In some conditions, regulator.exit may not send a signal to blocked
regulator.enter.
Let's assume we are in the critical section of regulator.exit and r.available
is equal to 0. And there are three more gorotines. One goroutine also executes
regulator.exit and waits for the lock. Rest run regulator.enter and wait for
the signal.
We send the signal, and after releasing the lock, there will be lock
contention:
1. Wait from regulator.enter
2. Lock from regulator.exit
If the winner is Lock from regulator.exit, we will not send another signal to
unlock the second Wait.
Signed-off-by: Oleg Bulatov <obulatov@redhat.com>
A previous inspection of the code surrounding zero-length blobs led to
some interesting question. After inspection, it was found that the hash
was indeed for the empty string (""), and not an empty tar, so the code
was correct. The variable naming and comments have been updated
accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
The registry uses partial Named values which the named parsers
no longer support. To allow the registry service to continue
to operate without canonicalization, switch to use WithName.
In the future, the registry should start using fully canonical
values on the backend and WithName should no longer support
creating partial values.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net> (github: dmcgowan)
`app.driver.List` on `"/"` is very expensive if registry contains significant amount of images. And the result isn't used anyways.
In most (if not all) storage drivers, `Stat` has a cheaper implementation, so use it instead to achieve the same goal.
Signed-off-by: yixi zhang <yixi@memsql.com>
Modify manifest builder so it can be used to build
manifests with different configuration media types.
Rename config media type const to image config.
Signed-off-by: Tonis Tiigi <tonistiigi@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net>
See #2077 for background.
The PR #1438 which was not reviewed by azure folks basically introduced
a race condition around uploads to the same blob by multiple clients
concurrently as it used the "writer" type for PutContent(), introduced in #1438.
This does chunked upload of blobs using "AppendBlob" type, which was not atomic.
Usage of "writer" type and thus AppendBlobs on metadata files is currently not
concurrency-safe and generally, they are not the right type of blob for the job.
This patch fixes PutContent() to use the atomic upload operation that works
for uploads smaller than 64 MB and creates blobs with "BlockBlob" type. To be
backwards compatible, we query the type of the blob first and if it is not
a "BlockBlob" we delete the blob first before doing an atomic PUT. This
creates a small inconsistency/race window "only once". Once the blob is made
"BlockBlob", it is overwritten with a single PUT atomicallly next time.
Therefore, going forward, PutContent() will be producing BlockBlobs and it
will silently migrate the AppendBlobs introduced in #1438 to BlockBlobs with
this patch.
Tested with existing code side by side, both registries with and without this
patch work fine without breaking each other. So this should be good from a
backwards/forward compatiblity perspective, with a cost of doing an extra
HEAD checking the blob type.
Fixes#2077.
Signed-off-by: Ahmet Alp Balkan <ahmetalpbalkan@gmail.com>
Golint now checks for new lines at the end of go error strings,
remove these unneeded new lines.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net> (github: dmcgowan)
Updating to a recent version of Azure Storage SDK to be
able to patch some memory leaks through configurable HTTP client
changes which were made possible by recent patches to it.
Signed-off-by: Ahmet Alp Balkan <ahmetalpbalkan@gmail.com>
The current code determines the header order for the
"string-to-sign" payload by sorting on the concatenation
of headers and values, whereas it should only happen on the
key.
During multipart uploads, since `x-amz-copy-source-range` and
`x-amz-copy-source` headers are present, V2 signatures fail to
validate since header order is swapped.
This patch reverts to the expected behavior.
Signed-off-by: Pierre-Yves Ritschard <pyr@spootnik.org>
Driver was passing connections by copying. Storing
`swift.Connection` as pointer to fix the warnings.
Ref: #2030.
Signed-off-by: Ahmet Alp Balkan <ahmetalpbalkan@gmail.com>
In GetContent() we read the bytes from a blob but do not close
the underlying response body.
Signed-off-by: Ahmet Alp Balkan <ahmetalpbalkan@gmail.com>
To allow generic manifest walking, we define an interface method of
`References` that returns the referenced items in the manifest. The
current implementation does not return the config target from schema2,
making this useless for most applications.
The garbage collector has been modified to show the utility of this
correctly formed `References` method. We may be able to make more
generic traversal methods with this, as well.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
Context should use type values instead of strings.
Updated direct calls to WithValue, but still other uses of string keys.
Update Acl to ACL in s3 driver.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net> (github: dmcgowan)
The Redis tests were failing with a "connection pool exhausted" error
from Redigo. Closing the connection used for FLUSHDB fixes the problem.
Signed-off-by: Noah Treuhaft <noah.treuhaft@docker.com>
This change to the S3 Move method uses S3's multipart upload API to copy
objects whose size exceeds a threshold. Parts are copied concurrently.
The level of concurrency, part size, and threshold are all configurable
with reasonable defaults.
Using the multipart upload API has two benefits.
* The S3 Move method can now handle objects over 5 GB, fixing #886.
* Moving most objects, and espectially large ones, is faster. For
example, moving a 1 GB object averaged 30 seconds but now averages 10.
Signed-off-by: Noah Treuhaft <noah.treuhaft@docker.com>
This is already supported by ncw/swift, so we just need to pass the
parameters from the storage driver.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Majewsky <stefan.majewsky@sap.com>
Use the much faster math/rand.Read function where cryptographic
guarantees are not required. The unit test suite should speed up a
little bit but we've already optimized around this, so it may not
matter.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
Previous component-wise path comparison is recursive and generates a
large amount of garbage. This more efficient version simply replaces the
path comparison with the zero-value to sort before everything. We do
this by replacing the byte-wise comparison that swaps a single character
inline for the separator comparison, such that separators sort first.
The resulting implementation provides component-wise path comparison
with no cost incurred for allocation or stack frame.
Direction of the comparison is also reversed to match Go style.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
* Allow precomputed stats on cross-mounted blobs
Signed-off-by: Michal Minář <miminar@redhat.com>
* Extended cross-repo mount tests
Signed-off-by: Michal Minář <miminar@redhat.com>
* Add Object ACL Support to the S3 Storage Backend
Signed-off-by: Frank Chen <frankchn@gmail.com>
* Made changes per @RichardScothern's comments
Signed-off-by: Frank Chen <frankchn@gmail.com>
* Fix Typos
Signed-off-by: Frank Chen <frankchn@gmail.com>
Pass the manifestURL directly into the schema2 manifest handler instead of
accessing through the repository as it has since the reference is now an
interface.
Signed-off-by: Richard Scothern <richard.scothern@docker.com>
Until we have some experience hosting foreign layer manifests, the Hub
operators wish to limit foreign layers on Hub. To that end, this change
adds registry configuration options to restrict the URLs that may appear
in pushed manifests.
Signed-off-by: Noah Treuhaft <noah.treuhaft@docker.com>
This fixes errors other than io.EOF from being dropped when a storage driver
lists repositories. For example, filesystem driver may point to a missing
directory and errors, which then gets subsequently dropped.
Signed-off-by: Edgar Lee <edgar.lee@docker.com>
This is similar to waitForSegmentsToShowUp which is called during
Close/Commit. Intuitively, you wouldn't expect missing segments to be a
problem during read operations, since the previous Close/Commit
confirmed that all segments are there.
But due to the distributed nature of Swift, the read request could be
hitting a different storage node of the Swift cluster, where the
segments are still missing.
Load tests on my team's staging Swift cluster have shown this to occur
about once every 100-200 layer uploads when the Swift proxies are under
high load. The retry logic, borrowed from waitForSegmentsToShowUp, fixes
this temporary inconsistency.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Majewsky <stefan.majewsky@sap.com>