With current implementation there was a possibility
that /start responds quicker than /attach, meaning that
some output would be clipped.
Fixed so the implementation matches with `docker run`.
This also fixes the flaky test results for TestCreateEchoStdout.
Signed-off-by: Tõnis Tiigi <tonistiigi@gmail.com> (github: tonistiigi)
Fixes#8832
All stdio streams need to finish writing before the
connection can be closed.
Signed-off-by: Tõnis Tiigi <tonistiigi@gmail.com> (github: tonistiigi)
Update for changes in docker 1.2. Running the docker daemon with "-r=false" has been deprecated in favor of per-container restart policies.
Signed-off-by: wilsaj <wilson.andrew.j+github@gmail.com>
If we need to raise an error, make sure the internal state is clean, because
a successful driver.Get() may have its internal state changed (eg. counting,
or mounts), while callers will only do that after a succussful Mount().
Signed-off-by: shuai-z <zs.broccoli@gmail.com>
Includes changes to mkdocs yml and removes style info from docs Read Me, adding a link instead.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Fred Lifton <fred.lifton@docker.com> (github: fredlf)
Conflicts:
docs/README.md
Revisions to style guide based on review.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Fred Lifton <fred.lifton@docker.com> (github: fredlf)
More Style Guide revisions based on review.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Fred Lifton <fred.lifton@docker.com> (github: fredlf)
A few more style guide copy edits
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Fred Lifton <fred.lifton@docker.com> (github: fredlf)
By default is a demo of file differences, but can be used to create a
tar of changes between an old and new path.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Batts <vbatts@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Vincent Batts <vbatts@hashbangbash.com>
In an effort to make layer content 'stable' between import
and export from two different graph drivers, we must resolve
an issue where AUFS produces metadata files in its layers
which other drivers explicitly ignore when importing.
The issue presents itself like this:
- Generate a layer using AUFS
- On commit of that container, the new stored layer contains
AUFS metadata files/dirs. The stored layer content has some
tarsum value: '1234567'
- `docker save` that image to a USB drive and `docker load`
into another docker engine instance which uses another
graph driver, say 'btrfs'
- On load, this graph driver explicitly ignores any AUFS metadata
that it encounters. The stored layer content now has some
different tarsum value: 'abcdefg'.
The only (apparent) useful aufs metadata to keep are the psuedo link
files located at `/.wh..wh.plink/`. Thes files hold information at the
RW layer about hard linked files between this layer and another layer.
The other graph drivers make sure to copy up these psuedo linked files
but I've tested out a few different situations and it seems that this
is unnecessary (In my test, AUFS already copies up the other hard linked
files to the RW layer).
This changeset adds explicit exclusion of the AUFS metadata files and
directories (NOTE: not the whiteout files!) on commit of a container
using the AUFS storage driver.
Also included is a change to the archive package. It now explicitly
ignores the root directory from being included in the resulting tar archive
for 2 reasons: 1) it's unnecessary. 2) It's another difference between
what other graph drivers produce when exporting a layer to a tar archive.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Josh Hawn <josh.hawn@docker.com> (github: jlhawn)
This backend uses the overlayfs union filesystem for containers
plus hard link file sharing for images.
Each container/image can have a "root" subdirectory which is a plain
filesystem hierarchy, or they can use overlayfs.
If they use overlayfs there is a "upper" directory and a "lower-id"
file, as well as "merged" and "work" directories. The "upper"
directory has the upper layer of the overlay, and "lower-id" contains
the id of the parent whose "root" directory shall be used as the lower
layer in the overlay. The overlay itself is mounted in the "merged"
directory, and the "work" dir is needed for overlayfs to work.
When a overlay layer is created there are two cases, either the
parent has a "root" dir, then we start out with a empty "upper"
directory overlaid on the parents root. This is typically the
case with the init layer of a container which is based on an image.
If there is no "root" in the parent, we inherit the lower-id from
the parent and start by making a copy if the parents "upper" dir.
This is typically the case for a container layer which copies
its parent -init upper layer.
Additionally we also have a custom implementation of ApplyLayer
which makes a recursive copy of the parent "root" layer using
hardlinks to share file data, and then applies the layer on top
of that. This means all chile images share file (but not directory)
data with the parent.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)