a3cae915c3
Signed-off-by: Aaron.L.Xu <likexu@harmonycloud.cn>
71 lines
3.7 KiB
Markdown
71 lines
3.7 KiB
Markdown
# Development Report for Feb 10, 2017
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Sorry for slacking off last week on the report. We totally spaced it.
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This week we will go over what happened last week and this week.
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## Snapshot Design Changes
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* https://github.com/docker/containerd/pull/496
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After receiving feedback on the `snapshot.Driver` interface, now known as the
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`Snapshotter`, it was found that the behavior of active and committed snapshots
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was confusing. Specifically, it was hard to tell which methods to use based on
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the state of the snapshot. It was also confusing which identifier to use based
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on the state.
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To clean this up, we moved to using "Active" and "Committed" as the type of a
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snapshot, as opposed to the state of the snapshot. These lifecycle
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relationships are such that "Active" snapshots can only be created from a
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"Committed" snapshot and "Committed" snapshots must come from an "Active"
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snapshot. We retain the concept of a parent for "Active" and "Committed"
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snapshots, but clarified that only "Committed" snapshots can be a parent.
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As part of this, we unified the keyspace of snapshots. For common operations,
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such as removal and stat, we only have a single method that works for both
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active and committed snapshots. For methods that take one or the other, the
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restriction is called out. `Remove` and `Delete` were consolidated as part of
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this. This also makes it easier to handle scenarios that use the snapshot
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identity as a lock to coordinate multiple writers.
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`Exists` and `Parent` have also be consolidated into single `Stat` call. This
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returns an `Info` structure which includes information about state and
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parentage. We also simplify the `Walk` method as part of this.
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Effectively, we now have snapshots that are either active or committed and a
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much smaller interface!
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## Bundles Bundles Bundles
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We spend time talking with people implementing Windows support as well as a few other users.
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One the the major issues with our current approach was that bundles were a central part of our architecture.
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The content and storage subsystems would produce bundles and the execution subsystem would consume them.
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However, with a bundle being on the filesystem, having this concept does not work as smoothly on Windows
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as it would for Unix platforms.
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So the major design change is that bundles will be an implementation detail of the runtime and not a core
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part of the API. You will no longer pass the bundle path to containerd, it will manage bundles internally
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and the root filesystem mounts along with the spec, passed via the `Any` type, will be API fields for the
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create request of a container.
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## Runtimes
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With the bundles change above we also need to make sure changes for where containers are created and who
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does the supervision after creation.
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The runtimes in containerd, things such as Linux, Windows, and Solaris, will be responsible for the
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creation of containers and loading of containers when containerd boots.
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The containerd core will be responsible for interfacing with the GRPC API and managing a common `Container`
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interface that the runtimes produce. The supervision of containers will be handled in the core.
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This is not much of a change from today, just refining where responsibilities lie.
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## Progress and POC
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Overall design has been a large focus for us at the moment. While containerd can run containers today it
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is not optimized in terms of speed or design. With the work we did this week to make sure that containerd
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will work across many different platforms with first class support, not as an after thought, we are in a good
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position to really start on the development work and get a POC out within the next few weeks.
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This POC should give you a good idea of what containerd can do, its APIs, and how users will interact with
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its various subsystems.
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