The practice of buffering to a tempfile during a pushing contributes massively
to slow V2 push performance perception. The protocol was actually designed to
avoid precalculation, supporting cut-through data push. This means we can
assemble the layer, calculate its digest and push to the remote endpoint, all
at the same time.
This should increase performance massively on systems with slow disks or IO
bottlenecks.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
Maps rely on the keys being comparable.
Using an interface type as the map key is dangerous,
because some interface types are not comparable.
I talked about this in my "Stupid Gopher Tricks" talk:
https://talks.golang.org/2015/tricks.slide
In this case, if the user-provided writer is backed by a slice
(such as io.MultiWriter) then the code will panic at run time.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org>
This patch makes it such that plugin initialization is synchronized
based on the plugin name and not globally
Signed-off-by: Darren Shepherd <darren@rancher.com>
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
sysinfo struct was initialized at daemon startup to make sure
kernel configs such as device cgroup are present and error out if not.
The struct was embedded in daemon struct making impossible to detect
if some system config is changed at daemon runtime (i.e. someone
umount the memory cgroup). This leads to container's starts failure if
some config is changed at daemon runtime.
This patch moves sysinfo out of daemon and initilize and check it when
needed (daemon startup, containers creation, contaienrs startup for
now).
Signed-off-by: Antonio Murdaca <runcom@linux.com>
(cherry picked from commit 472b6f66e03f9a85fe8d23098dac6f55a87456d8)
Carried: #14015
If kernel is compiled with CONFIG_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED disabled cpu.shares
doesn't exist.
If kernel is compiled with CONFIG_CFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED disabled blkio.weight
doesn't exist.
If kernel is compiled with CONFIG_CPUSETS disabled cpuset won't be
supported.
We need to handle these conditions by checking sysinfo and verifying them.
Signed-off-by: Zefan Li <lizefan@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Qiang Huang <h.huangqiang@huawei.com>
Some structures use int for sizes and UNIX timestamps. On some
platforms, int is 32 bits, so this can lead to the year 2038 issues and
overflows when dealing with large containers or layers.
Consistently use int64 to store sizes and UNIX timestamps in
api/types/types.go. Update related to code accordingly (i.e.
strconv.FormatInt instead of strconv.Itoa).
Use int64 in progressreader package to avoid integer overflow when
dealing with large quantities. Update related code accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
[pkg/archive] Update archive/copy path handling
- Remove unused TarOptions.Name field.
- Add new TarOptions.RebaseNames field.
- Update some of the logic around path dir/base splitting.
- Update some of the logic behind archive entry name rebasing.
[api/types] Add LinkTarget field to PathStat
[daemon] Fix stat, archive, extract of symlinks
These operations *should* resolve symlinks that are in the path but if the
resource itself is a symlink then it *should not* be resolved. This patch
puts this logic into a common function `resolvePath` which resolves symlinks
of the path's dir in scope of the container rootfs but does not resolve the
final element of the path. Now archive, extract, and stat operations will
return symlinks if the path is indeed a symlink.
[api/client] Update cp path hanling
[docs/reference/api] Update description of stat
Add the linkTarget field to the header of the archive endpoint.
Remove path field.
[integration-cli] Fix/Add cp symlink test cases
Copying a symlink should do just that: copy the symlink NOT
copy the target of the symlink. Also, the resulting file from
the copy should have the name of the symlink NOT the name of
the target file.
Copying to a symlink should copy to the symlink target and not
modify the symlink itself.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Josh Hawn <josh.hawn@docker.com> (github: jlhawn)