We now no longer write containers.conf, instead system connections and
farms are written to a new file called podman-connections.conf.
This is a major rework and I had to change a lot of things to get this
to compile again with my c/common changes.
It is a breaking change for users as connections/farms added before this
commit can now no longer be removed or modified directly. However because
the logic keeps reading from containers.conf the old connections can
still be used to connect to a remote host.
Signed-off-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com>
Also, do a general cleanup of all the timeout code. Changes
include:
- Convert from int to *uint where possible. Timeouts cannot be
negative, hence the uint change; and a timeout of 0 is valid,
so we need a new way to detect that the user set a timeout
(hence, pointer).
- Change name in the database to avoid conflicts between new data
type and old one. This will cause timeouts set with 4.2.0 to be
lost, but considering nobody is using the feature at present
(and the lack of validation means we could have invalid,
negative timeouts in the DB) this feels safe.
- Ensure volume plugin timeouts can only be used with volumes
created using a plugin. Timeouts on the local driver are
nonsensical.
- Remove the existing test, as it did not use a volume plugin.
Write a new test that does.
The actual plumbing of the containers.conf timeout in is one line
in volume_api.go; the remainder are the above-described cleanups.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Heon <mheon@redhat.com>
Update containers common to the latest HEAD. Some bug fixes in libimage
forced us to have a clearer separation between ordinary images and
manifest lists. Hence, when looking up manifest lists without recursing
into any of their instances, we need to use `LookupManifestList()`.
Also account for some other changes in c/common (e.g., the changed order
in the security labels).
Further vendor the latest HEAD from Buildah which is required to get the
bud tests to pass.
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <rothberg@redhat.com>
The seccomp/containers-golang library is not maintained any more and we
should stick to containers/common.
Signed-off-by: Sascha Grunert <sgrunert@suse.com>