Commit graph

11 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Stephen J Day
e53539c58f
cmd/dist, cmd/ctr: end to end image pull
With this changeset, we now have a proof of concept of end to end pull.
Up to this point, the relationship between subsystems has been somewhat
theoretical. We now leverage fetching, the snapshot drivers, the rootfs
service, image metadata and the execution service, validating the proposed
model for containerd. There are a few caveats, including the need to move some
of the access into GRPC services, but the basic components are there.

The first command we will cover here is `dist pull`. This is the analog
of `docker pull` and `git pull`. It performs a full resource fetch for
an image and unpacks the root filesystem into the snapshot drivers. An
example follows:

``` console
$ sudo ./bin/dist pull docker.io/library/redis:latest
docker.io/library/redis:latest:                                                   resolved       |++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++|
manifest-sha256:4c8fb09e8d634ab823b1c125e64f0e1ceaf216025aa38283ea1b42997f1e8059: done           |++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++|
layer-sha256:3b281f2bcae3b25c701d53a219924fffe79bdb74385340b73a539ed4020999c4:    done           |++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++|
config-sha256:e4a35914679d05d25e2fccfd310fde1aa59ffbbf1b0b9d36f7b03db5ca0311b0:   done           |++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++|
layer-sha256:4b7726832aec75f0a742266c7190c4d2217492722dfd603406208eaa902648d8:    done           |++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++|
layer-sha256:338a7133395941c85087522582af182d2f6477dbf54ba769cb24ec4fd91d728f:    done           |++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++|
layer-sha256:83f12ff60ff1132d1e59845e26c41968406b4176c1a85a50506c954696b21570:    done           |++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++|
layer-sha256:693502eb7dfbc6b94964ae66ebc72d3e32facd981c72995b09794f1e87bac184:    done           |++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++|
layer-sha256:622732cddc347afc9360b4b04b46c6f758191a1dc73d007f95548658847ee67e:    done           |++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++|
layer-sha256:19a7e34366a6f558336c364693df538c38307484b729a36fede76432789f084f:    done           |++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++|
elapsed: 1.6 s                                                                    total:   0.0 B (0.0 B/s)
INFO[0001] unpacking rootfs
```

Note that we haven't integrated rootfs unpacking into the status output, but we
pretty much have what is in docker today (:P). We can see the result of our pull
with the following:

```console
$ sudo ./bin/dist images
REF                            TYPE                                                 DIGEST                                                                  SIZE
docker.io/library/redis:latest application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json sha256:4c8fb09e8d634ab823b1c125e64f0e1ceaf216025aa38283ea1b42997f1e8059 1.8 kB
```

The above shows that we have an image called "docker.io/library/redis:latest"
mapped to the given digest marked with a specific format. We get the size of
the manifest right now, not the full image, but we can add more as we need it.
For the most part, this is all that is needed, but a few tweaks to the model
for naming may need to be added. Specifically, we may want to index under a few
different names, including those qualified by hash or matched by tag versions.
We can do more work in this area as we develop the metadata store.

The name shown above can then be used to run the actual container image. We can
do this with the following command:

```console
$ sudo ./bin/ctr run --id foo docker.io/library/redis:latest /usr/local/bin/redis-server
1:C 17 Mar 17:20:25.316 # Warning: no config file specified, using the default config. In order to specify a config file use /usr/local/bin/redis-server /path/to/redis.conf
1:M 17 Mar 17:20:25.317 * Increased maximum number of open files to 10032 (it was originally set to 1024).
                _._
           _.-``__ ''-._
      _.-``    `.  `_.  ''-._           Redis 3.2.8 (00000000/0) 64 bit
  .-`` .-```.  ```\/    _.,_ ''-._
 (    '      ,       .-`  | `,    )     Running in standalone mode
 |`-._`-...-` __...-.``-._|'` _.-'|     Port: 6379
 |    `-._   `._    /     _.-'    |     PID: 1
  `-._    `-._  `-./  _.-'    _.-'
 |`-._`-._    `-.__.-'    _.-'_.-'|
 |    `-._`-._        _.-'_.-'    |           http://redis.io
  `-._    `-._`-.__.-'_.-'    _.-'
 |`-._`-._    `-.__.-'    _.-'_.-'|
 |    `-._`-._        _.-'_.-'    |
  `-._    `-._`-.__.-'_.-'    _.-'
      `-._    `-.__.-'    _.-'
          `-._        _.-'
              `-.__.-'

1:M 17 Mar 17:20:25.326 # WARNING: The TCP backlog setting of 511 cannot be enforced because /proc/sys/net/core/somaxconn is set to the lower value of 128.
1:M 17 Mar 17:20:25.326 # Server started, Redis version 3.2.8
1:M 17 Mar 17:20:25.326 # WARNING overcommit_memory is set to 0! Background save may fail under low memory condition. To fix this issue add 'vm.overcommit_memory = 1' to /etc/sysctl.conf and then reboot or run the command 'sysctl vm.overcommit_memory=1' for this to take effect.
1:M 17 Mar 17:20:25.326 # WARNING you have Transparent Huge Pages (THP) support enabled in your kernel. This will create latency and memory usage issues with Redis. To fix this issue run the command 'echo never > /sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/enabled' as root, and add it to your /etc/rc.local in order to retain the setting after a reboot. Redis must be restarted after THP is disabled.
1:M 17 Mar 17:20:25.326 * The server is now ready to accept connections on port 6379
```

Wow! So, now we are running `redis`!

There are still a few things to work out. Notice that we have to specify the
command as part of the arguments to `ctr run`. This is because are not yet
reading the image config and converting it to an OCI runtime config. With the
base laid in this PR, adding such functionality should be straightforward.

While this is a _little_ messy, this is great progress. It should be easy
sailing from here.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2017-03-21 13:08:23 -07:00
Stephen J Day
5da4e1d0d2 services/content: move service client into package
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2017-02-28 17:12:24 -08:00
Stephen J Day
d99756a8a2
content: allow reset via Truncate
To make restarting after failed pull less racy, we define `Truncate(size
int64) error` on `content.Writer` for the zero offset. Truncating a
writer will dump any existing data and digest state and start from the
beginning. All subsequent writes will start from the zero offset.

For the service, we support this by defining the behavior for a write
that changes the offset. To keep this narrow, we only support writes out
of order at the offset 0, which causes the writer to dump existing data
and reset the local hash.

This makes restarting failed pulls much smoother when there was a
previously encountered error and the source doesn't support arbitrary
seeks or reads at arbitrary offsets. By allowing this to be done while
holding the write lock on a ref, we can restart the full download
without causing a race condition.

Once we implement seeking on the `io.Reader` returned by the fetcher,
this will be less useful, but it is good to ensure that our protocol
properly supports this use case for when streaming is the only option.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2017-02-28 10:40:02 -08:00
Stephen J Day
850f8addc2
content: close writer after opening
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2017-02-24 16:08:31 -08:00
Stephen J Day
c062a85782
content: cleanup service and interfaces
After implementing pull, a few changes are required to the content store
interface to make sure that the implementation works smoothly.
Specifically, we work to make sure the predeclaration path for digests
works the same between remote and local writers. Before, we were
hesitent to require the the size and digest up front, but it became
clear that having this provided significant benefit.

There are also several cleanups related to naming. We now call the
expected digest `Expected` consistently across the board and `Total` is
used to mark the expected size.

This whole effort comes together to provide a very smooth status
reporting workflow for image pull and push. This will be more obvious
when the bulk of pull code lands.

There are a few other changes to make `content.WriteBlob` more broadly
useful. In accordance with addition for predeclaring expected size when
getting a `Writer`, `WriteBlob` now supports this fully. It will also
resume downloads if provided an `io.Seeker` or `io.ReaderAt`. Coupled
with the `httpReadSeeker` from `docker/distribution`, we should only be
a lines of code away from resumable downloads.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2017-02-22 13:30:01 -08:00
Michael Crosby
3101be93bc Load runtimes dynamically via go1.8 plugins
Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <crosbymichael@gmail.com>

Add registration for more subsystems via plugins

Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <crosbymichael@gmail.com>

Move content service to separate package

Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <crosbymichael@gmail.com>
2017-02-21 16:29:46 -08:00
Stephen J Day
621164bc84
content: refactor content store for API
After iterating on the GRPC API, the changes required for the actual
implementation are now included in the content store. The begin change
is the move to a single, atomic `Ingester.Writer` method for locking
content ingestion on a key. From this, comes several new interface
definitions.

The main benefit here is the clarification between `Status` and `Info`
that came out of the GPRC API. `Status` tells the status of a write,
whereas `Info` is for querying metadata about various blobs.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2017-02-21 13:10:22 -08:00
Stephen J Day
f9cd9be61a
dist: expand functionality of the dist tool
With this change, we add the following commands to the dist tool:

- `ingest`: verify and accept content into storage
- `active`: display active ingest processes
- `list`: list content in storage
- `path`: provide a path to a blob by digest
- `delete`: remove a piece of content from storage

We demonstrate the utility with the following shell pipeline:

```
$ ./dist fetch docker.io/library/redis latest mediatype:application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json | \
    jq -r '.layers[] | "./dist fetch docker.io/library/redis "+.digest + "| ./dist ingest --expected-digest "+.digest+" --expected-size "+(.size | tostring) +" docker.io/library/redis@"+.digest' | xargs -I{} -P10 -n1 sh -c "{}"
```

The above fetches a manifest, pipes it to jq, which assembles a shell
pipeline to ingest each layer into the content store. Because the
transactions are keyed by their digest, concurrent downloads and
downloads of repeated content are ignored. Each process is then executed
parallel using xargs.

Put shortly, this is a parallel layer download.

In a separate shell session, could monitor the active downloads with the
following:

```
$ watch -n0.2 ./dist active
```

For now, the content is downloaded into `.content` in the current
working directory. To watch the contents of this directory, you can use
the following:

```
$ watch -n0.2 tree .content
```

This will help to understand what is going on internally.

To get access to the layers, you can use the path command:

```
$./dist path sha256:010c454d55e53059beaba4044116ea4636f8dd8181e975d893931c7e7204fffa
sha256:010c454d55e53059beaba4044116ea4636f8dd8181e975d893931c7e7204fffa /home/sjd/go/src/github.com/docker/containerd/.content/blobs/sha256/010c454d55e53059beaba4044116ea4636f8dd8181e975d893931c7e7204fffa
```

When you are done, you can clear out the content with the classic xargs
pipeline:

```
$ ./dist list -q | xargs ./dist delete
```

Note that this is mostly a POC. Things like failed downloads and
abandoned download cleanup aren't quite handled. We'll probably make
adjustments around how content store transactions are handled to address
this.

From here, we'll build out full image pull and create tooling to get
runtime bundles from the fetched content.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2017-01-27 10:29:10 -08:00
Stephen J Day
f27d43285a
content: cleanup package exports
The package exports are now cleaned up to remove a lot of stuttering in
the API. We also remove direct mapping of refs to the filesystem, opting
for a hash-based approach. This *does* affect insertion performance,
since it requires more individual file ios. A benchmark baseline has
been added and we can fix this later.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2017-01-23 20:11:35 -08:00
Gábor Lipták
d8aee18f6c Point digest import to opencontainers/go-digest
Signed-off-by: Gábor Lipták <gliptak@gmail.com>
2017-01-09 18:10:52 -05:00
Stephen J Day
3469905bbb
content: break up into multiple files
Break up the content store prototype into a few logical files. We have a
file for the store, the writer and helpers.

Also, the writer has been modified to remove write and exec permissions
on blobs in the store.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2016-11-03 17:18:45 -07:00