When an allocation runs for a task driver that can't support volume mounts,
the mounting will fail in a way that can be hard to understand. With host
volumes this usually means failing silently, whereas with CSI the operator
gets inscrutable internals exposed in the `nomad alloc status`.
This changeset adds a MountConfig field to the task driver Capabilities
response. We validate this when the `csi_hook` or `volume_hook` fires and
return a user-friendly error.
Note that we don't currently have a way to get driver capabilities up to the
server, except through attributes. Validating this when the user initially
submits the jobspec would be even better than what we're doing here (and could
be useful for all our other capabilities), but that's out of scope for this
changeset.
Also note that the MountConfig enum starts with "supports all" in order to
support community plugins in a backwards compatible way, rather than cutting
them off from volume mounting unexpectedly.
plugins/driver: update driver interface to support streaming stats
client/tr: use streaming stats api
TODO:
* how to handle errors and closed channel during stats streaming
* prevent tight loop if Stats(ctx) returns an error
drivers: update drivers TaskStats RPC to handle streaming results
executor: better error handling in stats rpc
docker: better control and error handling of stats rpc
driver: allow stats to return a recoverable error
Re-export the ResourceUsage structs in drivers package to avoid drivers
directly depending on the internal client/structs package directly.
I attempted moving the structs to drivers, but that caused some import
cycles that was a bit hard to disentagle. Alternatively, I added an
alias here that's sufficient for our purposes of avoiding external
drivers depend on internal packages, while allowing us to restructure
packages in future without breaking source compatibility.
This implements the InternalPluginDriver interface in each driver, and
calls the cancellation fn for their respective eventers.
This fixes a per task goroutine leak during test suite execution.
Mock driver config uses `time.Duration` fields but we initialize them
inconsistently, as time.Duration sometimes and as duration strings other
times. Previously, `mapstructure` handles it and does the right thing.
This is no longer the case with MsgPack. I could not find a good way to
bring back old behavior without too much complexity. `MsgPack` extended
types weren't ideal here as we lose type information (e.g. int64 vs
string), and the input is a generic map and not a MsgPack serialization
of duration.
As such, I went with the simple solution of declaring the config field
as duration string, and panicing if the test doesn't pass a valid
string.
I found this to cause the smallest change in tests, but we can
alternatively force all to be int64 instead.
This PR plumbs the plugins done ctx through the base and driver plugin
clients (device already had it). Further, it adds generic handling of
gRPC stream errors.