Copy the updated version of freeport (sdk/freeport), and tweak it for use
in Nomad tests. This means staying below port 10000 to avoid conflicts with
the lib/freeport that is still transitively used by the old version of
consul that we vendor. Also provide implementations to find ephemeral ports
of macOS and Windows environments.
Ports acquired through freeport are supposed to be returned to freeport,
which this change now also introduces. Many tests are modified to include
calls to a cleanup function for Server objects.
This should help quite a bit with some flakey tests, but not all of them.
Our port problems will not go away completely until we upgrade our vendor
version of consul. With Go modules, we'll probably do a 'replace' to swap
out other copies of freeport with the one now in 'nomad/helper/freeport'.
This handles a bug where we may start a container successfully, yet we
fail due to retries and startContainer not being idempotent call.
Here, we ensure that when starting a container fails with 500 error,
the retry succeeds if container was started successfully.
Support Docker `volumes` field in Windows. Previously, volumes parser
assumed some Unix-ism (e.g. didn't expect `:` in mount paths).
Here, we use the Docker parser to identify host and container paths.
Docker parsers use different validation logic from our previous unix
implementation: Docker parser accepts single path as a volume entry
(parsing it as a container path with auto-created volume) and enforces
additional checks (e.g. validity of mode). Thereforce, I opted to use
Docker parser only for Windows, and keep Nomad's linux parser to
preserve current behavior.
Fix AppVeyor failing builds, by moving docker image url test to run on unix
systems only. The used paused image is a linux image only, not
available on Windows.
* Docker for Windows does not support ulimits
* Use filepath.ToSlash to test workdir
* Convert expected mount paths to system style
* Skip security-opt test on windows
- Windows does not support seccomp, and it's unclear which options are
available.
* Skip StartN due to lack of sigint
* docker: Use api to get image info on windows
* No bridge on windows
* Stop hardcoding /bin/
- docker fingerprint issues a docker api system info call to get the
list of supported OCI runtimes.
- OCI runtimes are reported as comma separated list of names
- docker driver is aware of GPU runtime presence
- docker driver throws an error when user tries to run container with
GPU, when GPU runtime is not present
- docker GPU runtime name is configurable
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
We already have two other Kill tests (e.g.
TestDockerDriver_Start_Kill_Wait and
TestDockerDriver_Start_KillTimeout), so don't need yet another flaky
test.
Noticed an issue in Docker daemon failing to handle the OOM test case
failure in build https://travis-ci.org/hashicorp/nomad/jobs/468027848 ,
and I suspect it's related to the process dying so quickly, and
potentially the way we are starting the task, so added a start up delay
and made it more consistent with other tests that don't seem as flaky.
The following is the log line showing Docker returning 500 error condition; while we can probably handle it gracefully without retrying, the retry is very cheap in this case and it's more of an optimization that we can handle in follow up PR.
```
testlog.go:32: 2018-12-14T14:57:52.626Z [DEBUG] docker/driver.go:852: docker: setting container startup command: task_name=nc-demo command="/bin/nc -l 127.0.0.1 -p 0"
testlog.go:32: 2018-12-14T14:57:52.626Z [DEBUG] docker/driver.go:866: docker: setting container name: task_name=nc-demo container_name=724a3e77-8b15-e657-f6aa-84c2d3243b18
testlog.go:32: 2018-12-14T14:57:52.694Z [INFO ] docker/driver.go:196: docker: created container: container_id=362b6ea183f3c4ce472d7d7571ca47023cea1df0f5eb920827921716f17718be
testlog.go:32: 2018-12-14T14:57:53.523Z [DEBUG] docker/driver.go:416: docker: failed to start container: container_id=362b6ea183f3c4ce472d7d7571ca47023cea1df0f5eb920827921716f17718be attempt=1 error="API error (500): {"message":"cannot start a stopped process: unknown"}
"
testlog.go:32: 2018-12-14T14:57:55.394Z [DEBUG] docker/driver.go:416: docker: failed to start container: container_id=362b6ea183f3c4ce472d7d7571ca47023cea1df0f5eb920827921716f17718be attempt=2 error="API error (500): {"message":"cannot start a stopped process: unknown"}
"
testlog.go:32: 2018-12-14T14:57:57.243Z [DEBUG] docker/driver.go:416: docker: failed to start container: container_id=362b6ea183f3c4ce472d7d7571ca47023cea1df0f5eb920827921716f17718be attempt=3 error="API error (500): {"message":"cannot start a stopped process: unknown"}
"
```
Using `:latest` tag is typically a cause of pain, as underlying image
changes behavior. Here, I'm switching to using a point release, and
re-updating the stored tarballs with it.
Sadly, when saving/loading images, the repo digeset is not supported:
https://github.com/moby/moby/issues/22011 ; but using point releases
should mitigate the problem.
The motivation here is that docker tests have some flakiness due to
accidental importing of `busybox:latest` which has `/bin/nc` that no
longer supports `-p 0`:
```
$ docker run -it --rm busybox /bin/nc -l 127.0.0.1 -p 0
Unable to find image 'busybox:latest' locally
latest: Pulling from library/busybox
Digest: sha256:2a03a6059f21e150ae84b0973863609494aad70f0a80eaeb64bddd8d92465812
Status: Downloaded newer image for busybox:latest
nc: bad local port '0'
```
Looks like older busybox versions (e.g. `busybox:1.24` do honor `-p 0`
as the test expect, but I would rather update busybox to fix.
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.