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moby--moby/runtime_test.go

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package docker
import (
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
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"bytes"
"fmt"
"github.com/dotcloud/docker/utils"
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"io"
"log"
"net"
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"os"
"runtime"
"strconv"
"strings"
"sync"
"syscall"
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"testing"
"time"
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)
const (
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unitTestImageName = "docker-test-image"
unitTestImageID = "83599e29c455eb719f77d799bc7c51521b9551972f5a850d7ad265bc1b5292f6" // 1.0
unitTestNetworkBridge = "testdockbr0"
unitTestStoreBase = "/var/lib/docker/unit-tests"
testDaemonAddr = "127.0.0.1:4270"
testDaemonProto = "tcp"
)
var (
globalRuntime *Runtime
startFds int
startGoroutines int
)
func nuke(runtime *Runtime) error {
var wg sync.WaitGroup
for _, container := range runtime.List() {
wg.Add(1)
go func(c *Container) {
c.Kill()
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wg.Done()
}(container)
}
wg.Wait()
runtime.networkManager.Close()
return os.RemoveAll(runtime.root)
}
func cleanup(runtime *Runtime) error {
for _, container := range runtime.List() {
container.Kill()
runtime.Destroy(container)
}
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images, err := runtime.graph.Map()
if err != nil {
return err
}
for _, image := range images {
if image.ID != unitTestImageID {
runtime.graph.Delete(image.ID)
}
}
return nil
}
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func layerArchive(tarfile string) (io.Reader, error) {
// FIXME: need to close f somewhere
f, err := os.Open(tarfile)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return f, nil
}
func init() {
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os.Setenv("TEST", "1")
// Hack to run sys init during unit testing
if selfPath := utils.SelfPath(); selfPath == "/sbin/init" || selfPath == "/.dockerinit" {
SysInit()
return
}
if uid := syscall.Geteuid(); uid != 0 {
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log.Fatal("docker tests need to be run as root")
}
NetworkBridgeIface = unitTestNetworkBridge
// Setup the base runtime, which will be duplicated for each test.
// (no tests are run directly in the base)
setupBaseImage()
// Create the "global runtime" with a long-running daemon for integration tests
spawnGlobalDaemon()
startFds, startGoroutines = utils.GetTotalUsedFds(), runtime.NumGoroutine()
}
func setupBaseImage() {
runtime, err := NewRuntimeFromDirectory(unitTestStoreBase, false)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("Unable to create a runtime for tests:", err)
}
// Create the "Server"
srv := &Server{
runtime: runtime,
enableCors: false,
pullingPool: make(map[string]struct{}),
pushingPool: make(map[string]struct{}),
}
// If the unit test is not found, try to download it.
if img, err := runtime.repositories.LookupImage(unitTestImageName); err != nil || img.ID != unitTestImageID {
// Retrieve the Image
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if err := srv.ImagePull(unitTestImageName, "", os.Stdout, utils.NewStreamFormatter(false), nil, nil, true); err != nil {
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log.Fatalf("Unable to pull the test image:", err)
}
}
}
func spawnGlobalDaemon() {
if globalRuntime != nil {
utils.Debugf("Global runtime already exists. Skipping.")
return
}
globalRuntime = mkRuntime(log.New(os.Stderr, "", 0))
srv := &Server{
runtime: globalRuntime,
enableCors: false,
pullingPool: make(map[string]struct{}),
pushingPool: make(map[string]struct{}),
}
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// Spawn a Daemon
go func() {
utils.Debugf("Spawning global daemon for integration tests")
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if err := ListenAndServe(testDaemonProto, testDaemonAddr, srv, os.Getenv("DEBUG") != ""); err != nil {
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log.Fatalf("Unable to spawn the test daemon:", err)
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}
}()
// Give some time to ListenAndServer to actually start
// FIXME: use inmem transports instead of tcp
time.Sleep(time.Second)
}
// FIXME: test that ImagePull(json=true) send correct json output
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func GetTestImage(runtime *Runtime) *Image {
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imgs, err := runtime.graph.Map()
if err != nil {
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log.Fatalf("Unable to get the test image:", err)
}
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for _, image := range imgs {
if image.ID == unitTestImageID {
return image
}
}
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log.Fatalf("Test image %v not found", unitTestImageID)
return nil
}
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func TestRuntimeCreate(t *testing.T) {
runtime := mkRuntime(t)
defer nuke(runtime)
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// Make sure we start we 0 containers
if len(runtime.List()) != 0 {
t.Errorf("Expected 0 containers, %v found", len(runtime.List()))
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}
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container, err := runtime.Create(&Config{
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Image: GetTestImage(runtime).ID,
Cmd: []string{"ls", "-al"},
},
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)
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
defer func() {
if err := runtime.Destroy(container); err != nil {
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t.Error(err)
}
}()
// Make sure we can find the newly created container with List()
if len(runtime.List()) != 1 {
t.Errorf("Expected 1 container, %v found", len(runtime.List()))
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}
// Make sure the container List() returns is the right one
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if runtime.List()[0].ID != container.ID {
t.Errorf("Unexpected container %v returned by List", runtime.List()[0])
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}
// Make sure we can get the container with Get()
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if runtime.Get(container.ID) == nil {
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t.Errorf("Unable to get newly created container")
}
// Make sure it is the right container
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if runtime.Get(container.ID) != container {
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t.Errorf("Get() returned the wrong container")
}
// Make sure Exists returns it as existing
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if !runtime.Exists(container.ID) {
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t.Errorf("Exists() returned false for a newly created container")
}
// Make sure crete with bad parameters returns an error
if _, err = runtime.Create(&Config{Image: GetTestImage(runtime).ID}); err == nil {
t.Fatal("Builder.Create should throw an error when Cmd is missing")
}
if _, err := runtime.Create(
&Config{
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Image: GetTestImage(runtime).ID,
Cmd: []string{},
},
); err == nil {
t.Fatal("Builder.Create should throw an error when Cmd is empty")
}
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config := &Config{
Image: GetTestImage(runtime).ID,
Cmd: []string{"/bin/ls"},
PortSpecs: []string{"80"},
}
container, err = runtime.Create(config)
image, err := runtime.Commit(container, "testrepo", "testtag", "", "", config)
if err != nil {
t.Error(err)
}
_, err = runtime.Create(
&Config{
Image: image.ID,
PortSpecs: []string{"80000:80"},
},
)
if err == nil {
t.Fatal("Builder.Create should throw an error when PortSpecs is invalid")
}
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}
func TestDestroy(t *testing.T) {
runtime := mkRuntime(t)
defer nuke(runtime)
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container, err := runtime.Create(&Config{
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Image: GetTestImage(runtime).ID,
Cmd: []string{"ls", "-al"},
})
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if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
// Destroy
if err := runtime.Destroy(container); err != nil {
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t.Error(err)
}
// Make sure runtime.Exists() behaves correctly
if runtime.Exists("test_destroy") {
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t.Errorf("Exists() returned true")
}
// Make sure runtime.List() doesn't list the destroyed container
if len(runtime.List()) != 0 {
t.Errorf("Expected 0 container, %v found", len(runtime.List()))
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}
// Make sure runtime.Get() refuses to return the unexisting container
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if runtime.Get(container.ID) != nil {
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t.Errorf("Unable to get newly created container")
}
// Make sure the container root directory does not exist anymore
_, err = os.Stat(container.root)
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if err == nil || !os.IsNotExist(err) {
t.Errorf("Container root directory still exists after destroy")
}
// Test double destroy
if err := runtime.Destroy(container); err == nil {
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// It should have failed
t.Errorf("Double destroy did not fail")
}
}
func TestGet(t *testing.T) {
runtime := mkRuntime(t)
defer nuke(runtime)
container1, _, _ := mkContainer(runtime, []string{"_", "ls", "-al"}, t)
defer runtime.Destroy(container1)
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container2, _, _ := mkContainer(runtime, []string{"_", "ls", "-al"}, t)
defer runtime.Destroy(container2)
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container3, _, _ := mkContainer(runtime, []string{"_", "ls", "-al"}, t)
defer runtime.Destroy(container3)
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if runtime.Get(container1.ID) != container1 {
t.Errorf("Get(test1) returned %v while expecting %v", runtime.Get(container1.ID), container1)
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}
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if runtime.Get(container2.ID) != container2 {
t.Errorf("Get(test2) returned %v while expecting %v", runtime.Get(container2.ID), container2)
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}
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if runtime.Get(container3.ID) != container3 {
t.Errorf("Get(test3) returned %v while expecting %v", runtime.Get(container3.ID), container3)
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}
}
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
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func startEchoServerContainer(t *testing.T, proto string) (*Runtime, *Container, string) {
var (
err error
container *Container
strPort string
runtime = mkRuntime(t)
port = 5554
)
for {
port += 1
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
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strPort = strconv.Itoa(port)
var cmd string
if proto == "tcp" {
cmd = "socat TCP-LISTEN:" + strPort + ",reuseaddr,fork EXEC:/bin/cat"
} else if proto == "udp" {
cmd = "socat UDP-RECVFROM:" + strPort + ",fork EXEC:/bin/cat"
} else {
t.Fatal(fmt.Errorf("Unknown protocol %v", proto))
}
t.Log("Trying port", strPort)
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container, err = runtime.Create(&Config{
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
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Image: GetTestImage(runtime).ID,
Cmd: []string{"sh", "-c", cmd},
PortSpecs: []string{fmt.Sprintf("%s/%s", strPort, proto)},
})
if container != nil {
break
}
if err != nil {
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
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nuke(runtime)
t.Fatal(err)
}
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
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t.Logf("Port %v already in use", strPort)
}
if err := container.Start(&HostConfig{}); err != nil {
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
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nuke(runtime)
t.Fatal(err)
}
setTimeout(t, "Waiting for the container to be started timed out", 2*time.Second, func() {
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for !container.State.Running {
time.Sleep(10 * time.Millisecond)
}
})
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// Even if the state is running, lets give some time to lxc to spawn the process
container.WaitTimeout(500 * time.Millisecond)
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
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strPort = container.NetworkSettings.PortMapping[strings.Title(proto)][strPort]
return runtime, container, strPort
}
// Run a container with a TCP port allocated, and test that it can receive connections on localhost
func TestAllocateTCPPortLocalhost(t *testing.T) {
runtime, container, port := startEchoServerContainer(t, "tcp")
defer nuke(runtime)
defer container.Kill()
for i := 0; i != 10; i++ {
conn, err := net.Dial("tcp", fmt.Sprintf("localhost:%v", port))
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
defer conn.Close()
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
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input := bytes.NewBufferString("well hello there\n")
_, err = conn.Write(input.Bytes())
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
buf := make([]byte, 16)
read := 0
conn.SetReadDeadline(time.Now().Add(3 * time.Second))
read, err = conn.Read(buf)
if err != nil {
if err, ok := err.(*net.OpError); ok {
if err.Err == syscall.ECONNRESET {
t.Logf("Connection reset by the proxy, socat is probably not listening yet, trying again in a sec")
conn.Close()
time.Sleep(time.Second)
continue
}
if err.Timeout() {
t.Log("Timeout, trying again")
conn.Close()
continue
}
}
t.Fatal(err)
}
output := string(buf[:read])
if !strings.Contains(output, "well hello there") {
t.Fatal(fmt.Errorf("[%v] doesn't contain [well hello there]", output))
} else {
return
}
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
2013-06-11 18:46:23 -04:00
}
t.Fatal("No reply from the container")
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
2013-06-11 18:46:23 -04:00
}
// Run a container with an UDP port allocated, and test that it can receive connections on localhost
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
2013-06-11 18:46:23 -04:00
func TestAllocateUDPPortLocalhost(t *testing.T) {
runtime, container, port := startEchoServerContainer(t, "udp")
defer nuke(runtime)
defer container.Kill()
conn, err := net.Dial("udp", fmt.Sprintf("localhost:%v", port))
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
defer conn.Close()
input := bytes.NewBufferString("well hello there\n")
buf := make([]byte, 16)
// Try for a minute, for some reason the select in socat may take ages
// to return even though everything on the path seems fine (i.e: the
// UDPProxy forwards the traffic correctly and you can see the packets
// on the interface from within the container).
for i := 0; i != 120; i++ {
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
2013-06-11 18:46:23 -04:00
_, err := conn.Write(input.Bytes())
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
conn.SetReadDeadline(time.Now().Add(500 * time.Millisecond))
Add support for UDP (closes #33) API Changes ----------- The port notation is extended to support "/udp" or "/tcp" at the *end* of the specifier string (and defaults to tcp if "/tcp" or "/udp" are missing) `docker ps` now shows UDP ports as "frontend->backend/udp". Nothing changes for TCP ports. `docker inspect` now displays two sub-dictionaries: "Tcp" and "Udp", under "PortMapping" in "NetworkSettings". Theses changes stand true for the values returned by the HTTP API too. This changeset will definitely break tools built upon the API (or upon `docker inspect`). A less intrusive way to add UDP ports in `docker inspect` would be to simply add "/udp" for UDP ports but it will still break existing applications which tries to convert the whole field to an integer. I believe that having two TCP/UDP sub-dictionaries is better because it makes the whole thing more clear and more easy to parse right away (i.e: you don't have to check the format of the string, split it and convert the right part to an integer) Code Changes ------------ Significant changes in network.go: - A second PortAllocator is instantiated for the UDP range; - PortMapper maintains separate mapping for TCP and UDP; - The extPorts array in NetworkInterface is now an array of Nat objects (so we can know on which protocol a given port was mapped when NetworkInterface.Release() is called); - TCP proxying on localhost has been moved away in network_proxy.go. localhost proxy code rewrite in network_proxy.go: We have to proxy the traffic between localhost:frontend-port and container:backend-port because Netfilter doesn't work properly on the loopback interface and DNAT iptable rules aren't applied there. - Goroutines in the TCP proxying code are now explicitly stopped when the proxy is stopped; - UDP connection tracking using a map (more infos in [1]); - Support for IPv6 (to be more accurate, the code is transparent to the Go net package, so you can use, tcp/tcp4/tcp6/udp/udp4/udp6); - Single Proxy interface for both UDP and TCP proxying; - Full test suite. [1] https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/issues/33#issuecomment-20010400
2013-06-11 18:46:23 -04:00
read, err := conn.Read(buf)
if err == nil {
output := string(buf[:read])
if strings.Contains(output, "well hello there") {
return
}
}
}
t.Fatal("No reply from the container")
}
func TestRestore(t *testing.T) {
runtime1 := mkRuntime(t)
defer nuke(runtime1)
// Create a container with one instance of docker
container1, _, _ := mkContainer(runtime1, []string{"_", "ls", "-al"}, t)
defer runtime1.Destroy(container1)
// Create a second container meant to be killed
container2, _, _ := mkContainer(runtime1, []string{"-i", "_", "/bin/cat"}, t)
2013-04-02 10:13:42 -04:00
defer runtime1.Destroy(container2)
// Start the container non blocking
hostConfig := &HostConfig{}
if err := container2.Start(hostConfig); err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
2013-04-02 10:13:42 -04:00
if !container2.State.Running {
2013-06-04 14:00:22 -04:00
t.Fatalf("Container %v should appear as running but isn't", container2.ID)
}
// Simulate a crash/manual quit of dockerd: process dies, states stays 'Running'
cStdin, _ := container2.StdinPipe()
cStdin.Close()
if err := container2.WaitTimeout(2 * time.Second); err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
2013-04-02 10:13:42 -04:00
container2.State.Running = true
container2.ToDisk()
if len(runtime1.List()) != 2 {
t.Errorf("Expected 2 container, %v found", len(runtime1.List()))
}
if err := container1.Run(); err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
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if !container2.State.Running {
2013-06-04 14:00:22 -04:00
t.Fatalf("Container %v should appear as running but isn't", container2.ID)
}
// Here are are simulating a docker restart - that is, reloading all containers
// from scratch
runtime2, err := NewRuntimeFromDirectory(runtime1.root, false)
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
defer nuke(runtime2)
if len(runtime2.List()) != 2 {
t.Errorf("Expected 2 container, %v found", len(runtime2.List()))
}
runningCount := 0
for _, c := range runtime2.List() {
if c.State.Running {
2013-06-04 14:00:22 -04:00
t.Errorf("Running container found: %v (%v)", c.ID, c.Path)
runningCount++
}
}
if runningCount != 0 {
t.Fatalf("Expected 0 container alive, %d found", runningCount)
}
2013-06-04 14:00:22 -04:00
container3 := runtime2.Get(container1.ID)
2013-04-02 10:13:42 -04:00
if container3 == nil {
t.Fatal("Unable to Get container")
}
2013-04-02 10:13:42 -04:00
if err := container3.Run(); err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
container2.State.Running = false
}