On unix platforms, it is safe to re-open fifo's for reading after the
first creation if the file is already a fifo, however this is not
possible on windows where this triggers a permissions error on the
socket path, as you cannot recreate it.
We can't transparently handle this in the CreateAndRead handle, because
the Access Is Denied error is too generic to reliably be an IO error.
Instead, we add an explict API for opening a reader to an existing FIFO,
and check to see if the fifo already exists inside the calling package
(e.g logmon)
This PR switches to using plain fifo files instead of golang structs
managed by containerd/fifo library.
The library main benefit is management of opening fifo files. In Linux,
a reader `open()` request would block until a writer opens the file (and
vice-versa). The library uses goroutines so that it's the first IO
operation that blocks.
This benefit isn't really useful for us: Given that logmon simply
streams output in a separate process, blocking of opening or first read
is effectively the same.
The library additionally makes further complications for managing state
and tracking read/write permission that seems overhead for our use,
compared to using a file directly.
Looking here, I made the following incidental changes:
* document that we do handle if fifo files are already created, as we
rely on that behavior for logmon restarts
* use type system to lock read vs write: currently, fifo library returns
`io.ReadWriteCloser` even if fifo is opened for writing only!