Add the following options to "swarm init" and "swarm update":
- --max-snapshots: Retain this many old Raft snapshots in addition
to the latest one
- --snapshot-interval: Number of log entries between Raft snapshots
These options already existed in SwarmKit and the Docker API but were
never exposed in the CLI. I'm adding them here to fix this oversight.
--max-snapshots may be useful for debugging purposes and more
conservative users who want to store rolling backups of old versions of
the Raft state.
--snapshot-interval is most useful for performance tuning. The default
value of 10000 may not be ideal for some setups.
There is also a LogEntriesForSlowFollowers option that is not exposed. I
decided not to expose it along with these others because I don't think
it's generally useful (and I'm not sure what I would call the CLI flag).
But if people want, I can expose it for the sake of completeness.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
--group-add was used for specifying groups for both service create
and service update. For create it was confusing since we don't have
an existing set of groups. Instead I added --group to create, and
moved --group-add to service update only, like --group-rm
This deals with issue 27646
Signed-off-by: Lily Guo <lily.guo@docker.com>
Update flag documentation
Specify that --group, --group-add and --groupd-rm refers to
supplementary user groups
Signed-off-by: Lily Guo <lily.guo@docker.com>
Fix docs for groups and update completion scripts
Signed-off-by: Lily Guo <lily.guo@docker.com>
A HealthConfig entry was added to the ContainerSpec associated with the
service being created or updated.
Signed-off-by: Cezar Sa Espinola <cezarsa@gmail.com>
The --name flag was inadvertently added to
docker service update, but is not supported,
as it has various side-effects (e.g., existing
tasks are not renamed).
This removes the flag from the service update
command.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
containers may specify these cgroup values at runtime. This will allow
processes to change their priority to real-time within the container
when CONFIG_RT_GROUP_SCHED is enabled in the kernel. See #22380.
Also added sanity checks for the new --cpu-rt-runtime and --cpu-rt-period
flags to ensure that that the kernel supports these features and that
runtime is not greater than period.
Daemon will support a --cpu-rt-runtime flag to initialize the parent
cgroup on startup, this prevents the administrator from alotting runtime
to docker after each restart.
There are additional checks that could be added but maybe too far? Check
parent cgroups to ensure values are <= parent, inspecting rtprio ulimit
and issuing a warning.
Signed-off-by: Erik St. Martin <alakriti@gmail.com>
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>