This change does a couple things to remove some cruft/unused functionality
in the Windows snapshotter, as well as add a way to specify the rootfs
size in bytes for a Windows container via a new field added in the CRI api in
k8s 1.24. Setting the rootfs/scratch volume size was assumed to be working
prior to this but turns out not to be the case.
Previously I'd added a change to pass any annotations in the containerd
snapshot form (containerd.io/snapshot/*) as labels for the containers
rootfs snapshot. This was added as a means for a client to be able to provide
containerd.io/snapshot/io.microsoft.container.storage.rootfs.size-gb as an
annotation and have that be translated to a label and ultimately set the
size for the scratch volume in Windows. However, this actually only worked if
interfacing with the CRI api directly (crictl) as Kubernetes itself will
fail to validate annotations that if split by "/" end up with > 2 parts,
which the snapshot labels will (containerd.io / snapshot / foobarbaz).
With this in mind, passing the annotations and filtering to
containerd.io/snapshot/* is moot, so I've removed this code in favor of
a new `snapshotterOpts()` function that will return platform specific
snapshotter options if ones exist. Now on Windows we can just check if
RootfsSizeInBytes is set on the WindowsContainerResources struct and
then return a snapshotter option that sets the right label.
So all in all this change:
- Gets rid of code to pass CRI annotations as labels down to snapshotters.
- Gets rid of the functionality to create a 1GB sized scratch disk if
the client provided a size < 20GB. This code is not used currently and
has a few logical shortcomings as it won't be able to create the disk
if a container is already running and using the same base layer. WCIFS
(driver that handles the unioning of windows container layers together)
holds open handles to some files that we need to delete to create the
1GB scratch disk is the underlying problem.
- Deprecates the containerd.io/snapshot/io.microsoft.container.storage.rootfs.size-gb
label in favor of a new containerd.io/snapshot/windows/rootfs.sizebytes label.
The previous label/annotation wasn't being used by us, and from a cursory
github search wasn't being used by anyone else either. Now that there is a CRI
field to specify the size, this should just be a field that users can set
on their pod specs and don't need to concern themselves with what it eventually
gets translated to, but non-CRI clients can still use the new label/deprecated
label as usual.
- Add test to cri integration suite to validate expanding the rootfs size.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Canter <dcanter@microsoft.com>
HostProcess containers require every container in the pod to be a
host process container and have the corresponding field set. The Kubelet
usually enforces this so we'd error before even getting here but we recently
found a bug in this logic so better to be safe than sorry.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Canter <dcanter@microsoft.com>
The regression in v1.22.2 has been resolved, so we can drop the
replace rule and use the latest v1.22.x version.
full diff: https://github.com/urfave/cli/compare/v1.22.1...v1.22.9
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These tests are launching containerd and pulling busybox there, while
other tests are using busybox from TestMain().
This commit shares busybox at least between TestRestartMonitor and
TestRestartMonitorWithOnFailurePolicy to reduce the chance of
throttling from ghcr.io.
Signed-off-by: Kazuyoshi Kato <katokazu@amazon.com>
This test tends to fail under Cirrus CI + Vagrant. Skipping for now
since running the test on GitHub Actions would be suffice.
Signed-off-by: Kazuyoshi Kato <katokazu@amazon.com>
Kubelet sends the PullImage request without timeout, because the image size
is unknown and timeout is hard to defined. The pulling request might run
into 0B/s speed, if containerd can't receive any packet in that connection.
For this case, the containerd should cancel the PullImage request.
Although containerd provides ingester manager to track the progress of pulling
request, for example `ctr image pull` shows the console progress bar, it needs
more CPU resources to open/read the ingested files to get status.
In order to support progress timeout feature with lower overhead, this
patch uses http.RoundTripper wrapper to track active progress. That
wrapper will increase active-request number and return the
countingReadCloser wrapper for http.Response.Body. Each bytes-read
can be count and the active-request number will be descreased when the
countingReadCloser wrapper has been closed. For the progress tracker,
it can check the active-request number and bytes-read at intervals. If
there is no any progress, the progress tracker should cancel the
request.
NOTE: For each blob data, the containerd will make sure that the content
writer is opened before sending http request to the registry. Therefore, the
progress reporter can rely on the active-request number.
fixed: #4984
Signed-off-by: Wei Fu <fuweid89@gmail.com>
Previouslty "Size" was reserved by protoc-gen-gogoctrd and user-generated
"Size" was automatically renamed to "Size_" to avoid conflicts.
Signed-off-by: Kazuyoshi Kato <katokazu@amazon.com>
This commit hides types.Any from the diff package's interface. Clients
(incl. imgcrypt) shouldn't aware about gogo/protobuf.
Signed-off-by: Kazuyoshi Kato <katokazu@amazon.com>
This commit upgrades github.com/containerd/typeurl to use typeurl.Any.
The interface hides gogo/protobuf/types.Any from containerd's Go client.
Signed-off-by: Kazuyoshi Kato <katokazu@amazon.com>