Fixes#3141
1, return 416 for Out-of-order blob upload
2, return 400 for content length and content size mismatch
Signed-off-by: wang yan <wangyan@vmware.com>
Go 1.13 and up enforce import paths to be versioned if a project
contains a go.mod and has released v2 or up.
The current v2.x branches (and releases) do not yet have a go.mod,
and therefore are still allowed to be imported with a non-versioned
import path (go modules add a `+incompatible` annotation in that case).
However, now that this project has a `go.mod` file, incompatible
import paths will not be accepted by go modules, and attempting
to use code from this repository will fail.
This patch uses `v3` for the import-paths (not `v2`), because changing
import paths itself is a breaking change, which means that the
next release should increment the "major" version to comply with
SemVer (as go modules dictate).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Several error codes are generally useful but tied to the v2 specification
definitions. This change moves these error code definitions into the common
package for use by the health package, which is not tied to the v2 API.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
See: 3ea67df373/registry/handlers/app.go (L498)
Per the comment on line 498, this moves the logic of setting the http
status code into the serveJSON func, leaving the auth.Challenge.ServeHTTP()
func to just set the auth challenge header.
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
Manifests are now fetched by a field called "reference", which may be a tag or
a digest. When using digests to reference a manifest, the data is immutable.
The routes and specification have been updated to allow this.
There are a few caveats to this approach:
1. It may be problematic to rely on data format to differentiate between a tag
and a digest. Currently, they are disjoint but there may modifications on
either side that break this guarantee.
2. The caching characteristics of returned content are very different for
digest versus tag-based references. Digest urls can be cached forever while tag
urls cannot.
Both of these are minimal caveats that we can live with in the future.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>