| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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This option causes Podman to not only remove the specified containers
but all of the containers that depend on the specified
containers.
Fixes: https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/10360
Also ran codespell on the code
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
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The Docker-compatible REST API has historically behaved just as the rest
of Podman and Buildah (and the atomic Docker in older RHEL/Fedora) where
`containers-registries.conf` is centrally controlling which registries
a short name may resolve to during pull or local image lookups. Please
refer to a blog for more details [1].
Docker, however, is only resolving short names to docker.io which has
been reported (see #12320) to break certain clients who rely on this
behavior. In order to support this scenario, `containers.conf(5)`
received a new option to control whether Podman's compat API resolves
to docker.io only or behaves as before.
Most endpoints allow for directly normalizing parameters that represent
an image. If set in containers.conf, Podman will then normalize the
references directly to docker.io. The build endpoint is an outlier
since images are also referenced in Dockerfiles. The Buildah API,
however, supports specifying a custom `types.SystemContext` in which
we can set a field that enforces short-name resolution to docker.io
in `c/image/pkg/shortnames`.
Notice that this a "hybrid" approach of doing the normalization directly
in the compat endpoints *and* in `pkg/shortnames` by passing a system
context. Doing such a hybrid approach is neccessary since the compat
and the libpod endpoints share the same `libimage.Runtime` which makes
a global enforcement via the `libimage.Runtime.systemContext`
impossible. Having two separate runtimes for the compat and the libpod
endpoints seems risky and not generally applicable to all endpoints.
[1] https://www.redhat.com/sysadmin/container-image-short-names
Fixes: #12320
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <rothberg@redhat.com>
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When I originally wrote this code I had no idea what POST
would look like so I did a sloppy job, deferring making it
usable. Now that we have some real-world examples in place,
I have a better understanding of what params look like and
how to make tests more readable/maintainable. (Deferring isn't
always bad: one of my early ideas was to separate params using
commas; that would've been a disaster because some JSON values,
such as arrays, include commas).
This commit implements a better way of dealing with POST:
* The main concept is still 'key=value'
* When value is a JSON object (dictionary, array), it
can be quoted.
* Multiple params are simply separated by spaces.
The 3-digit HTTP code is a prominent, readable separator
between POST params and expected results. The parsing
code is a little uglier, but test developers need
never see that. The important thing is that writing
tests is now easier.
* POST params can be empty (this removes the need for a
useless '')
I snuck in one unrelated change: one of the newly-added
tests, .NetworkSettings, was failing when run rootless
(which is how I test on my setup). I made it conditional.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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Signed-off-by: Milivoje Legenovic <m.legenovic@gmail.com>
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Signed-off-by: Matej Vasek <mvasek@redhat.com>
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It's been a while since I last looked at these; some cruft
has crept in, generating noise and hence unreadable test
results. Clean it up:
* remove pushd/popd in one subtest, replace with 'tar -C'.
(Also remove confusing quotation marks). This removes
spurious directory names from output.
* in like(), show only first line of actual output.
Some commands ('tree', 'generate kube') produce
voluminous multi-line output, which is super useless
and distracting when reading a test run.
* Recognize that some queries will not generate output,
e.g. HEAD requests and some POSTs. Deal with that.
This fixes "curl.result.out: no such file" and "parse
error" warnings.
* In cleanup, 'podman rm -a' and 'rmi -af'; this gets
rid of errors when deleting $WORKDIR. (EBUSY error
when root, EPERM when rootless).
And, the original reason for poking in here: refactor the
wait-for-port part of start_server() into its own helper
function, so we can use it when starting a local registry
in 12-imagesMore. (Ref: #9270)
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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Docker doesn't have the destination parameter as libpod does,
the "image name" path parameter is supposed to be the destination.
Signed-off-by: Matej Vasek <mvasek@redhat.com>
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Followon to #7965 (mirror registry). mirror.gcr.io doesn't
cache all the images we need, and I can't find a way to
add to its cache, so let's just use quay.io for those
images that it can't serve.
Tools used:
skopeo copy --all docker://docker.io/library/alpine:3.10.2 \
docker://quay.io/libpod/alpine:3.10.2
...and also:
docker.io/library/alpine:3.2
docker.io/library/busybox:latest
docker.io/library/busybox:glibc
docker.io/library/busybox:1.30.1
docker.io/library/redis:alpine
docker.io/libpod/alpine-with-bogus-seccomp:label
docker.io/libpod/alpine-with-seccomp:label
docker.io/libpod/alpine_healthcheck:latest
docker.io/libpod/badhealthcheck:latest
Since most of those were new quay.io/libpod images, they required
going in through the quay.io GUI, image, settings, Make Public.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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In the new-Cirrus transition, APIv2 tests were inadvertently
disabled. As expected when tests get disabled, they break.
This commit fixes some failing tests, and comments out others
(with big FIXMEs) because I have neither the expertise nor
time to figure out the real problems.
The big change to test-apiv2 is due to a recently-added
test that looks for an '=' sign in json output. My '=' vs '~'
detector completely barfed on that, and there's just no
way to make it work in a bash 'case' statement. So, switch
to an 'if' with 'expr'.
And, unrelated, fix a longstanding (harmless) bug that was
issuing spurious "expected" messages to the test log; those
should've been going to the full results log.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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Signed-off-by: Edward Shen <weshen@redhat.com>
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