We missed bumping the go module, so let's do it now :)
Automated go code with github.com/sirkon/go-imports-rename
Manually via vgrep podman/v2 the rest
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <rothberg@redhat.com>
The resize warning logged the wrong error. While this does not fix
#9172, it may very well be helpful finding its root cause.
[NO TESTS NEEDED]
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <rothberg@redhat.com>
Our users are missing certain warning messages that would
make debugging issues with Podman easier.
For example if you do a podman build with a Containerfile
that contains the SHELL directive, the Derective is silently
ignored.
If you run with the log-level warn you get a warning message explainging
what happened.
$ podman build --no-cache -f /tmp/Containerfile1 /tmp/
STEP 1: FROM ubi8
STEP 2: SHELL ["/bin/bash", "-c"]
STEP 3: COMMIT
--> 7a207be102a
7a207be102aa8993eceb32802e6ceb9d2603ceed9dee0fee341df63e6300882e
$ podman --log-level=warn build --no-cache -f /tmp/Containerfile1 /tmp/
STEP 1: FROM ubi8
STEP 2: SHELL ["/bin/bash", "-c"]
STEP 3: COMMIT
WARN[0000] SHELL is not supported for OCI image format, [/bin/bash -c] will be ignored. Must use `docker` format
--> 7bd96fd25b9
7bd96fd25b9f755d8a045e31187e406cf889dcf3799357ec906e90767613e95f
These messages will no longer be lost, when we default to WARNing level.
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
Our previous flow was to perform a hijack before passing a
connection into Libpod, and then Libpod would attach to the
container's attach socket and begin forwarding traffic.
A problem emerges: we write the attach header as soon as the
attach complete. As soon as we write the header, the client
assumes that all is ready, and sends a Start request. This Start
may be processed *before* we successfully finish attaching,
causing us to lose output.
The solution is to handle hijacking inside Libpod. Unfortunately,
this requires a downright extensive refactor of the Attach and
HTTP Exec StartAndAttach code. I think the result is an
improvement in some places (a lot more errors will be handled
with a proper HTTP error code, before the hijack occurs) but
other parts, like the relocation of printing container logs, are
just *bad*. Still, we need this fixed now to get CI back into
good shape...
Fixes#7195
Signed-off-by: Matthew Heon <matthew.heon@pm.me>
I confused STDIN and STDOUT's file descriptors (it's 0 and 1, I
thought they were 1 and 0). As such, we were looking at whether
we wanted to print STDIN when we looked to print STDOUT. This
bool was set when `-i` was set in at the `podman exec` command
line, which masked the problem when it was set.
Fixes#6890Fixes#6891Fixes#6892
Signed-off-by: Matthew Heon <matthew.heon@pm.me>
With the advent of Podman 2.0.0 we crossed the magical barrier of go
modules. While we were able to continue importing all packages inside
of the project, the project could not be vendored anymore from the
outside.
Move the go module to new major version and change all imports to
`github.com/containers/libpod/v2`. The renaming of the imports
was done via `gomove` [1].
[1] https://github.com/KSubedi/gomove
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <rothberg@redhat.com>
This adds bindings for starting exec sessions, and then uses them
to wire up detached exec. Code is heavily based on Attach code
for containers, slightly modified to handle exec sessions.
Bindings are presently attached-only, detached is pending on a
Conmon update landing in CI. I'll probably get to that next.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Heon <matthew.heon@pm.me>