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Open tries to reuse the control file to save syscalls and
file descriptors when opening a file. However, when the
control file was opened using O_PATH (e.g. no file permission
to open readonly), Open() would not check for it.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 322821729
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Updates #173
PiperOrigin-RevId: 322665518
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 321449877
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Now it calls pkt.Data.ToView() when writing the packet. This may require
copying when the packet is large, which puts the worse case in an even worse
situation.
This sent out in a separate preparation change as it requires syscall filter
changes. This change will be followed by the change for the adoption of the new
PacketHeader API.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 321447003
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Much like the boot process, apply pdeathsig to the gofer for cases where
the sandbox lifecycle is attached to the parent (runsc run/do).
This isn't strictly necessary, as the gofer normally exits once the
sentry disappears, but this makes that extra reliable.
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 321411758
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- Combine process creation code that is shared between
root and subcontainer processes
- Move root container information into a struct for
clarity
Updates #2714
PiperOrigin-RevId: 321204798
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 321053634
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The go.mod dependency tree for the shim was somehow contradictory. After
resolving these issues (e.g. explicitly imported k8s 1.14, pulling a
specific dbus version), and adding all dependencies, the shim can now be
build as part of the regular bazel tree.
As part of this process, minor cleanup was done in all the source files:
headers were standardized (and include "The gVisor Authors" in addition
to the "The containerd Authors" if originally derived from containerd
sources), and comments were cleaned up to meet coding standards.
This change makes the containerd installation dynamic, so that multiple
versions can be tested, and drops the static installer for the VM image
itself.
This change also updates test/root/crictl_test.go and related utilities,
so that the containerd tests can be run on any version (and in cases
where it applies, they can be run on both v1 and v2 as parameterized
tests).
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Adds a netns flag to runsc spec that allows users to specify a network
namespace path when creating a sample config.json file. Also, adds the ability
to specify the command arguments used when running the container.
This will make it easier for new users to create sample OCI bundles without
having to edit the config.json by hand.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 320486267
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This change gates all FUSE commands (by gating /dev/fuse) behind a runsc
flag. In order to use FUSE commands, use the --fuse flag with the --vfs2
flag. Check if FUSE is enabled by running dmesg in the sandbox.
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Container restart test is disabled for VFS2 for now.
Updates #1487
PiperOrigin-RevId: 320296401
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 320281516
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Removed VDSO dependency on VFS1.
Resolves #2921
PiperOrigin-RevId: 320122176
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This change fixes a few things:
- creating sockets using mknod(2) is supported via vfs2
- fsgofer can create regular files via mknod(2)
- mode = 0 for mknod(2) will be interpreted as regular file in vfs2 as well
Updates #2923
PiperOrigin-RevId: 320074267
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Updates #2912 #1035
PiperOrigin-RevId: 318162565
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Linux controls socket send/receive buffers using a few sysctl variables
- net.core.rmem_default
- net.core.rmem_max
- net.core.wmem_max
- net.core.wmem_default
- net.ipv4.tcp_rmem
- net.ipv4.tcp_wmem
The first 4 control the default socket buffer sizes for all sockets
raw/packet/tcp/udp and also the maximum permitted socket buffer that can be
specified in setsockopt(SOL_SOCKET, SO_(RCV|SND)BUF,...).
The last two control the TCP auto-tuning limits and override the default
specified in rmem_default/wmem_default as well as the max limits.
Netstack today only implements tcp_rmem/tcp_wmem and incorrectly uses it
to limit the maximum size in setsockopt() as well as uses it for raw/udp
sockets.
This changelist introduces the other 4 and updates the udp/raw sockets to use
the newly introduced variables. The values for min/max match the current
tcp_rmem/wmem values and the default value buffers for UDP/RAW sockets is
updated to match the linux value of 212KiB up from the really low current value
of 32 KiB.
Updates #3043
Fixes #3043
PiperOrigin-RevId: 318089805
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Previously, it was not possible to encode/decode an object graph which
contained a pointer to a field within another type. This was because the
encoder was previously unable to disambiguate a pointer to an object and a
pointer within the object.
This CL remedies this by constructing an address map tracking the full memory
range object occupy. The encoded Refvalue message has been extended to allow
references to children objects within another object. Because the encoding
process may learn about object structure over time, we cannot encode any
objects under the entire graph has been generated.
This CL also updates the state package to use standard interfaces intead of
reflection-based dispatch in order to improve performance overall. This
includes a custom wire protocol to significantly reduce the number of
allocations and take advantage of structure packing.
As part of these changes, there are a small number of minor changes in other
places of the code base:
* The lists used during encoding are changed to use intrusive lists with the
objectEncodeState directly, which required that the ilist Len() method is
updated to work properly with the ElementMapper mechanism.
* A bug is fixed in the list code wherein Remove() called on an element that is
already removed can corrupt the list (removing the element if there's only a
single element). Now the behavior is correct.
* Standard error wrapping is introduced.
* Compressio was updated to implement the new wire.Reader and wire.Writer
inteface methods directly. The lack of a ReadByte and WriteByte caused issues
not due to interface dispatch, but because underlying slices for a Read or
Write call through an interface would always escape to the heap!
* Statify has been updated to support the new APIs.
See README.md for a description of how the new mechanism works.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 318010298
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Support is limited to the functionality that exists in VFS1.
Updates #2923 #1035
PiperOrigin-RevId: 317981417
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Metadata was useful for debugging and safety, but enough tests exist that we
should see failures when (de)serialization is broken. It made stack
initialization more cumbersome and it's also getting in the way of ip6tables.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 317210653
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Updates #173,#6
Fixes #2888
PiperOrigin-RevId: 317087652
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--tx-checksum-offload=<true|false>
enable TX checksum offload (default: false)
--rx-checksum-offload=<true|false>
enable RX checksum offload (default: true)
Fixes #2989
PiperOrigin-RevId: 316781309
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The previous format skipped many important structs that
are pointers, especially for cgroups. Change to print
as json, removing parts of the spec that are not relevant.
Also removed debug message from gofer that can be very
noisy when directories are large.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 316713267
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Fixes #701
PiperOrigin-RevId: 316025635
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Major differences from existing overlay filesystems:
- Linux allows lower layers in an overlay to require revalidation, but not the
upper layer. VFS1 allows the upper layer in an overlay to require
revalidation, but not the lower layer. VFS2 does not allow any layers to
require revalidation. (Now that vfs.MkdirOptions.ForSyntheticMountpoint
exists, no uses of overlay in VFS1 are believed to require upper layer
revalidation; in particular, the requirement that the upper layer support the
creation of "trusted." extended attributes for whiteouts effectively required
the upper filesystem to be tmpfs in most cases.)
- Like VFS1, but unlike Linux, VFS2 overlay does not attempt to make mutations
of the upper layer atomic using a working directory and features like
RENAME_WHITEOUT. (This may change in the future, since not having a working
directory makes error recovery for some operations, e.g. rmdir, particularly
painful.)
- Like Linux, but unlike VFS1, VFS2 represents whiteouts using character
devices with rdev == 0; the equivalent of the whiteout attribute on
directories is xattr trusted.overlay.opaque = "y"; and there is no equivalent
to the whiteout attribute on non-directories since non-directories are never
merged with lower layers.
- Device and inode numbers work as follows:
- In Linux, modulo the xino feature and a special case for when all layers
are the same filesystem:
- Directories use the overlay filesystem's device number and an
ephemeral inode number assigned by the overlay.
- Non-directories that have been copied up use the device and inode
number assigned by the upper filesystem.
- Non-directories that have not been copied up use a per-(overlay,
layer)-pair device number and the inode number assigned by the lower
filesystem.
- In VFS1, device and inode numbers always come from the lower layer unless
"whited out"; this has the adverse effect of requiring interaction with
the lower filesystem even for non-directory files that exist on the upper
layer.
- In VFS2, device and inode numbers are assigned as in Linux, except that
xino and the samefs special case are not supported.
- Like Linux, but unlike VFS1, VFS2 does not attempt to maintain memory mapping
coherence across copy-up. (This may have to change in the future, as users
may be dependent on this property.)
- Like Linux, but unlike VFS1, VFS2 uses the overlayfs mounter's credentials
when interacting with the overlay's layers, rather than the caller's.
- Like Linux, but unlike VFS1, VFS2 permits multiple lower layers in an
overlay.
- Like Linux, but unlike VFS1, VFS2's overlay filesystem is
application-mountable.
Updates #1199
PiperOrigin-RevId: 316019067
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- Set hugetlb related fields
- Add realtime scheduler related fields
- Beef up unit tests
Updates #2713
PiperOrigin-RevId: 315797979
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LinuxPids.Limit is the only optional cgroup field in OCI that
is not a pointer. If value is 0 or negative it should be
skipped.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 315791909
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 315583963
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Run vs. exec, VFS1 vs. VFS2 were executable lookup were
slightly different from each other. Combine them all
into the same logic.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 315426443
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This is mostly syscall plumbing, VFS2 already implements the internals of
mounts. In addition to the syscall defintions, the following mount-related
mechanisms are updated:
- Implement MS_NOATIME for VFS2, but only for tmpfs and goferfs. The other VFS2
filesystems don't implement node-level timestamps yet.
- Implement the 'mode', 'uid' and 'gid' mount options for VFS2's tmpfs.
- Plumb mount namespace ownership, which is necessary for checking appropriate
capabilities during mount(2).
Updates #1035
PiperOrigin-RevId: 315035352
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 314997564
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IPTables.connections contains a sync.RWMutex. Copying it will trigger copylocks
analysis. Tested by manually enabling nogo tests.
sync.RWMutex is added to IPTables for the additional race condition discovered.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 314817019
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- Add /tmp handling
- Apply mount options
- Enable more container_test tests
- Forward signals to child process when test respaws process
to run as root inside namespace.
Updates #1487
PiperOrigin-RevId: 314263281
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Using tee instead of read to detect when a O_RDONLY|O_NONBLOCK pipe FD has a
writer circumvents the problem of what to do with the byte read from the pipe,
avoiding much of the complexity of the fdpipe package.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 314216146
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SetTraceback("all") does not include all goroutines in panics (you didn't think
it was that simple, did you?). It includes all _user_ goroutines; those started
by the runtime (such as GC workers) are excluded.
Switch to "system" to additionally include runtime goroutines, which are useful
to track down bugs in the runtime itself.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 314204473
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No writes are expected to the underlying filesystem when
using --overlay.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 314171457
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 313871804
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 313828906
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 313663382
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 313636920
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Updates #2713
PiperOrigin-RevId: 312559463
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 312104899
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* Aggregate architecture Overview in "What is gVisor?" as it makes more sense
in one place.
* Drop "user-space kernel" and use "application kernel". The term "user-space
kernel" is confusing when some platform implementation do not run in
user-space (instead running in guest ring zero).
* Clear up the relationship between the Platform page in the user guide and the
Platform page in the architecture guide, and ensure they are cross-linked.
* Restore the call-to-action quick start link in the main page, and drop the
GitHub link (which also appears in the top-right).
* Improve image formatting by centering all doc and blog images, and move the
image captions to the alt text.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 311845158
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Updates #1487
PiperOrigin-RevId: 311443628
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Linux 4.18 and later make reads and writes coherent between pre-copy-up and
post-copy-up FDs representing the same file on an overlay filesystem. However,
memory mappings remain incoherent:
- Documentation/filesystems/overlayfs.rst, "Non-standard behavior": "If a file
residing on a lower layer is opened for read-only and then memory mapped with
MAP_SHARED, then subsequent changes to the file are not reflected in the
memory mapping."
- fs/overlay/file.c:ovl_mmap() passes through to the underlying FD without any
management of coherence in the overlay.
- Experimentally on Linux 5.2:
```
$ cat mmap_cat_page.c
#include <err.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
#include <unistd.h>
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
if (argc < 2) {
errx(1, "syntax: %s [FILE]", argv[0]);
}
const int fd = open(argv[1], O_RDONLY);
if (fd < 0) {
err(1, "open(%s)", argv[1]);
}
const size_t page_size = sysconf(_SC_PAGE_SIZE);
void* page = mmap(NULL, page_size, PROT_READ, MAP_SHARED, fd, 0);
if (page == MAP_FAILED) {
err(1, "mmap");
}
for (;;) {
write(1, page, strnlen(page, page_size));
if (getc(stdin) == EOF) {
break;
}
}
return 0;
}
$ gcc -O2 -o mmap_cat_page mmap_cat_page.c
$ mkdir lowerdir upperdir workdir overlaydir
$ echo old > lowerdir/file
$ sudo mount -t overlay -o "lowerdir=lowerdir,upperdir=upperdir,workdir=workdir" none overlaydir
$ ./mmap_cat_page overlaydir/file
old
^Z
[1]+ Stopped ./mmap_cat_page overlaydir/file
$ echo new > overlaydir/file
$ cat overlaydir/file
new
$ fg
./mmap_cat_page overlaydir/file
old
```
Therefore, while the VFS1 gofer client's behavior of reopening read FDs is only
necessary pre-4.18, replacing existing memory mappings (in both sentry and
application address spaces) with mappings of the new FD is required regardless
of kernel version, and this latter behavior is common to both VFS1 and VFS2.
Re-document accordingly, and change the runsc flag to enabled by default.
New test:
- Before this CL: https://source.cloud.google.com/results/invocations/5b222d2c-e918-4bae-afc4-407f5bac509b
- After this CL: https://source.cloud.google.com/results/invocations/f28c747e-d89c-4d8c-a461-602b33e71aab
PiperOrigin-RevId: 311361267
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Updates #1487
PiperOrigin-RevId: 311356385
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 311234146
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