Some tests have containers that die almost immediately, and may die
and cleaned up before `driver.WaitUntilStarted` runs.
The causes for container dying seems special for each test:
* TestDockerDriver_Cleanup: `hello-world` image just emits a message and exits immediately
* TestDockerDriver_ForcePull_RepoDigest: the busybox image in `TestDockerDriver_ForcePull_RepoDigest` test didn't support `-p 0` argument
* TestDockerDriver_Entrypoint: with the entrypoint being `/bin/sh -c`, the command needs to be the entire string; otherwise, it ignores the comments
this allows us to drop a cyclical import, but is subobptimal as it
requires BaseDriver tests to move. This falls firmly into the realm of
being a hack. Alternatives welcome.
This removes a cyclical dependency when importing client/structs from
dependencies of the plugin_loader, specifically, drivers. Due to
client/config also depending on the plugin_loader.
It also better reflects the ownership of fingerprint structs, as they
are fairly internal to the fingerprint manager.
As part of deprecating legacy drivers, we're moving the env package to a
new drivers/shared tree, as it is used by the modern docker and rkt
driver packages, and is useful for 3rd party plugins.
This allows the container to be tagged with a user friendly image name
(e.g. `redis:3.2`) rather than the image ID (e.g.
`sha256:87856cc39862cec77541d68382e4867d7ccb29a85a17221446c857ddaebca916`).
Useful for human debugging, as well as some debugging and image scanning
tools.
This risks two bad changes:
1. Discrepancy in image resolution between docker and Nomad's image
loader.
* I checked the image creation paths in Nomad, and noticed that we
either pulled the image or inspect the image with the user provided
name.
2. A race in image tagging where the tag is modified between image
loading and container creation.
* I, personally, don't think this case is cause for concern, as it is
analogous to the task running a bit later. As long as the image is
still present, creating the container should be good.
Introduce a device manager that manages the lifecycle of device plugins
on the client. It fingerprints, collects stats, and forwards Reserve
requests to the correct plugin. The manager, also handles device plugins
failing and validates their output.