Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Derek McGowan
9613acb2ed
Add context to content commit
Content commit is updated to take in a context, allowing
content to be committed within the same context the writer
was in. This is useful when commit may be able to use more
context to complete the action rather than creating its own.
An example of this being useful is for the metadata implementation
of content, having a context allows tests to fully create
content in one database transaction by making use of the context.

Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net>
2017-09-06 10:19:12 -07:00
Derek McGowan
dee8dc2cda
Add support for content labels on commit
Add commit options which allow for setting labels on commit.
Prevents potential race between garbage collector reading labels
after commit and labels getting set.

Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net>
2017-08-11 14:15:20 -07:00
Derek McGowan
c4387a159e
Add content test suite run to client
Fix bugs in content deletion and upload status

Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net>
2017-08-11 14:08:34 -07:00
Stephen J Day
a4fadc596b
errdefs: centralize error handling
Now that we have most of the services required for use with containerd,
it was found that common patterns were used throughout services. By
defining a central `errdefs` package, we ensure that services will map
errors to and from grpc consistently and cleanly. One can decorate an
error with as much context as necessary, using `pkg/errors` and still
have the error mapped correctly via grpc.

We make a few sacrifices. At this point, the common errors we use across
the repository all map directly to grpc error codes. While this seems
positively crazy, it actually works out quite well. The error conditions
that were specific weren't super necessary and the ones that were
necessary now simply have better context information. We lose the
ability to add new codes, but this constraint may not be a bad thing.

Effectively, as long as one uses the errors defined in `errdefs`, the
error class will be mapped correctly across the grpc boundary and
everything will be good. If you don't use those definitions, the error
maps to "unknown" and the error message is preserved.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2017-06-29 15:00:47 -07:00
Stephen J Day
12a6beaeeb
*: update import paths to use versioned services
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2017-06-21 18:29:06 -07:00
Michael Crosby
94eafaab60 Update GRPC for consistency
Signed-off-by: Michael Crosby <crosbymichael@gmail.com>
2017-06-21 13:34:24 -07:00
Derek McGowan
9211a1daa7
Set the remote writer ref on writer creation
Ensures that status calls to the remote writer correctly
sets the ref.

Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net>
2017-06-07 16:40:42 -07:00
Stephen J Day
193abed96e
content: unify provider and ingester
The split between provider and ingester was a long standing division
reflecting the client-side use cases. For the most part, we were
differentiating these for the algorithms that operate them, but it made
instantation and use of the types challenging. On the server-side, this
distinction is generally less important. This change unifies these types
and in the process we get a few benefits.

The first is that we now completely access the content store over GRPC.
This was the initial intent and we have now satisfied this goal
completely. There are a few issues around listing content and getting
status, but we resolve these with simple streaming and regexp filters.
More can probably be done to polish this but the result is clean.

Several other content-oriented methods were polished in the process of
unification. We have now properly seperated out the `Abort` method to
cancel ongoing or stalled ingest processes. We have also replaced the
`Active` method with a single status method.

The transition went extremely smoothly. Once the clients were updated to
use the new methods, every thing worked as expected on the first
compile.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2017-05-10 17:05:53 -07:00