These consts were used in combination with idtools utilities, which
makes it a more logical location for these consts to live.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This struct now has a properly typed member, so use the properly typed
functions with it.
Also update the vendor directory and hope nothing explodes.
Signed-off-by: Jason A. Donenfeld <Jason@zx2c4.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Signed-off-by: John Howard <jhoward@microsoft.com>
Also fixes https://github.com/moby/moby/issues/22874
This commit is a pre-requisite to moving moby/moby on Windows to using
Containerd for its runtime.
The reason for this is that the interface between moby and containerd
for the runtime is an OCI spec which must be unambigious.
It is the responsibility of the runtime (runhcs in the case of
containerd on Windows) to ensure that arguments are escaped prior
to calling into HCS and onwards to the Win32 CreateProcess call.
Previously, the builder was always escaping arguments which has
led to several bugs in moby. Because the local runtime in
libcontainerd had context of whether or not arguments were escaped,
it was possible to hack around in daemon/oci_windows.go with
knowledge of the context of the call (from builder or not).
With a remote runtime, this is not possible as there's rightly
no context of the caller passed across in the OCI spec. Put another
way, as I put above, the OCI spec must be unambigious.
The other previous limitation (which leads to various subtle bugs)
is that moby is coded entirely from a Linux-centric point of view.
Unfortunately, Windows != Linux. Windows CreateProcess uses a
command line, not an array of arguments. And it has very specific
rules about how to escape a command line. Some interesting reading
links about this are:
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/twistylittlepassagesallalike/2011/04/23/everyone-quotes-command-line-arguments-the-wrong-way/https://stackoverflow.com/questions/31838469/how-do-i-convert-argv-to-lpcommandline-parameter-of-createprocesshttps://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/cpp/parsing-cpp-command-line-arguments?view=vs-2017
For this reason, the OCI spec has recently been updated to cater
for more natural syntax by including a CommandLine option in
Process.
What does this commit do?
Primary objective is to ensure that the built OCI spec is unambigious.
It changes the builder so that `ArgsEscaped` as commited in a
layer is only controlled by the use of CMD or ENTRYPOINT.
Subsequently, when calling in to create a container from the builder,
if follows a different path to both `docker run` and `docker create`
using the added `ContainerCreateIgnoreImagesArgsEscaped`. This allows
a RUN from the builder to control how to escape in the OCI spec.
It changes the builder so that when shell form is used for RUN,
CMD or ENTRYPOINT, it builds (for WCOW) a more natural command line
using the original as put by the user in the dockerfile, not
the parsed version as a set of args which loses fidelity.
This command line is put into args[0] and `ArgsEscaped` is set
to true for CMD or ENTRYPOINT. A RUN statement does not commit
`ArgsEscaped` to the commited layer regardless or whether shell
or exec form were used.
This implements chown support on Windows. Built-in accounts as well
as accounts included in the SAM database of the container are supported.
NOTE: IDPair is now named Identity and IDMappings is now named
IdentityMapping.
The following are valid examples:
ADD --chown=Guest . <some directory>
COPY --chown=Administrator . <some directory>
COPY --chown=Guests . <some directory>
COPY --chown=ContainerUser . <some directory>
On Windows an owner is only granted the permission to read the security
descriptor and read/write the discretionary access control list. This
fix also grants read/write and execute permissions to the owner.
Signed-off-by: Salahuddin Khan <salah@docker.com>
Libcontainer no longer provides placeholders for
unsupported platforms, which cause the Windows
builds to fail.
This patch moves features that are not supported
to platform-specific files.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This enables docker cp and ADD/COPY docker build support for LCOW.
Originally, the graphdriver.Get() interface returned a local path
to the container root filesystem. This does not work for LCOW, so
the Get() method now returns an interface that LCOW implements to
support copying to and from the container.
Signed-off-by: Akash Gupta <akagup@microsoft.com>
Commit the rwLayer to get the correct DiffID
Refacator copy in thebuilder
move more code into exportImage
cleanup some windows tests
Release the newly commited layer.
Set the imageID on the buildStage after exporting a new image.
Move archiver to BuildManager.
Have ReleaseableLayer.Commit return a layer
and store the Image from exportImage in the local imageSources cache
Remove NewChild from image interface.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@docker.com>
Remove pathCache from imageContexts
Extract validateCopySourcePath
Extract copyWithWildcards
Extract copyInfoForFile and walkSource from calcCopyInfo
Move copy internals to copy.go
remove source from Builder
Signed-off-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@docker.com>
This patch creates interfaces in builder/ for building Docker images.
It is a first step in a series of patches to remove the daemon
dependency on builder and later allow a client-side Dockerfile builder
as well as potential builder plugins.
It is needed because we cannot remove the /build API endpoint, so we
need to keep the server-side Dockerfile builder, but we also want to
reuse the same Dockerfile parser and evaluator for both server-side and
client-side.
builder/dockerfile/ and api/server/builder.go contain implementations
of those interfaces as a refactoring of the current code.
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>