distribution/storage/layerstore.go

193 lines
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Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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package storage
import (
"fmt"
"strings"
"time"
"github.com/Sirupsen/logrus"
"github.com/docker/docker-registry/digest"
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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"github.com/docker/docker-registry/storagedriver"
)
type layerStore struct {
driver storagedriver.StorageDriver
pathMapper *pathMapper
uploadStore layerUploadStore
}
func (ls *layerStore) Exists(name string, digest digest.Digest) (bool, error) {
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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// Because this implementation just follows blob links, an existence check
// is pretty cheap by starting and closing a fetch.
_, err := ls.Fetch(name, digest)
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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if err != nil {
if err == ErrLayerUnknown {
return false, nil
}
return false, err
}
return true, nil
}
func (ls *layerStore) Fetch(name string, digest digest.Digest) (Layer, error) {
repos, err := ls.resolveContainingRepositories(digest)
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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if err != nil {
// TODO(stevvooe): Unknown tarsum error: need to wrap.
return nil, err
}
// TODO(stevvooe): Access control for layer pulls need to happen here: we
// have a list of repos that "own" the tarsum that need to be checked
// against the list of repos to which we have pull access. The argument
// repos needs to be filtered against that access list.
_, blobPath, err := ls.resolveBlobPath(repos, digest)
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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if err != nil {
// TODO(stevvooe): Map this error correctly, perhaps in the callee.
return nil, err
}
p, err := ls.pathMapper.path(blobPath)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
// Grab the size of the layer file, ensuring that it exists, among other
// things.
size, err := ls.driver.CurrentSize(p)
if err != nil {
// TODO(stevvooe): Handle blob/path does not exist here.
// TODO(stevvooe): Get a better understanding of the error cases here
// that don't stem from unknown path.
return nil, err
}
// Build the layer reader and return to the client.
layer := &layerReader{
layerStore: ls,
path: p,
name: name,
digest: digest,
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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// TODO(stevvooe): Storage backend does not support modification time
// queries yet. Layers "never" change, so just return the zero value.
createdAt: time.Time{},
offset: 0,
size: int64(size),
}
return layer, nil
}
// Upload begins a layer upload, returning a handle. If the layer upload
// is already in progress or the layer has already been uploaded, this
// will return an error.
func (ls *layerStore) Upload(name string) (LayerUpload, error) {
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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// NOTE(stevvooe): Consider the issues with allowing concurrent upload of
// the same two layers. Should it be disallowed? For now, we allow both
// parties to proceed and the the first one uploads the layer.
lus, err := ls.uploadStore.New(name)
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return ls.newLayerUpload(lus), nil
}
// Resume continues an in progress layer upload, returning the current
// state of the upload.
func (ls *layerStore) Resume(uuid string) (LayerUpload, error) {
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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lus, err := ls.uploadStore.GetState(uuid)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return ls.newLayerUpload(lus), nil
}
// newLayerUpload allocates a new upload controller with the given state.
func (ls *layerStore) newLayerUpload(lus LayerUploadState) LayerUpload {
return &layerUploadController{
LayerUploadState: lus,
layerStore: ls,
uploadStore: ls.uploadStore,
}
}
func (ls *layerStore) resolveContainingRepositories(digest digest.Digest) ([]string, error) {
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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// Lookup the layer link in the index by tarsum id.
layerIndexLinkPath, err := ls.pathMapper.path(layerIndexLinkPathSpec{digest: digest})
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
layerIndexLinkContent, err := ls.driver.GetContent(layerIndexLinkPath)
if err != nil {
switch err := err.(type) {
case storagedriver.PathNotFoundError:
return nil, ErrLayerUnknown
default:
return nil, err
}
}
results := strings.Split(string(layerIndexLinkContent), "\n")
// clean these up
for i, result := range results {
results[i] = strings.TrimSpace(result)
}
return results, nil
}
// resolveBlobId lookups up the tarSum in the various repos to find the blob
// link, returning the repo name and blob path spec or an error on failure.
func (ls *layerStore) resolveBlobPath(repos []string, digest digest.Digest) (name string, bps blobPathSpec, err error) {
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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for _, repo := range repos {
pathSpec := layerLinkPathSpec{name: repo, digest: digest}
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
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layerLinkPath, err := ls.pathMapper.path(pathSpec)
if err != nil {
// TODO(stevvooe): This looks very lazy, may want to collect these
// errors and report them if we exit this for loop without
// resolving the blob id.
logrus.Debugf("error building linkLayerPath (%V): %v", pathSpec, err)
continue
}
layerLinkContent, err := ls.driver.GetContent(layerLinkPath)
if err != nil {
logrus.Debugf("error getting layerLink content (%V): %v", pathSpec, err)
continue
}
// Yay! We've resolved our blob id and we're ready to go.
parts := strings.SplitN(strings.TrimSpace(string(layerLinkContent)), ":", 2)
if len(parts) != 2 {
return "", bps, fmt.Errorf("invalid blob reference: %q", string(layerLinkContent))
}
name = repo
bp := blobPathSpec{alg: parts[0], digest: parts[1]}
return repo, bp, nil
}
// TODO(stevvooe): Map this error to repo not found, but it basically
// means we exited the loop above without finding a blob link.
return "", bps, fmt.Errorf("unable to resolve blog id for repos=%v and digest=%v", repos, digest)
Initial implementation of registry LayerService This change contains the initial implementation of the LayerService to power layer push and pulls on the storagedriver. The interfaces presented in this package will be used by the http application to drive most features around efficient pulls and resumable pushes. The file storage/layer.go defines the interface interactions. LayerService is the root type and supports methods to access Layer and LayerUpload objects. Pull operations are supported with LayerService.Fetch and push operations are supported with LayerService.Upload and LayerService.Resume. Reads and writes of layers are split between Layer and LayerUpload, respectively. LayerService is implemented internally with the layerStore object, which takes a storagedriver.StorageDriver and a pathMapper instance. LayerUploadState is currently exported and will likely continue to be as the interaction between it and layerUploadStore are better understood. Likely, the layerUploadStore lifecycle and implementation will be deferred to the application. Image pushes pulls will be implemented in a similar manner without the discrete, persistent upload. Much of this change is in place to get something running and working. Caveats of this change include the following: 1. Layer upload state storage is implemented on the local filesystem, separate from the storage driver. This must be replaced with using the proper backend and other state storage. This can be removed when we implement resumable hashing and tarsum calculations to avoid backend roundtrips. 2. Error handling is rather bespoke at this time. The http API implementation should really dictate the error return structure for the future, so we intend to refactor this heavily to support these errors. We'd also like to collect production data to understand how failures happen in the system as a while before moving to a particular edict around error handling. 3. The layerUploadStore, which manages layer upload storage and state is not currently exported. This will likely end up being split, with the file management portion being pointed at the storagedriver and the state storage elsewhere. 4. Access Control provisions are nearly completely missing from this change. There are details around how layerindex lookup works that are related with access controls. As the auth portions of the new API take shape, these provisions will become more clear. Please see TODOs for details and individual recommendations.
2014-11-18 00:29:42 +00:00
}