Adding support to publish on custom host port ranges

Signed-off-by: Don Kjer <don.kjer@gmail.com>

Changing vendor/src/github.com/docker/libnetwork to match lindenlab/libnetwork custom-host-port-ranges-1.7 branch
This commit is contained in:
Don Kjer 2015-05-01 19:35:26 +00:00
parent 1c1d0c5f6f
commit e22508c702
3 changed files with 102 additions and 7 deletions

View file

@ -34,17 +34,20 @@ type PortSet map[Port]struct{}
// Port is a string containing port number and protocol in the format "80/tcp"
type Port string
// NewPort creates a new instance of a Port given a protocol and port number
// NewPort creates a new instance of a Port given a protocol and port number or port range
func NewPort(proto, port string) (Port, error) {
// Check for parsing issues on "port" now so we can avoid having
// to check it later on.
portInt, err := ParsePort(port)
portStartInt, portEndInt, err := ParsePortRange(port)
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
return Port(fmt.Sprintf("%d/%s", portInt, proto)), nil
if portStartInt == portEndInt {
return Port(fmt.Sprintf("%d/%s", portStartInt, proto)), nil
}
return Port(fmt.Sprintf("%d-%d/%s", portStartInt, portEndInt, proto)), nil
}
// ParsePort parses the port number string and returns an int
@ -59,6 +62,18 @@ func ParsePort(rawPort string) (int, error) {
return int(port), nil
}
// ParsePortRange parses the port range string and returns start/end ints
func ParsePortRange(rawPort string) (int, int, error) {
if len(rawPort) == 0 {
return 0, 0, nil
}
start, end, err := parsers.ParsePortRange(rawPort)
if err != nil {
return 0, 0, err
}
return int(start), int(end), nil
}
// Proto returns the protocol of a Port
func (p Port) Proto() string {
proto, _ := SplitProtoPort(string(p))
@ -84,6 +99,11 @@ func (p Port) Int() int {
return int(port)
}
// Range returns the start/end port numbers of a Port range as ints
func (p Port) Range() (int, int, error) {
return ParsePortRange(p.Port())
}
// SplitProtoPort splits a port in the format of proto/port
func SplitProtoPort(rawPort string) (string, string) {
parts := strings.Split(rawPort, "/")
@ -162,7 +182,12 @@ func ParsePortSpecs(ports []string) (map[Port]struct{}, map[Port][]PortBinding,
}
if hostPort != "" && (endPort-startPort) != (endHostPort-startHostPort) {
return nil, nil, fmt.Errorf("Invalid ranges specified for container and host Ports: %s and %s", containerPort, hostPort)
// Allow host port range iff containerPort is not a range.
// In this case, use the host port range as the dynamic
// host port range to allocate into.
if endPort != startPort {
return nil, nil, fmt.Errorf("Invalid ranges specified for container and host Ports: %s and %s", containerPort, hostPort)
}
}
if !validateProto(strings.ToLower(proto)) {
@ -174,6 +199,11 @@ func ParsePortSpecs(ports []string) (map[Port]struct{}, map[Port][]PortBinding,
if len(hostPort) > 0 {
hostPort = strconv.FormatUint(startHostPort+i, 10)
}
// Set hostPort to a range only if there is a single container port
// and a dynamic host port.
if startPort == endPort && startHostPort != endHostPort {
hostPort = fmt.Sprintf("%s-%s", hostPort, strconv.FormatUint(endHostPort, 10))
}
port, err := NewPort(strings.ToLower(proto), containerPort)
if err != nil {
return nil, nil, err

View file

@ -41,6 +41,56 @@ func TestParsePort(t *testing.T) {
}
}
func TestParsePortRange(t *testing.T) {
var (
begin int
end int
err error
)
type TestRange struct {
Range string
Begin int
End int
}
validRanges := []TestRange{
{"1234", 1234, 1234},
{"1234-1234", 1234, 1234},
{"1234-1235", 1234, 1235},
{"8000-9000", 8000, 9000},
{"0", 0, 0},
{"0-0", 0, 0},
}
for _, r := range validRanges {
begin, end, err = ParsePortRange(r.Range)
if err != nil || begin != r.Begin {
t.Fatalf("Parsing port range '%s' did not succeed. Expected begin %d, got %d", r.Range, r.Begin, begin)
}
if err != nil || end != r.End {
t.Fatalf("Parsing port range '%s' did not succeed. Expected end %d, got %d", r.Range, r.End, end)
}
}
invalidRanges := []string{
"asdf",
"1asdf",
"9000-8000",
"9000-",
"-8000",
"-8000-",
}
for _, r := range invalidRanges {
begin, end, err = ParsePortRange(r)
if err == nil || begin != 0 || end != 0 {
t.Fatalf("Parsing port range '%s' succeeded", r)
}
}
}
func TestPort(t *testing.T) {
p, err := NewPort("tcp", "1234")
@ -68,6 +118,20 @@ func TestPort(t *testing.T) {
if err == nil {
t.Fatal("tcp, asd1234 was supposed to fail")
}
p, err = NewPort("tcp", "1234-1230")
if err == nil {
t.Fatal("tcp, 1234-1230 was supposed to fail")
}
p, err = NewPort("tcp", "1234-1242")
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("tcp, 1234-1242 had a parsing issue: %v", err)
}
if string(p) != "1234-1242/tcp" {
t.Fatal("tcp, 1234-1242 did not result in the string 1234-1242/tcp")
}
}
func TestSplitProtoPort(t *testing.T) {

View file

@ -2,8 +2,9 @@ package nat
import (
"sort"
"strconv"
"strings"
"github.com/docker/docker/pkg/parsers"
)
type portSorter struct {
@ -88,8 +89,8 @@ func SortPortMap(ports []Port, bindings PortMap) {
}
}
func toInt(s string) int64 {
i, err := strconv.ParseInt(s, 10, 64)
func toInt(s string) uint64 {
i, _, err := parsers.ParsePortRange(s)
if err != nil {
i = 0
}