| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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The field was already exposed already in the `system df` output
so this just required a bit of plumbing and testing.
As part of this, fix `podman systemd df` volume in-use logic.
Previously, volumes were only considered to be in use if the
container using them was running. This does not match Docker's
behavior, where a volume is considered in use as long as a
container exists that uses the volume, even if said container is
not running.
Fixes #15720
Signed-off-by: Matthew Heon <matthew.heon@pm.me>
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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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While I wasn't looking, some completely unreadable cruft
crept in here, and it's totally my fault: I never knew
you could pass JSON to a GET query. Everyone who DID
know that, did so, but had to URL-escape it into a
completely gobbledygook mess to make curl happy.
Solution: trivial, do the URL-escaping in 't' itself. I
just never realized that was needed.
I'm so sorry. I hope this helps.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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This implements support for mounting and unmounting volumes
backed by volume plugins. Support for actually retrieving
plugins requires a pull request to land in containers.conf and
then that to be vendored, and as such is not yet ready. Given
this, this code is only compile tested. However, the code for
everything past retrieving the plugin has been written - there is
support for creating, removing, mounting, and unmounting volumes,
which should allow full functionality once the c/common PR is
merged.
A major change is the signature of the MountPoint function for
volumes, which now, by necessity, returns an error. Named volumes
managed by a plugin do not have a mountpoint we control; instead,
it is managed entirely by the plugin. As such, we need to cache
the path in the DB, and calls to retrieve it now need to access
the DB (and may fail as such).
Notably absent is support for SELinux relabelling and chowning
these volumes. Given that we don't manage the mountpoint for
these volumes, I am extremely reluctant to try and modify it - we
could easily break the plugin trying to chown or relabel it.
Also, we had no less than *5* separate implementations of
inspecting a volume floating around in pkg/infra/abi and
pkg/api/handlers/libpod. And none of them used volume.Inspect(),
the only correct way of inspecting volumes. Remove them all and
consolidate to using the correct way. Compat API is likely still
doing things the wrong way, but that is an issue for another day.
Fixes #4304
Signed-off-by: Matthew Heon <matthew.heon@pm.me>
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This change adds code to report the reclaimed space after a prune.
Reclaimed space from volumes, images, and containers is recorded
during the prune call in a PruneReport struct. These structs are
collected into a slice during a system prune and processed afterwards
to calculate the total reclaimed space.
Closes #8658
Signed-off-by: Baron Lenardson <lenardson.baron@gmail.com>
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This change was missed in pull/8689. Now that volume pruneing supports
filters system pruneing can pass its filters down to the volume
pruneing. Additionally this change adds tests for the following components
* podman system prune subcommand with `--volumes` & `--filter` options
* apiv2 api tests for `/system/` and `/libpod/system` endpoints
Relates to #8453, #8672
Signed-off-by: Baron Lenardson <lenardson.baron@gmail.com>
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