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>
To allow the querying of usage for snapshots, we define a new method on
the snapshotter to query the resources in use by a single snapshot.
Conversely, it can be said that if the snapshot was deleted, the
reported amount of usage would be recovered.
There are few problems with this model in the implementation of btrfs
that need to be worked out. In btrfs, it is hard to resolve the amount
of data usage with the use of quotas but these may report valuables that
are incompatible with the model.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>