distribution/storage/notifications/event.go
Stephen J Day 0a29b59e14 Webhook notification support in registry webapp
Endpoints are now created at applications startup time, using notification
configuration. The instances are then added to a Broadcaster instance, which
becomes the main event sink for the application. At request time, an event
bridge is configured to listen to repository method calls. The actor and source
of the eventBridge are created from the requeest context and application,
respectively. The result is notifications are dispatched with calls to the
context's Repository instance and are queued to each endpoint via the
broadcaster.

This commit also adds the concept of a RequestID and App.InstanceID. The
request id uniquely identifies each request and the InstanceID uniquely
identifies a run of the registry. These identifiers can be used in the future
to correlate log messages with generated events to support rich debugging.

The fields of the app were slightly reorganized for clarity and a few horrid
util functions have been removed.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2015-02-03 13:32:37 -08:00

142 lines
4.9 KiB
Go

package notifications
import (
"fmt"
"time"
"github.com/docker/distribution/digest"
)
// EventAction constants used in action field of Event.
const (
EventActionPull = "pull"
EventActionPush = "push"
EventActionDelete = "delete"
)
// EventTargetType constants used in Target section of Event.
const (
EventTargetTypeManifest = "manifest"
EventTargetTypeBlob = "blob"
)
// EventsMediaType is the mediatype for the json event envelope. If the Event,
// ActorRecord, SourceRecord or Envelope structs change, the version number
// should be incremented.
const EventsMediaType = "application/vnd.docker.distribution.events.v1+json"
// Envelope defines the fields of a json event envelope message that can hold
// one or more events.
type Envelope struct {
// Events make up the contents of the envelope. Events present in a single
// envelope are not necessarily related.
Events []Event `json:"events,omitempty"`
}
// TODO(stevvooe): The event type should be separate from the json format. It
// should be defined as an interface. Leaving as is for now since we don't
// need that at this time. If we make this change, the struct below would be
// called "EventRecord".
// Event provides the fields required to describe a registry event.
type Event struct {
// ID provides a unique identifier for the event.
ID string `json:"id,omitempty"`
// Timestamp is the time at which the event occurred.
Timestamp time.Time `json:"timestamp,omitempty"`
// Action indicates what action encompasses the provided event.
Action string `json:"action,omitempty"`
// Target uniquely describes the target of the event.
Target struct {
// Type should be "manifest" or "blob"
Type string `json:"type,omitempty"`
// Name identifies the named repository.
Name string `json:"name,omitempty"`
// Digest should identify the object in the repository.
Digest digest.Digest `json:"digest,omitempty"`
// Tag is present if the operation involved a tagged manifest.
Tag string `json:"tag,omitempty"`
// URL provides a link to the content on the relevant repository instance.
URL string `json:"url,omitempty"`
} `json:"target,omitempty"`
// Actor specifies the agent that initiated the event. For most
// situations, this could be from the authorizaton context of the request.
Actor ActorRecord `json:"actor,omitempty"`
// Source identifies the registry node that generated the event. Put
// differently, while the actor "initiates" the event, the source
// "generates" it.
Source SourceRecord `json:"source,omitempty"`
}
// ActorRecord specifies the agent that initiated the event. For most
// situations, this could be from the authorizaton context of the request.
// Data in this record can refer to both the initiating client and the
// generating request.
type ActorRecord struct {
// Name corresponds to the subject or username associated with the
// request context that generated the event.
Name string `json:"name,omitempty"`
// Addr contains the ip or hostname and possibly port of the client
// connection that initiated the event.
Addr string `json:"addr,omitempty"`
// Host is the externally accessible host name of the registry instance,
// as specified by the http host header on incoming requests.
Host string `json:"host,omitempty"`
// RequestID uniquely identifies the registry request that generated the
// event.
RequestID string `json:"requestID,omitempty"`
// TODO(stevvooe): Look into setting a session cookie to get this
// without docker daemon.
// SessionID
// TODO(stevvooe): Push the "Docker-Command" header to replace cookie and
// get the actual command.
// Command
}
// SourceRecord identifies the registry node that generated the event. Put
// differently, while the actor "initiates" the event, the source "generates"
// it.
type SourceRecord struct {
// Addr contains the ip or hostname and the port of the registry node
// that generated the event. Generally, this will be resolved by
// os.Hostname() along with the running port.
Addr string `json:"addr,omitempty"`
// InstanceID identifies a running instance of an application. Changes
// after each restart.
InstanceID string `json:"instanceID,omitempty"`
}
var (
// ErrSinkClosed is returned if a write is issued to a sink that has been
// closed. If encountered, the error should be considered terminal and
// retries will not be successful.
ErrSinkClosed = fmt.Errorf("sink: closed")
)
// Sink accepts and sends events.
type Sink interface {
// Write writes one or more events to the sink. If no error is returned,
// the caller will assume that all events have been committed and will not
// try to send them again. If an error is received, the caller may retry
// sending the event. The caller should cede the slice of memory to the
// sink and not modify it after calling this method.
Write(events ...Event) error
// Close the sink, possibly waiting for pending events to flush.
Close() error
}