Commit Graph

2 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
fate-grand-order af86cd4d2f Use error.New () directly to output the error message
Signed-off-by: fate-grand-order <chenjg@harmonycloud.cn>
2017-02-10 14:31:49 +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