It's easily possible for a flood of requests to trigger thousands of
concurrent file accesses on the storage driver. Each file I/O call creates
a new OS thread that is not reaped by the Golang runtime. By limiting it
to only 100 at a time we can effectively bound the number of OS threads
in use by the storage driver.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Josh Hawn <josh.hawn@docker.com> (github: jlhawn)
Signed-off-by: Tony Holdstock-Brown <tony@docker.com>
Updates registry storage code to use this for better resumable writes.
Implements this interface for the following drivers:
+ Inmemory
+ Filesystem
+ S3
+ Azure
Signed-off-by: Brian Bland <brian.bland@docker.com>
Errors thrown by storage drivers don't have the name of the driver, causing user
confusion about whether the error is coming from Docker or from a storage driver.
This change adds the storage driver name to each error message.
This required changing ErrUnsupportedDriver to a type, leading to code changes
whenever ErrUnsupportedDriver is used. The tests check whether the driver name
appears in the error message.
Signed-off-by: Amit Shukla <amit.shukla@docker.com>
- Change driver interface to take a context as its first argument
- Make newFileReader take a context as its first argument
- Make newFileWriter take a context as its first argument
- Make blobstore exists and delete take a context as a first argument
- Pass the layerreader's context to the storage layer
- Pass the app's context to purgeuploads
- Store the app's context into the blobstore (was previously null)
- Pass the trace'd context to the storage drivers
Signed-off-by: Richard Scothern <richard.scothern@gmail.com>
This change is slightly more complex than previous package maves in that the
package name changed. To address this, we simply always reference the package
driver as storagedriver to avoid compatbility issues with existing code. While
unfortunate, this can be cleaned up over time.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>