Make getStore() take a config struct from which it pulls the store
options, then update the kpod commands so that they call getConfig()
and pass the config into getStore()
Signed-off-by: Ryan Cole <rcyoalne@gmail.com>
The syscall package is locked down and the comment in [1] advises to
switch code to use the corresponding package from golang.org/x/sys. Do
so and replace usage of package syscall where possible (leave
syscall.SysProcAttr and syscall.Stat_t).
[1] https://github.com/golang/go/blob/master/src/syscall/syscall.go#L21-L24
This will also allow to get updates and fixes just by re-vendoring
golang.org/x/sys/unix instead of having to update to a new go version.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
This patch also hides the profile under the debug flag as there's
runtime cost to enable the profiler.
This removes the old way of profiling (CPU) as that's not really
needed.
Signed-off-by: Antonio Murdaca <runcom@redhat.com>
Container runtimes provide different levels of isolation, from kernel
namespaces to hardware virtualization. When starting a specific
container, one may want to decide which level of isolation to use
depending on how much we trust the container workload. Fully verified
and signed containers may not need the hardware isolation layer but e.g.
CI jobs pulling packages from many untrusted sources should probably not
run only on a kernel namespace isolation layer.
Here we allow CRI-O users to define a container runtime for trusted
containers and another one for untrusted containers, and also to define
a general, default trust level. This anticipates future kubelet
implementations that would be able to tag containers as trusted or
untrusted. When missing a kubelet hint, containers are trusted by
default.
A container becomes untrusted if we get a hint in that direction from
kubelet or if the default trust level is set to "untrusted" and the
container is not privileged. In both cases CRI-O will try to use the
untrusted container runtime. For any other cases, it will switch to the
trusted one.
Signed-off-by: Samuel Ortiz <sameo@linux.intel.com>
The ocid project was renamed to CRI-O, months ago, it is time that we moved
all of the code to the new name. We want to elminate the name ocid from use.
Move fully to crio.
Also cric is being renamed to crioctl for the time being.
Signed-off-by: Dan Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>