PACKET_RX_RING allows the use of an mmapped buffer to receive packets from the
kernel. This should cut down the number of host syscalls that need to be made
to receive packets when the underlying fd is a socket of the AF_PACKET type.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 233834998
Change-Id: I8060025c6ced206986e94cc46b8f382b81bfa47f
Nothing reads them and they can simply get stale.
Generated with:
$ sed -i "s/licenses(\(.*\)).*/licenses(\1)/" **/BUILD
PiperOrigin-RevId: 231818945
Change-Id: Ibc3f9838546b7e94f13f217060d31f4ada9d4bf0
This should reduce the number of syscalls required to process packets
significantly and improve throughputs.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 231366886
Change-Id: I8b38077262bf9c53176bc4a94b530188d3d7c0ca
Removed "error" and "failed to" prefix that don't add value
from messages. Adjusted a few other messages. In particular,
when the container fail to start, the message returned is easier
for humans to read:
$ docker run --rm --runtime=runsc alpine foobar
docker: Error response from daemon: OCI runtime start failed: <path> did not terminate sucessfully: starting container: starting root container [foobar]: starting sandbox: searching for executable "foobar", cwd: "/", $PATH="/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin": no such file or directory
Closes#77
PiperOrigin-RevId: 230022798
Change-Id: I83339017c70dae09e4f9f8e0ea2e554c4d5d5cd1
Runsc wants to mount /tmp using internal tmpfs implementation for
performance. However, it risks hiding files that may exist under
/tmp in case it's present in the container. Now, it only mounts
over /tmp iff:
- /tmp was not explicitly asked to be mounted
- /tmp is empty
If any of this is not true, then /tmp maps to the container's
image /tmp.
Note: checkpoint doesn't have sentry FS mounted to check if /tmp
is empty. It simply looks for explicit mounts right now.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 229607856
Change-Id: I10b6dae7ac157ef578efc4dfceb089f3b94cde06
More helper structs have been added to the fsutil package to make it easier to
implement fs.InodeOperations and fs.FileOperations.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 229305982
Change-Id: Ib6f8d3862f4216745116857913dbfa351530223b
Make 'runsc create' join cgroup before creating sandbox process.
This removes the need to synchronize platform creation and ensure
that sandbox process is charged to the right cgroup from the start.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 227166451
Change-Id: Ieb4b18e6ca0daf7b331dc897699ca419bc5ee3a2
"RLIMIT_MEMLOCK: This is the maximum number of bytes of memory that may
be locked into RAM." - getrlimit(2)
PiperOrigin-RevId: 226384346
Change-Id: Iefac4a1bb69f7714dc813b5b871226a8344dc800
Currently mlock() and friends do nothing whatsoever. However, mlocking
is directly application-visible in a number of ways; for example,
madvise(MADV_DONTNEED) and msync(MS_INVALIDATE) both fail on mlocked
regions. We handle this inconsistently: MADV_DONTNEED is too important
to not work, but MS_INVALIDATE is rejected.
Change MM to track mlocked regions in a manner consistent with Linux.
It still will not actually pin pages into host physical memory, but:
- mlock() will now cause sentry memory management to precommit mlocked
pages.
- MADV_DONTNEED and MS_INVALIDATE will interact with mlocked pages as
described above.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 225861605
Change-Id: Iee187204979ac9a4d15d0e037c152c0902c8d0ee
This option is effectively equivalent to -panic-signal, except that the
sandbox does not die after logging the traceback.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 225089593
Change-Id: Ifb1c411210110b6104613f404334bd02175e484e
The number of symbolic links that are allowed to be followed
are for a full path and not just a chain of symbolic links.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 224047321
Change-Id: I5e3c4caf66a93c17eeddcc7f046d1e8bb9434a40
RET_KILL_THREAD doesn't work well for Go because it will
kill only the offending thread and leave the process hanging.
RET_TRAP can be masked out and it's not guaranteed to kill
the process. RET_KILL_PROCESS is available since 4.14.
For older kernel, continue to use RET_TRAP as this is the
best option (likely to kill process, easy to debug).
PiperOrigin-RevId: 222357867
Change-Id: Icc1d7d731274b16c2125b7a1ba4f7883fbdb2cbd
This can happen when destroy is called multiple times or when destroy
failed previously and is being called again.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 221882034
Change-Id: I8d069af19cf66c4e2419bdf0d4b789c5def8d19e
destroyContainerFS must wait for all async operations to finish before
returning. In an attempt to do this, we call fs.AsyncBarrier() at the end of
the function. However, there are many defer'd DecRefs which end up running
AFTER the AsyncBarrier() call.
This CL fixes this by calling fs.AsyncBarrier() in the first defer statement,
thus ensuring that it runs at the end of the function, after all other defers.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 220523545
Change-Id: I5e96ee9ea6d86eeab788ff964484c50ef7f64a2f
Before this change, a container starting up could race with
destroy (aka delete) and leave processes behind.
Now, whenever a container is created, Loader.processes gets
a new entry. Start now expects the entry to be there, and if
it's not it means that the container was deleted.
I've also fixed Loader.waitPID to search for the process using
the init process's PID namespace.
We could use a few more tests for signal and wait. I'll send
them in another cl.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 220224290
Change-Id: I15146079f69904dc07d43c3b66cc343a2dab4cc4
Otherwise the gofer's attach point may be different from sandbox when there
symlinks in the path.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 219730492
Change-Id: Ia9c4c2d16228c6a1a9e790e0cb673fd881003fe1
Fluentd configuration uses 'log' for the log message
while containerd uses 'msg'. Since we can't have a single
JSON format for both, add another log format and make
debug log configurable.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 219729658
Change-Id: I2a6afc4034d893ab90bafc63b394c4fb62b2a7a0
Updated error messages so that it doesn't print full Go struct representations
when running a new container in a sandbox. For example, this occurs frequently
when commands are not found when doing a 'kubectl exec'.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 219729141
Change-Id: Ic3a7bc84cd7b2167f495d48a1da241d621d3ca09
Use private futexes for performance and to align with other runtime uses.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 219422634
Change-Id: Ief2af5e8302847ea6dc246e8d1ee4d64684ca9dd
This change also adds extensive testing to the p9 package via mocks. The sanity
checks and type checks are moved from the gofer into the core package, where
they can be more easily validated.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 218296768
Change-Id: I4fc3c326e7bf1e0e140a454cbacbcc6fd617ab55
Added events for *ctl syscalls that may have multiple different commands.
For runsc, each syscall event is only logged once. For *ctl syscalls, use
the cmd as identifier, not only the syscall number.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 218015941
Change-Id: Ie3c19131ae36124861e9b492a7dbe1765d9e5e59
It's hard to resolve symlinks inside the sandbox because rootfs and mounts
may be read-only, forcing us to create mount points inside lower layer of an
overlay, **before** the volumes are mounted.
Since the destination must already be resolved outside the sandbox when creating
mounts, take this opportunity to rewrite the spec with paths resolved.
"runsc boot" will use the "resolved" spec to load mounts. In addition, symlink
traversals were disabled while mounting containers inside the sandbox.
It haven't been able to write a good test for it. So I'm relying on manual tests
for now.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 217749904
Change-Id: I7ac434d5befd230db1488446cda03300cc0751a9
We were closing the FD directly. If the test then created a new socket pair
with the same FD, in-flight RPCs would get directed to the new socket and break
the test.
Instead, we should use unet.Socket.Close(), which allows any in-flight RPCs to
finish.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 217608491
Change-Id: I8c5a76638899ba30f33ca976e6fac967fa0aadbf
Now containers run with "docker run -it" support control characters like ^C and
^Z.
This required refactoring our signal handling a bit. Signals delivered to the
"runsc boot" process are turned into loader.Signal calls with the appropriate
delivery mode. Previously they were always sent directly to PID 1.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 217566770
Change-Id: I5b7220d9a0f2b591a56335479454a200c6de8732
--pid allows specific processes to be signalled rather than the container root
process or all processes in the container. containerd needs to SIGKILL exec'd
processes that timeout and check whether processes are still alive.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 217547636
Change-Id: I2058ebb548b51c8eb748f5884fb88bad0b532e45
This is a breaking change if you're using --debug-log-dir.
The fix is to replace it with --debug-log and add a '/' at
the end:
--debug-log-dir=/tmp/runsc ==> --debug-log=/tmp/runsc/
PiperOrigin-RevId: 216761212
Change-Id: I244270a0a522298c48115719fa08dad55e34ade1
This change introduces a new flags to create/run called
--user-log. Logs to this files are visible to users and
are meant to help debugging problems with their images
and containers.
For now only unsupported syscalls are sent to this log,
and only minimum support was added. We can build more
infrastructure around it as needed.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 216735977
Change-Id: I54427ca194604991c407d49943ab3680470de2d0
Currently, in the face of FileMem fragmentation and a large sendmsg or
recvmsg call, host sockets may pass > 1024 iovecs to the host, which
will immediately cause the host to return EMSGSIZE.
When we detect this case, use a single intermediate buffer to pass to
the kernel, copying to/from the src/dst buffer.
To avoid creating unbounded intermediate buffers, enforce message size
checks and truncation w.r.t. the send buffer size. The same
functionality is added to netstack unix sockets for feature parity.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 216590198
Change-Id: I719a32e71c7b1098d5097f35e6daf7dd5190eff7
Sandbox creation uses the limits and reservations configured in the
OCI spec and set cgroup options accordinly. Then it puts both the
sandbox and gofer processes inside the cgroup.
It also allows the cgroup to be pre-configured by the caller. If the
cgroup already exists, sandbox and gofer processes will join the
cgroup but it will not modify the cgroup with spec limits.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 216538209
Change-Id: If2c65ffedf55820baab743a0edcfb091b89c1019