by
`github.com/docker/cli/cli-plugins/plugin`) which do not themselves need the
compose-on-kubernetes API avoid a huge pile of transitive dependencies.
On one of my private projects the diff on the vendor dir is:
280 files changed, 21 insertions(+), 211346 deletions(-)
and includes dropping:
* `github.com/docker/compose-on-kubernetes/api/compose/{clone,impersonation}`
* `github.com/docker/compose-on-kubernetes/api/compose/{v1alpha3,v1beta1,v1beta2,v1beta3}`
* `github.com/google/btree`
* `github.com/googleapis/gnostic`
* `github.com/gregjones/httpcache`
* `github.com/peterbourgon/diskv`
* `k8s.io/api/*` (_lots_ of subpackages)
* `k8s.io/client-go/{discovery,kubernetes/scheme}`
and I've gone from:
$ du -sh vendor/k8s.io/
8.1M vendor/k8s.io/
to:
$ du -sh vendor/k8s.io/
2.1M vendor/k8s.io/
(overall I went from 36M → 29M of vendor dir for this particular project)
The change to `cli/command/system/version.go` is just for consistency and
allows us to drop the now unused alias.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ijc@docker.com>