Some extra steps were added for WS2022 in accordance with
the published image on Azure:
- Install Container Feature & reboot VM
- Create NAT network
Temporarily we skip critest steps for WS2022 until all test images
are updated in that project.
Signed-off-by: Adelina Tuvenie <atuvenie@cloudbasesolutions.com>
After containerd restarts, it will try to recover its sandboxes,
containers, and images. If it detects a task in the Created or
Stopped state, it will be removed. This will cause the containerd
process it hang on Windows on the t.io.Wait() call.
Calling t.io.Close() beforehand will solve this issue.
Additionally, the same issue occurs when trying to stopp a sandbox
after containerd restarts. This will solve that case as well.
Signed-off-by: Claudiu Belu <cbelu@cloudbasesolutions.com>
Windows HostProcess containers can run containerized workloads on a Windows host.
These containers operate as normal processes but have access to the host network
namespace, storage, and devices when given the appropriate user privileges.
HostProcess containers support the ability to run as one of the following Windows
service accounts: LocalSystem, LocalService, NetworkService.
Signed-off-by: Claudiu Belu <cbelu@cloudbasesolutions.com>
The CRI-plugin subscribes the image event on k8s.io namespace. By
default, the image event is created by CRI-API. However, the image can
be downloaded by containerd API on k8s.io with the customized labels.
The CRI-plugin should use patch update for `io.cri-containerd.image`
label in this case.
Fixes: #5900
Signed-off-by: Wei Fu <fuweid89@gmail.com>
Process.Kill might still return an IsNotFound error, even if it
actually killed the process. We should wait for the process to
finish in the first place. Otherwise, when querying the task's
status, we might still see it running, resulting in an error.
Signed-off-by: Claudiu Belu <cbelu@cloudbasesolutions.com>
The test sets container's Linux.SecurityContext.NamespaceOptions.Pid = NamespaceMode_CONTAINER,
which will ensure that the container keeps running even if the sandbox container dies. We do
not have that option on Windows.
Adds additional logging in the test, so it is easier to figure out which assertion failed.
Signed-off-by: Claudiu Belu <cbelu@cloudbasesolutions.com>
Since go 1.16, -buildmode=pie is supported on riscv [1],
so let's remove the platform from the exclusion list.
This reverts commit e34bf08e58.
[1] https://golang.org/doc/go1.16#riscv
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
A previous commit made the Windows containerd/platforms.Default stricter
by requiring the OS Version to have a similar OS Version as the node's OS Version.
However, tar images (from docker save) do not have any OS Version information,
causing the containerd/import.Import's images.FilterPlatforms to filter out the image
entirely, which means that the images.SetChildrenLabels doesn't get to label
any children, which in turn will cause the Garbage Collector to remove content
related to the image.
This sets a default platform for the imported image if it's a Windows image which
doesn't have any OSVersion information, or if there's no platform information at
all.
Signed-off-by: Claudiu Belu <cbelu@cloudbasesolutions.com>
This commit attemts to support containerd on darwin platform. With an
external runtime shim, ctr run should work with, for instance,
--runtime=io.containerd.runu.v1. An example of runtime and shim is
managed under different repository (github.com/ukontainer/runu/).
Signed-off-by: Hajime Tazaki <thehajime@gmail.com>
Since the /run directory on macOS is read-only, darwin containerd should
use a different directory. Use the pre-defined default values instead
to avoid this issue.
Fixes: bd908acab ("Use path based unix socket for shims")
Signed-off-by: Hajime Tazaki <thehajime@gmail.com>
It seems like the cwd flag isn't used anywhere for ctr tasks exec. This change
just sets the cwd field on the spec for the execed process if a new one was
asked for, otherwise it will continue using whatever was on the containers spec.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Canter <dcanter@microsoft.com>
The Pod Sandbox can enter in a NotReady state if the task associated
with it no longer exists (it died, or it was killed). In this state,
the Pod network namespace could still be open, which means we can't
remove the sandbox, even if --force was used.
Signed-off-by: Claudiu Belu <cbelu@cloudbasesolutions.com>
This version brings in some bug fixes to layer handling. The actual fix isn't
present in the diff as it's not used here, but the Windows shim is built from
the tag present in go.mod, so the fix will be in the Windows shim on a new release
of Containerd if this tag is in.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Canter <dcanter@microsoft.com>
With the introduction of Windows Server 2022, some images have been updated
to support WS2022 in their manifest list. This commit updates the test images
accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Adelina Tuvenie <atuvenie@cloudbasesolutions.com>
CRI container runtimes mount devices (set via kubernetes device plugins)
to containers by taking the host user/group IDs (uid/gid) to the
corresponding container device.
This triggers a problem when trying to run those containers with
non-zero (root uid/gid = 0) uid/gid set via runAsUser/runAsGroup:
the container process has no permission to use the device even when
its gid is permissive to non-root users because the container user
does not belong to that group.
It is possible to workaround the problem by manually adding the device
gid(s) to supplementalGroups. However, this is also problematic because
the device gid(s) may have different values depending on the workers'
distro/version in the cluster.
This patch suggests to take RunAsUser/RunAsGroup set via SecurityContext
as the device UID/GID, respectively. The feature must be enabled by
setting device_ownership_from_security_context runtime config value to
true (valid on Linux only).
Signed-off-by: Mikko Ylinen <mikko.ylinen@intel.com>
Currently, containerd doesn't restart pull when it encounters unexpected EOF of
blob strem withtout error codes.
There are cases where this lead to pull failure.
This commit tries to fix this issue.
Signed-off-by: Kohei Tokunaga <ktokunaga.mail@gmail.com>
The Windows Default matcher also checks the the OS Version prefix,
however, the platforms.DefaultSpec does not include it, which means
that it won't match the matcher.
This solves the issue by adding the OS Version to the DefaultSpec.
Signed-off-by: Claudiu Belu <cbelu@cloudbasesolutions.com>
Go 1.15.7 contained a security fix for CVE-2021-3115, which allowed arbitrary
code to be executed at build time when using cgo on Windows. This issue also
affects Unix users who have “.” listed explicitly in their PATH and are running
“go get” outside of a module or with module mode disabled.
This issue is not limited to the go command itself, and can also affect binaries
that use `os.Command`, `os.LookPath`, etc.
From the related blogpost (ttps://blog.golang.org/path-security):
> Are your own programs affected?
>
> If you use exec.LookPath or exec.Command in your own programs, you only need to
> be concerned if you (or your users) run your program in a directory with untrusted
> contents. If so, then a subprocess could be started using an executable from dot
> instead of from a system directory. (Again, using an executable from dot happens
> always on Windows and only with uncommon PATH settings on Unix.)
>
> If you are concerned, then we’ve published the more restricted variant of os/exec
> as golang.org/x/sys/execabs. You can use it in your program by simply replacing
This patch replaces all uses of `os/exec` with `golang.org/x/sys/execabs`. While
some uses of `os/exec` should not be problematic (e.g. part of tests), it is
probably good to be consistent, in case code gets moved around.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>