Interleaving asynchronous updates with pod or container creations can
lead to unrecoverable races and corruptions of the pod or container hash
tables. This is fixed by serializing update against pod or container
creation operations, while pod and container creation operations can
run in parallel.
Signed-off-by: Samuel Ortiz <sameo@linux.intel.com>
Now that the image package has fixes to support docker images v2s1,
we can remove our buildOCIProcessARgs() hack for empty image configs
and simplify this routine.
Signed-off-by: Samuel Ortiz <sameo@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Antonio Murdaca <runcom@redhat.com>
When a pod sandbox comes with DNS settings, the resulting resolv.conf
file needs to be bind mounted in all pod containers under
/etc/resolv.conf.
Signed-off-by: Samuel Ortiz <sameo@linux.intel.com>
We have moved selinux support out of opencontainers/runc into its
own package. This patch moves to using the new selinux go bindings.
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
We need to support a 2x2 matrix of use cases with both
kubelet giving us (command, args) slices and the OCI
image config file giving us (ENTRYPOINT, CMD) slices.
Here we always prioritize the kubelet information over
the OCI image one, and use the latter when the former
is incomplete.
Not that this routine will be slightly simpler when
issue #395 is fixed.
Signed-off-by: Samuel Ortiz <sameo@linux.intel.com>
The way we build the OCI Process Args slice is incorrect.
With the current implementation we may for example end up building this
slice with only the entry point arguments, if the kubelet passed
information is missing the Command slice.
We also will end up building the Args slice with the Image config
process arguments, without the defined entry point, if kubelet does not
tell us anything about the container process command to be run.
This patch fixes that by favoring the kubelet ContainerConfig
information. If that is missing, we try to complete it with the
container image information. We always use ContainerConfig.Command[] or
ImageConfig.EntryPoint[] as the first OCI Process Args slice entries.
Signed-off-by: Samuel Ortiz <sameo@linux.intel.com>
The sandbox privileged flag is set to true only if either the
pod configuration privileged flag is set to true or when any
of the pod namespaces are the host ones.
A container inherit its privileged flag from its sandbox, and
will be run by the privileged runtime only if it's set to true.
In other words, the privileged runtime (when defined) will be
when one of the below conditions is true:
- The sandbox will be asked to run at least one privileged container.
- The sandbox requires access to either the host IPC or networking
namespaces.
Signed-off-by: Samuel Ortiz <sameo@linux.intel.com>
kubelet sends a request to create a container with an image ID (as
opposed as an image name). That ID comes from the ImageStatus response.
This patch fixes that by setting the image ID as well as the image name
and fix the login to lookup for image ID as well.
Found while running `make test-e2e-node`.
Signed-off-by: Antonio Murdaca <runcom@redhat.com>
Use containers/storage to store images, pod sandboxes, and containers.
A pod sandbox's infrastructure container has the same ID as the pod to
which it belongs, and all containers also keep track of their pod's ID.
The container configuration that we build using the data in a
CreateContainerRequest is stored in the container's ContainerDirectory
and ContainerRunDirectory.
We catch SIGTERM and SIGINT, and when we receive either, we gracefully
exit the grpc loop. If we also think that there aren't any container
filesystems in use, we attempt to do a clean shutdown of the storage
driver.
The test harness now waits for ocid to exit before attempting to delete
the storage root directory.
Signed-off-by: Nalin Dahyabhai <nalin@redhat.com>
Vendor updated containers/image and containers/storage, along
with any new dependencies they drag in, and updated versions of other
dependencies that happen to get pulled in.
github.com/coreos/go-systemd/daemon/SdNotify() now takes a boolean to
control whether or not it unsets the NOTIFY_SOCKET variable from the
calling process's environment. Adapt.
github.com/opencontainers/runtime-tools/generate/Generator.AddProcessEnv()
now takes the environment variable name and value as two arguments, not
one. Adapt.
Signed-off-by: Nalin Dahyabhai <nalin@redhat.com>
Because they need to prepare the hypervisor networking interfaces
and have them match the ones created in the pod networking
namespace (typically to bridge TAP and veth interfaces), hypervisor
based container runtimes need the sandbox pod networking namespace
to be set up before it's created. They can then prepare and start
the hypervisor interfaces when creating the pod virtual machine.
In order to do so, we need to create per pod persitent networking
namespaces that we pass to the CNI plugin. This patch leverages
the CNI ns package to create such namespaces under /var/run/netns,
and assign them to all pod containers.
The persitent namespace is removed when either the pod is stopped
or removed.
Since the StopPodSandbox() API can be called multiple times from
kubelet, we track the pod networking namespace state (closed or
not) so that we don't get a containernetworking/ns package error
when calling its Close() routine multiple times as well.
Signed-off-by: Samuel Ortiz <sameo@linux.intel.com>
VM base container runtimes (e.g. Clear Containers) will run each pod
in a VM and will create containers within that pod VM. Unfortunately
those runtimes will get called by ocid with the same commands
(create and start) for both the pause containers and subsequent
containers to be added to the pod namespace. Unless they work around
that by e.g. infering that a container which rootfs is under
"/pause" would represent a pod, they have no way to decide if they
need to create/start a VM or if they need to add a container to an
already running VM pod.
This patch tries to formalize this difference through pod
annotations. When starting a container or a sandbox, we now add 2
annotations for the container type (Infrastructure or not) and the
sandbox name. This will allow VM based container runtimes to handle
2 things:
- Decide if they need to create a pod VM or not.
- Keep track of which pod ID runs in a given VM, so that they
know to which sandbox they have to add containers.
Signed-off-by: Samuel Ortiz <sameo@linux.intel.com>