In the CRI streaming server, a goroutine (`handleResizeEvents`) is launched
to handle terminal resize events if a TTY is asked for with an exec; this
is the sender of terminal resize events. Another goroutine is launched
shortly after successful process startup to actually do something with
these events, however the issue arises if the exec process fails to start
for any reason that would have `process.Start` return non-nil. The receiver
goroutine never gets launched so the sender is stuck blocked on a channel send
infinitely.
This could be used in a malicious manner by repeatedly launching execs
with a command that doesn't exist in the image, as a single goroutine
will get leaked on every invocation which will slowly grow containerd's
memory usage.
Signed-off-by: Danny Canter <danny@dcantah.dev>
Remove direct invocation of old v0.1.0 NRI plugins. They
can be enabled using the revised NRI API and the v0.1.0
adapter plugin.
Signed-off-by: Krisztian Litkey <krisztian.litkey@intel.com>
Implement the adaptation interface required by the NRI
service plugin to handle CRI sandboxes and containers.
Hook the NRI service plugin into CRI request processing.
Signed-off-by: Krisztian Litkey <krisztian.litkey@intel.com>
All pause container object references must be removed
from sbserver. This is an implementation detail of
podsandbox package.
Added TODOs for remaining work.
Signed-off-by: Maksym Pavlenko <pavlenko.maksym@gmail.com>
In golang when copy a slice, if the slice is initialized with a
desired length, then appending to it will cause the size double.
Signed-off-by: bin liu <liubin0329@gmail.com>
Add a new config as sandbox controller mod, which can be either
"podsandbox" or "shim". If empty, set it to default "podsandbox"
when CRI plugin inits.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianyang <burning9699@gmail.com>
Go 1.18 and up now provides a strings.Cut() which is better suited for
splitting key/value pairs (and similar constructs), and performs better:
```go
func BenchmarkSplit(b *testing.B) {
b.ReportAllocs()
data := []string{"12hello=world", "12hello=", "12=hello", "12hello"}
for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
for _, s := range data {
_ = strings.SplitN(s, "=", 2)[0]
}
}
}
func BenchmarkCut(b *testing.B) {
b.ReportAllocs()
data := []string{"12hello=world", "12hello=", "12=hello", "12hello"}
for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
for _, s := range data {
_, _, _ = strings.Cut(s, "=")
}
}
}
```
BenchmarkSplit
BenchmarkSplit-10 8244206 128.0 ns/op 128 B/op 4 allocs/op
BenchmarkCut
BenchmarkCut-10 54411998 21.80 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
While looking at occurrences of `strings.Split()`, I also updated some for alternatives,
or added some constraints; for cases where an specific number of items is expected, I used `strings.SplitN()`
with a suitable limit. This prevents (theoretical) unlimited splits.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Signed-off-by: Swagat Bora <sbora@amazon.com>
Add spans around image unpack operations
Use image.ref to denote image name and image.id for the image config digest
Add top-level spand and record errors in the CRI instrumentation service