Add a trusted flag to force the cli to resolve a tag into a digest via the notary trust library and pull by digest.
On push the flag the trust flag will indicate the digest and size of a manifest should be signed and push to a notary server.
If a tag is given, the cli will resolve the tag into a digest and pull by digest.
After pulling, if a tag is given the cli makes a request to tag the image.
Use certificate directory for notary requests
Read certificates using same logic used by daemon for registry requests.
Catch JSON syntax errors from Notary client
When an uncaught error occurs in Notary it may show up in Docker as a JSON syntax error, causing a confusing error message to the user.
Provide a generic error when a JSON syntax error occurs.
Catch expiration errors and wrap in additional context.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net> (github: dmcgowan)
This patch creates a new cli package that allows to combine both client
and daemon commands (there is only one daemon command: docker daemon).
The `-d` and `--daemon` top-level flags are deprecated and a special
message is added to prompt the user to use `docker daemon`.
Providing top-level daemon-specific flags for client commands result
in an error message prompting the user to use `docker daemon`.
This patch does not break any old but correct usages.
This also makes `-d` and `--daemon` flags, as well as the `daemon`
command illegal in client-only binaries.
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
Fix the following warnings:
pkg/mount/mountinfo.go:5:6: type name will be used as mount.MountInfo by other packages, and that stutters; consider calling this Info
pkg/mount/mountinfo.go:7:2: struct field Id should be ID
Signed-off-by: Antonio Murdaca <runcom@linux.com>
The Ansi parser and their associated actions have been decoupled. Now
parsing results in call backs to an interface which performs the
appropriate actions depending on the environment.
This improvement provides a functional Vi experience and the vttest no
longer panics.
This PR replaces docker/docker #13224 with the latest console updates.
Signed-off-by: John Howard <jhoward@microsoft.com>
Adds TarResource and CopyTo functions to be used for creating
archives for use with the new `docker cp` behavior.
Adds multiple test cases for the CopyFrom and CopyTo
functions in the pkg/archive package.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Josh Hawn <josh.hawn@docker.com> (github: jlhawn)
Closes#14621
This one grew to be much more than I expected so here's the story... :-)
- when a bad port string (e.g. xxx80) is passed into container.create()
via the API it wasn't being checked until we tried to start the container.
- While starting the container we trid to parse 'xxx80' in nat.Int()
and would panic on the strconv.ParseUint(). We should (almost) never panic.
- In trying to remove the panic I decided to make it so that we, instead,
checked the string during the NewPort() constructor. This means that
I had to change all casts from 'string' to 'Port' to use NewPort() instead.
Which is a good thing anyway, people shouldn't assume they know the
internal format of types like that, in general.
- This meant I had to go and add error checks on all calls to NewPort().
To avoid changing the testcases too much I create newPortNoError() **JUST**
for the testcase uses where we know the port string is ok.
- After all of that I then went back and added a check during container.create()
to check the port string so we'll report the error as soon as we get the
data.
- If, somehow, the bad string does get into the metadata we will generate
an error during container.start() but I can't test for that because
the container.create() catches it now. But I did add a testcase for that.
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
Replaced github.com/docker/libcontainer with
github.com/opencontainers/runc/libcontaier.
Also I moved AppArmor profile generation to docker.
Main idea of this update is to fix mounting cgroups inside containers.
After updating docker on CI we can even remove dind.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Morozov <lk4d4@docker.com>
Check if there is a plugin socket first under `/run/docker/plugins/NAME.sock`.
If there is no socket for a plugin, check `/etc/docker/plugins/NAME.spec` and
`/usr/lib/docker/plugins/NAME.spec` for spec files.
Signed-off-by: David Calavera <david.calavera@gmail.com>