This change is in preparation of deprecating support for old manifests.
Currently the daemon's ID is based on the trust-key ID, which will be
removed once we fully deprecate support for old manifests (the trust
key is currently only used in tests).
This patch:
- looks if a trust-key is present; if so, it migrates the trust-key
ID to the new "engine-id" file within the daemon's root.
- if no trust-key is present (so in case it's a "fresh" install), we
generate a UUID instead and use that as ID.
The migration is to prevent engines from getting a new ID on upgrades;
while we don't provide any guarantees on the engine's ID, users may
expect the ID to be "stable" (not change) between upgrades.
A test has been added, which can be ran with;
make DOCKER_GRAPHDRIVER=vfs TEST_FILTER='TestConfigDaemonID' test-integration
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This is a follow-up to 427c7cc5f8, which added
proxy-configuration options ("http-proxy", "https-proxy", "no-proxy") to the
dockerd cli and in `daemon.json`.
While working on documentation changes for this feature, I realised that those
options won't be "next" to each-other when formatting the daemon.json JSON, for
example using `jq` (which sorts the fields alphabetically). As it's possible that
additional proxy configuration options are added in future, I considered that
grouping these options in a struct within the JSON may help setting these options,
as well as discovering related options.
This patch introduces a "proxies" field in the JSON, which includes the
"http-proxy", "https-proxy", "no-proxy" options.
Conflict detection continues to work as before; with this patch applied:
mkdir -p /etc/docker/
echo '{"proxies":{"http-proxy":"http-config", "https-proxy":"https-config", "no-proxy": "no-proxy-config"}}' > /etc/docker/daemon.json
dockerd --http-proxy=http-flag --https-proxy=https-flag --no-proxy=no-proxy-flag --validate
unable to configure the Docker daemon with file /etc/docker/daemon.json:
the following directives are specified both as a flag and in the configuration file:
http-proxy: (from flag: http-flag, from file: http-config),
https-proxy: (from flag: https-flag, from file: https-config),
no-proxy: (from flag: no-proxy-flag, from file: no-proxy-config)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The daemon can print the proxy configuration as part of error-messages,
and when reloading the daemon configuration (SIGHUP). Make sure that
the configuration is sanitized before printing.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The proxy configuration works, but looks like we're unable to connect to the
test proxy server as part of our test;
level=debug msg="Trying to pull example.org:5000/some/image from https://example.org:5000 v2"
level=warning msg="Error getting v2 registry: Get \"https://example.org:5000/v2/\": proxyconnect tcp: dial tcp 127.0.0.1:45999: connect: connection refused"
level=info msg="Attempting next endpoint for pull after error: Get \"https://example.org:5000/v2/\": proxyconnect tcp: dial tcp 127.0.0.1:45999: connect: connection refused"
level=error msg="Handler for POST /v1.42/images/create returned error: Get \"https://example.org:5000/v2/\": proxyconnect tcp: dial tcp 127.0.0.1:45999: connect: connection refused"
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This allows configuring the daemon's proxy server through the daemon.json con-
figuration file or command-line flags configuration file, in addition to the
existing option (through environment variables).
Configuring environment variables on Windows to configure a service is more
complicated than on Linux, and adding alternatives for this to the daemon con-
figuration makes the configuration more transparent and easier to use.
The configuration as set through command-line flags or through the daemon.json
configuration file takes precedence over env-vars in the daemon's environment,
which allows the daemon to use a different proxy. If both command-line flags
and a daemon.json configuration option is set, an error is produced when starting
the daemon.
Note that this configuration is not "live reloadable" due to Golang's use of
`sync.Once()` for proxy configuration, which means that changing the proxy
configuration requires a restart of the daemon (reload / SIGHUP will not update
the configuration.
With this patch:
cat /etc/docker/daemon.json
{
"http-proxy": "http://proxytest.example.com:80",
"https-proxy": "https://proxytest.example.com:443"
}
docker pull busybox
Using default tag: latest
Error response from daemon: Get "https://registry-1.docker.io/v2/": proxyconnect tcp: dial tcp: lookup proxytest.example.com on 127.0.0.11:53: no such host
docker build .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 89.28MB
Step 1/3 : FROM golang:1.16-alpine AS base
Get "https://registry-1.docker.io/v2/": proxyconnect tcp: dial tcp: lookup proxytest.example.com on 127.0.0.11:53: no such host
Integration tests were added to test the behavior:
- verify that the configuration through all means are used (env-var,
command-line flags, damon.json), and used in the expected order of
preference.
- verify that conflicting options produce an error.
Signed-off-by: Anca Iordache <anca.iordache@docker.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The io/ioutil package has been deprecated in Go 1.16. This commit
replaces the existing io/ioutil functions with their new definitions in
io and os packages.
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
This allows containers to use the embedded default profile if a different
default is set (e.g. "unconfined") in the daemon configuration. Without this
option, users would have to copy the default profile to a file in order to
use the default.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Commit b237189e6c implemented an option to
set the default seccomp profile in the daemon configuration. When that PR
was reviewed, it was discussed to have the option accept the path to a custom
profile JSON file; https://github.com/moby/moby/pull/26276#issuecomment-253546966
However, in the implementation, the special "unconfined" value was not taken into
account. The "unconfined" value is meant to disable seccomp (more factually:
run with an empty profile).
While it's likely possible to achieve this by creating a file with an an empty
(`{}`) profile, and passing the path to that file, it's inconsistent with the
`--security-opt seccomp=unconfined` option on `docker run` and `docker create`,
which is both confusing, and makes it harder to use (especially on Docker Desktop,
where there's no direct access to the VM's filesystem).
This patch adds the missing check for the special "unconfined" value.
Co-authored-by: Tianon Gravi <admwiggin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Fixes#36911
If config file is invalid we'll exit anyhow, so this just prevents
the daemon from starting if the configuration is fine.
Mainly useful for making config changes and restarting the daemon
iff the config is valid.
Signed-off-by: Rich Horwood <rjhorwood@apple.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Signed-off-by: Anca Iordache <anca.iordache@docker.com>