2016-12-02 23:38:59 +00:00
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# Architecture
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To ensure clean separation of concerns, we have organized the units of
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containerd's behavior into _components_. _Components_ are roughly organized
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into _subsystems_. _Components_ that bridge subsystems may be referred to as
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_modules_. _Modules_ typically provide cross-cutting functionality, such as
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persistent storage or event distribution. Understanding these _components_ and
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their relationships is key to modifying and extending the system.
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This document will cover very high-level interaction. For details on each
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module, please see the relevant design document.
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The main goal of this architecture is to coordinate the creation and execution
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of _bundles_. _Bundles_ contain configuration, metadata and root filesystem
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data and are consumed by the _runtime_. A _bundle_ is the on-disk
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representation of a runtime container. _Bundles_ are mutable and can be passed
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to other systems for modification or packed up and distributed. In practice, it
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is simply a directory on the filesystem.
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2016-12-02 23:45:08 +00:00
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![Architecture](architecture.png)
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2016-12-02 23:38:59 +00:00
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2016-12-15 03:15:01 +00:00
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Note that while these architectural ideas are important to understanding the
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2016-12-02 23:38:59 +00:00
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system, code layout may not reflect the exact architecture. These ideas should
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be used as a guide for placing functionality and behavior and understanding the
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thought behind the design.
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## Subsystems
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External users interact with services, made available via a GRPC API.
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- __*Distribution*__: The distribution service supports pulling images.
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- __*Bundle*__: The bundle service allows the user to extract and pack bundles
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from disk images.
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- __*Runtime*__: The runtime service supports the execution of _bundles_,
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including the creation of runtime containers.
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Typically, each subsystem will have one or more related _controller_ components
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that implement the behavior of the _subsystem_. The behavior of the _subsystem_
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may be exported for access via corresponding _services_.
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## Modules
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2017-01-19 17:18:18 +00:00
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In addition to the subsystems have, we have several components that may cross
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subsystem boundaries, referened to as components. We have the following
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components:
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- __*Executor*__: The executor implements the actual container runtime.
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- __*Supervisor*__: The supervisor monitors and reports container state.
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- __*Metadata*__: Stores metadata in a graph database. Use to store any
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persistent references to images and bundles. Data entered into the
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database will have schemas coordinated between components to provide access
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to arbitrary data. Other functionality includes hooks for garbage collection
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of on-disk resources.
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- __*Content*__: Provides access to content addressable storage. All immutable
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content will be stored here, keyed by content hash.
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- __*Snapshot*__: Manages filesystem snapshots for container images. This is
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analogous to the graphdriver in Docker today. Layers are unpacked into
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snapshots.
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- __*Events*__: Supports the collection and consumption of events for providing
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consistent, event driven behavior and auditing. Events may be replayed to
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various _modules_
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- __*Metrics*__: Each components will export several metrics, accessible via
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the metrics API. (We may want to promote this to a subsystem.
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## Data Flow
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As discussed above, the concept of a _bundle_ is central to containerd. Below
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is a diagram illustrating the data flow for bundle creation.
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2016-12-02 23:45:08 +00:00
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![data-flow](data-flow.png)
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Let's take pulling an image as a demonstrated example:
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2017-01-19 17:18:18 +00:00
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1. Instruct the Distribution layer to pull a particular image. The distribution
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layer places the image content into the _content store_. The image name and
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root manifest pointers are registered with the metadata store.
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2. Once the image is pulled, the user can instruct the bundle controller to
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unpack the image into a bundle. Consuming from the content store, _layers_
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from the image are unpacked into the _snapshot_ component.
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3. When the snapshot for the rootfs of a container is ready, the _bundle
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controller_ can use the image manifest and config to prepare the execution
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configuration. Part of this is entering mounts into the execution config
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from the _snapshot_ module.
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2016-12-15 00:24:30 +00:00
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4. The prepared bundle is then passed off to the _runtime_ subsystem for
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execution. It reads the bundle configuration to create a running container.
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