These fields store the raw JSON data that we received, and should
never container bytes that are non-JSON (as we'd error out when
failing to unmarshal).
Change the type to a json.RawMessage, which:
- Is more explicit on intent
- Can still be used as a regular []byte in all cases
And, while it's not expected to be marshaled to JSON, doing so will also
print the output in a readable format instead of base64 encoding;
package main
import (
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
)
func main() {
foo := struct {
Bytes []byte
Raw json.RawMessage
}{
Bytes: []byte(`{"hello": "world"}`),
Raw: json.RawMessage(`{"hello": "world"}`),
}
out, _ := json.MarshalIndent(foo, "", " ")
fmt.Println(string(out))
}
Will print:
{
"Bytes": "eyJoZWxsbyI6ICJ3b3JsZCJ9",
"Raw": {
"hello": "world"
}
}
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
These comments were added to enforce using the correct import path for
our packages ("github.com/docker/docker", not "github.com/moby/moby").
However, when working in go module mode (not GOPATH / vendor), they have
no effect, so their impact is limited.
Remove these imports in preparation of migrating our code to become an
actual go module.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Looking in history to learn why this struct existed, shows that this type
was mostly the result of tech-debt accumulating over time;
- originally ([moby@1aa7f13]) most of the request handling was internal;
the [`call()` function][1] would make a request, read the `response.Body`,
and return it as a `[]byte` (or an error if one happened).
- some features needed the statuscode, so [moby@a4bcf7e] added an extra
output variable to return the `response.StatusCode`.
- some new features required streaming, so [moby@fdd8d4b] changed the
function to return the `response.Body` as a `io.ReadCloser`, instead
of a `[]byte`.
- some features needed access to the content-type header, so a new
`clientRequest` method was introduced in [moby@6b2eeaf] to read the
`Content-Type` header from `response.Headers` and return it as a string.
- of course, `Content-Type` may not be the only header needed, so [moby@0cdc3b7]
changed the signature to return `response.Headers` as a whole as a
`http.Header`
- things became a bit unwieldy now, with the function having four (4) output
variables, so [moby@126529c] chose to refactor this code, introducing a
`serverResponse` struct to wrap them all, not realizing that all these
values were effectively deconstructed from the `url.Response`, so now
re-assembling them into our own "URL response", only preserving a subset
of the information available.
- now that we had a custom struct, it was possible to add more information
to it without changing the signature. When there was a need to know the
URL of the request that initiated the response, [moby@27ef09a] introduced
a `reqURL` field to hold the `request.URL` which notably also is available
in `response.Request.URL`.
In short;
- The original implementation tried to (pre-maturely) abstract the underlying
response to provide a simplified interface.
- While initially not needed, abstracting caused relevant information from
the response (and request) to be unavailable to callers.
- As a result, we ended up in a situation where we are deconstructing the
original `url.Response`, only to re-assemble it into our own, custom struct
(`serverResponsee`) with only a subset of the information preserved.
This patch removes the `serverResponse` struct, instead returning the
`url.Response` as-is, so that all information is preserved, allowing callers
to use the information they need.
There is one follow-up change to consider; commit [moby@589df17] introduced
a `ensureReaderClosed` utility. Before that commit, the response body would
be closed in a more idiomatic way through a [`defer serverResp.body.Close()`][2].
A later change in [docker/engine-api@5dd6452] added an optimization to that
utility, draining the response to allow connections to be reused. While
skipping that utility (and not draining the response) would not be a critical
issue, it may be easy to overlook that utility, and to close the response
body in the "idiomatic" way, resulting in a possible performance regression.
We need to check if that optimization is still relevant or if later changes
in Go itself already take care of this; we should also look if context
cancellation is handled correctly for these. If it's still relevant, we could
- Wrap the the `url.Response` in a custom struct ("drainCloser") to provide
a `Close()` function handling the draining and closing; this would re-
introduce a custom type to be returned, so perhaps not what we want.
- Wrap the `url.Response.Body` in the response returned (so, calling)
`response.Body.Close()` would call the wrapped closer.
- Change the signature of `Client.sendRequest()` (and related) to return
a `close()` func to handle this; doing so would more strongly encourage
callers to close the response body.
[1]: 1aa7f1392d/commands.go (L1008-L1027)
[2]: 589df17a1a/api/client/ps.go (L84-L89)
[moby@1aa7f13]: 1aa7f1392d
[moby@a4bcf7e]: a4bcf7e1ac
[moby@fdd8d4b]: fdd8d4b7d9
[moby@6b2eeaf]: 6b2eeaf896
[moby@0cdc3b7]: 0cdc3b7539
[moby@126529c]: 126529c6d0
[moby@27ef09a]: 27ef09a46f
[moby@589df17]: 589df17a1a
[docker/engine-api@5dd6452]: 5dd6452d4d
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
In situations where an empty ID was passed, the client would construct an
invalid API endpoint URL, which either resulted in the "not found" handler
being hit (resulting in a "page not found" error), or even the wrong endpoint
being hit if the client follows redirects.
For example, `/containers/<empty id>/json` (inspect) redirects to `/containers/json`
(docker ps))
Given that empty IDs should never be expected (especially if they're part of
the API URL path), we can validate these and return early.
Its worth noting that a few methods already had an error in place; those
methods were related to the situation mentioned above, where (e.g.) an
"inspect" would redirect to a "list" endpoint. The existing errors, for
convenience, mimicked a "not found" error; this patch changes such errors
to an "Invalid Parameter" instead, which is more correct, but it could be
a breaking change for some edge cases where users parsed the output;
git grep 'objectNotFoundError{'
client/config_inspect.go: return swarm.Config{}, nil, objectNotFoundError{object: "config", id: id}
client/container_inspect.go: return container.InspectResponse{}, nil, objectNotFoundError{object: "container", id: containerID}
client/container_inspect.go: return container.InspectResponse{}, objectNotFoundError{object: "container", id: containerID}
client/distribution_inspect.go: return distributionInspect, objectNotFoundError{object: "distribution", id: imageRef}
client/image_inspect.go: return image.InspectResponse{}, nil, objectNotFoundError{object: "image", id: imageID}
client/network_inspect.go: return network.Inspect{}, nil, objectNotFoundError{object: "network", id: networkID}
client/node_inspect.go: return swarm.Node{}, nil, objectNotFoundError{object: "node", id: nodeID}
client/plugin_inspect.go: return nil, nil, objectNotFoundError{object: "plugin", id: name}
client/secret_inspect.go: return swarm.Secret{}, nil, objectNotFoundError{object: "secret", id: id}
client/service_inspect.go: return swarm.Service{}, nil, objectNotFoundError{object: "service", id: serviceID}
client/task_inspect.go: return swarm.Task{}, nil, objectNotFoundError{object: "task", id: taskID}
client/volume_inspect.go: return volume.Volume{}, nil, objectNotFoundError{object: "volume", id: volumeID}
Two such errors are still left, as "ID or name" would probably be confusing,
but perhaps we can use a more generic error to include those as well (e.g.
"invalid <object> reference: value is empty");
client/distribution_inspect.go: return distributionInspect, objectNotFoundError{object: "distribution", id: imageRef}
client/image_inspect.go: return image.InspectResponse{}, nil, objectNotFoundError{object: "image", id: imageID}
Before this patch:
docker container start ""
Error response from daemon: page not found
Error: failed to start containers:
docker container start " "
Error response from daemon: No such container:
Error: failed to start containers:
With this patch:
docker container start ""
invalid container name or ID: value is empty
Error: failed to start containers:
docker container start " "
invalid container name or ID: value is empty
Error: failed to start containers:
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The wrapResponseError() utility converted some specific errors, but in
doing so, could hide the actual error message returned by the daemon.
In addition, starting with 38e6d474af,
HTTP status codes were already mapped to their corresponding errdefs
types on the client-side, making this conversion redundant.
This patch removes the wrapResponseError() utility; it's worth noting
that some error-messages will change slightly (as they now return the
error as returned by the daemon), but may cointain more details as
before, and in some cases prevents hiding the actual error.
Before this change:
docker container rm nosuchcontainer
Error: No such container: nosuchcontainer
docker container cp mycontainer:/no/such/path .
Error: No such container:path: mycontainer:/no/such/path
docker container cp ./Dockerfile mycontainer:/no/such/path
Error: No such container:path: mycontainer:/no/such
docker image rm nosuchimage
Error: No such image: nosuchimage
docker network rm nosuchnetwork
Error: No such network: nosuchnetwork
docker volume rm nosuchvolume
Error: No such volume: nosuchvolume
docker plugin rm nosuchplugin
Error: No such plugin: nosuchplugin
docker checkpoint rm nosuchcontainer nosuchcheckpoint
Error response from daemon: No such container: nosuchcontainer
docker checkpoint rm mycontainer nosuchcheckpoint
Error response from daemon: checkpoint nosuchcheckpoint does not exist for container mycontainer
docker service rm nosuchservice
Error: No such service: nosuchservice
docker node rm nosuchnode
Error: No such node: nosuchnode
docker config rm nosuschconfig
Error: No such config: nosuschconfig
docker secret rm nosuchsecret
Error: No such secret: nosuchsecret
After this change:
docker container rm nosuchcontainer
Error response from daemon: No such container: nosuchcontainer
docker container cp mycontainer:/no/such/path .
Error response from daemon: Could not find the file /no/such/path in container mycontainer
docker container cp ./Dockerfile mycontainer:/no/such/path
Error response from daemon: Could not find the file /no/such in container mycontainer
docker image rm nosuchimage
Error response from daemon: No such image: nosuchimage:latest
docker network rm nosuchnetwork
Error response from daemon: network nosuchnetwork not found
docker volume rm nosuchvolume
Error response from daemon: get nosuchvolume: no such volume
docker plugin rm nosuchplugin
Error response from daemon: plugin "nosuchplugin" not found
docker checkpoint rm nosuchcontainer nosuchcheckpoint
Error response from daemon: No such container: nosuchcontainer
docker checkpoint rm mycontainer nosuchcheckpoint
Error response from daemon: checkpoint nosuchcheckpoint does not exist for container mycontainer
docker service rm nosuchservice
Error response from daemon: service nosuchservice not found
docker node rm nosuchnode
Error response from daemon: node nosuchnode not found
docker config rm nosuchconfig
Error response from daemon: config nosuchconfig not found
docker secret rm nosuchsecret
Error response from daemon: secret nosuchsecret not found
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
The io/ioutil package has been deprecated in Go 1.16. This commit
replaces the existing io/ioutil functions with their new definitions in
io and os packages.
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
Unlike a plain `net/http/client.Do()`, requests made through client/request
use the `sendRequest` function, which parses the server response, and may
convert non-transport errors into errors (through `cli.checkResponseErr()`).
This means that we cannot assume that no reader was opened if an error is
returned.
This patch changes various locations where `ensureReaderClosed` was only
called in the non-error situation, and uses a `defer` to make sure it's
always called.
`ensureReaderClosed` itself already checks if the response's body was set,
so in situations where the error was due to a transport error, calling
`ensureReaderClosed` should be a no-op.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Since Go 1.7, context is a standard package. Since Go 1.9, everything
that is provided by "x/net/context" is a couple of type aliases to
types in "context".
Many vendored packages still use x/net/context, so vendor entry remains
for now.
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
If a blank nodeID was previously passed in it resulted in a node list
request. The response would then fail to umarshal into a `Node`
type returning a JSON error.
This adds an extra validation to all inspect calls to check that the ID
that is required is provided and if not return an error.
Signed-off-by: Emil Davtyan <emil2k@gmail.com>