This re-applies commit b39d02b with additional iptables rules to solve the issue with containers routing back into themselves.
The previous issue with this attempt was that the DNAT rule would send traffic back into the container it came from. When this happens you have 2 issues.
1) reverse path filtering. The container is going to see the traffic coming in from the outside and it's going to have a source address of itself. So reverse path filtering will kick in and drop the packet.
2) direct return mismatch. Assuming you turned reverse path filtering off, when the packet comes back in, it's goign to have a source address of itself, thus when the reply traffic is sent, it's going to have a source address of itself. But the original packet was sent to the host IP address, so the traffic will be dropped because it's coming from an address which the original traffic was not sent to (and likely with an incorrect port as well).
The solution to this is to masquerade the traffic when it gets routed back into the origin container. However for this to work you need to enable hairpin mode on the bridge port, otherwise the kernel will just drop the traffic.
The hairpin mode set is part of libcontainer, while the MASQ change is part of docker.
This reverts commit 63c303eecdbaf4dc7967fd51b82cd447c778cecc.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Patrick Hemmer <patrick.hemmer@gmail.com> (github: phemmer)
By default is a demo of file differences, but can be used to create a
tar of changes between an old and new path.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Batts <vbatts@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Vincent Batts <vbatts@hashbangbash.com>
Fixes#1992
Right now when you `docker cp` a path which is in a volume, the cp
itself works, however you end up getting files that are in the
container's fs rather than the files in the volume (which is not in the
container's fs).
This makes it so when you `docker cp` a path that is in a volume it
follows the volume to the real path on the host.
archive.go has been modified so that when you do `docker cp mydata:/foo
.`, and /foo is the volume, the outputed folder is called "foo" instead
of the volume ID (because we are telling it to tar up
`/var/lib/docker/vfs/dir/<some id>` and not "foo", but the user would be
expecting "foo", not the ID
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
Now that the archive package does not depend on any docker-specific
packages, only those in pkg and vendor, it can be safely moved into pkg.
Signed-off-by: Rafe Colton <rafael.colton@gmail.com>
This is the second of two steps to break the archive package's
dependence on utils so that archive may be moved into pkg. `Matches()`
is also a good candidate pkg in that it is small, concise, and not
specific to docker internals
Signed-off-by: Rafe Colton <rafael.colton@gmail.com>
This is the first of two steps to break the archive package's dependence
on utils so that archive may be moved into pkg. Also, the `Go()`
function is small, concise, and not specific to the docker internals, so
it is a good candidate for pkg.
Signed-off-by: Rafe Colton <rafael.colton@gmail.com>
When read is called on a tarsum with a two different read sizes, specifically the second call larger than the first, the dynamic buffer does not get reallocated causing a slice read error.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net> (github: dmcgowan)