It's necessary to compile the code first; otherwise go vet silently
fails to load imports.
Fixes#807.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
This ensures that rados is not required when building the registry. This was
slightly tricky in that when the flags were applied, the rados package was
completely missing. This led to a problem where rados was basically unlistable
and untestable as a package. This was fixed by simply adding a doc.go file that
is included whether rados is built or not.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
This driver implements the storagedriver.StorageDriver interface and
uses Ceph Object Storage as storage backend.
Since RADOS is an object storage and no hierarchy notion, the
following convention is used to keep the filesystem notions stored in
this backend:
* All the objects data are stored with opaque UUID names prefixed
(e.g. "blob:d3d232ff-ab3a-4046-9ab7-930228d4c164).
* All the hierarchy information are stored in rados omaps, where the
omap object identifier is the virtual directory name, the keys in
a specific are the relative filenames and the values the blob
object identifier (or empty value for a sub directory).
e.g. For the following hierarchy:
/directory1
/directory1/object1
/directory1/object2
/directory1/directory2/object3
The omap "/directory1" will contains the following key / values:
- "object1" "blob:d3d232ff-ab3a-4046-9ab7-930228d4c164"
- "object2" "blob:db2e359d-4af0-4bfb-ba1d-d2fd029866a0"
- "directory2" ""
The omap "/directory1/directory2" will contains:
- "object3" "blob:9ae2371c-81fc-4945-80ac-8bf7f566a5d9"
* The MOVE is implemented by changing the reference to a specific
blob in its parent virtual directory omap.
This driver stripes rados objects to a fixed size (e.g. 4M). The idea
is to keep small objects (as done by RBD on the top of RADOS) that
will be easily synchronized accross OSDs. The information of the
original object (i.e total size of the chunks) is stored as a Xattr
in the first chunk object.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Giersch <vincent.giersch@ovh.net>
The tests are using way too much memory with the race detector enabled causing
the build machines to fall over. Cursory profiling shows no leaks but it may
need a closer look. For now, it will be disabled but this cannot be permanent.