* integrated hostdiscovery package with the new Docker Discovery
* Integrated hostdiscovery package with libnetwork core
* removed libnetwork_discovery tag
* Introduced driver apis for discovery events
* moved overlay driver to make use of the discovery events
* Using Docker Discovery service.
* Changed integration-tests to make use of the new discovery
Signed-off-by: Madhu Venugopal <madhu@docker.com>
Currently the driver configuration is pushed through a separate
api. This makes driver configuration possible at any arbitrary
time. This unncessarily complicates the driver implementation.
More importantly the driver does not get access to it's
configuration before it can do the handshake with libnetwork.
This make the internal drivers a little bit different to
external plugins which can get their configuration before the handshake
with libnetwork.
This PR attempts to fix that mismatch between internal drivers and
external plugins.
Signed-off-by: Jana Radhakrishnan <mrjana@docker.com>
This way we won't vendor test related functions in docker anymore.
It also moves netns related functions to a new ns package to be able to
call the ns init function in tests. I think this also helps with the
overall package isolation.
Signed-off-by: David Calavera <david.calavera@gmail.com>
- Maps 1 to 1 with container's networking stack
- It holds container's specific nw options which
before were incorrectly owned by Endpoint.
- Sandbox creation no longer coupled with Endpoint Join,
sandbox and endpoint have now separate lifecycle.
- LeaveAll naturally replaced by Sandbox.Delete
- some pkg and file renaming in order to have clear
mapping between structure name and entity ("sandbox")
- Revisited hosts and resolv.conf handling
- Removed from JoinInfo interface capability of setting hosts and resolv.conf paths
- Changed etchosts.Build() to first write the search domains and then the nameservers
Signed-off-by: Alessandro Boch <aboch@docker.com>
For the moment in 1.7.1 since we provide a resolv.conf set api
to the driver honor that so that for host driver we can use the
the host's /etc/resolv.conf file as is rather than putting the
contents through a filtering logic.
It should be noted that the driver side capability to set the
resolv.conf file is most likely going to go away in the future
but this should be fine for 1.7.1
Signed-off-by: Jana Radhakrishnan <mrjana@docker.com>
Currently store makes use of a static isReservedNetwork check to decide
if a network needs to be stored in the distributed store or not. But it
is better if the check is not static, but be determined based on the
capability of the driver that backs the network.
Hence introducing a new capability mechanism to the driver which it can
express its capability during registration. Making use of first such
capability : Scope. This can be expanded in the future for more such cases.
Signed-off-by: Madhu Venugopal <madhu@docker.com>
Refactored the driver api so that is aligns well with the design
of endpoint lifecycle becoming decoupled from the container lifecycle.
Introduced go interfaces to obtain address information during CreateEndpoint.
Go interfaces are also used to get data from driver during join.
This sort of deisgn hides the libnetwork specific type details from drivers.
Another adjustment is to provide a list of interfaces during CreateEndpoint. The
goal of this is many-fold:
* To indicate to the driver that IP address has been assigned by some other
entity (like a user wanting to use their own static IP for an endpoint/container)
and asking the driver to honor this. Driver may reject this configuration
and return an error but it may not try to allocate an IP address and override
the passed one.
* To indicate to the driver that IP address has already been allocated once
for this endpoint by an instance of the same driver in some docker host
in the cluster and this is merely a notification about that endpoint and the
allocated resources.
* In case the list of interfaces is empty the driver is required to allocate and
assign IP addresses for this endpoint.
Signed-off-by: Jana Radhakrishnan <mrjana@docker.com>
In the present code, each driver package provides a `New()` method
which constructs a driver of its type, which is then registered with
the controller.
However, this is not suitable for the `drivers/remote` package, since
it does not provide a (singleton) driver, but a mechanism for drivers
to be added dynamically. As a result, the implementation is oddly
dual-purpose, and a spurious `"remote"` driver is added to the
controller's list of available drivers.
Instead, it is better to provide the registration callback to each
package and let it register its own driver or drivers. That way, the
singleton driver packages can construct one and register it, and the
remote package can hook the callback up with whatever the dynamic
driver mechanism turns out to be.
NB there are some method signature changes; in particular to
controller.New, which can return an error if the built-in driver
packages fail to initialise.
Signed-off-by: Michael Bridgen <mikeb@squaremobius.net>
This commits brings in a functionality for remote drivers to register
with LibNetwork. The Built-In remote driver is responsible for the
actual "remote" plugin to be made available.
Having such a mechanism makes libnetwork core not dependent on any
external plugin mechanism and also the Libnetwork NB apis are free of
Driver interface.
Signed-off-by: Madhu Venugopal <madhu@docker.com>