Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Stephen J Day
ba6b774aea Spool layer uploads to remote storage
To smooth initial implementation, uploads were spooled to local file storage,
validated, then pushed to remote storage. That approach was flawed in that it
present easy clustering of registry services that share a remote storage
backend. The original plan was to implement resumable hashes then implement
remote upload storage. After some thought, it was found to be better to get
remote spooling working, then optimize with resumable hashes.

Moving to this approach has tradeoffs: after storing the complete upload
remotely, the node must fetch the content and validate it before moving it to
the final location. This can double bandwidth usage to the remote backend.
Modifying the verification and upload code to store intermediate hashes should
be trivial once the layer digest format has settled.

The largest changes for users of the storage package (mostly the registry app)
are the LayerService interface and the LayerUpload interface. The LayerService
now takes qualified repository names to start and resume uploads. In corallry,
the concept of LayerUploadState has been complete removed, exposing all aspects
of that state as part of the LayerUpload object. The LayerUpload object has
been modified to work as an io.WriteSeeker and includes a StartedAt time, to
allow for upload timeout policies. Finish now only requires a digest, eliding
the requirement for a size parameter.

Resource cleanup has taken a turn for the better. Resources are cleaned up
after successful uploads and during a cancel call. Admittedly, this is probably
not completely where we want to be. It's recommend that we bolster this with a
periodic driver utility script that scans for partial uploads and deletes the
underlying data. As a small benefit, we can leave these around to better
understand how and why these uploads are failing, at the cost of some extra
disk space.

Many other changes follow from the changes above. The webapp needs to be
updated to meet the new interface requirements.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2015-01-09 14:50:39 -08:00
Brian Bland
07ba5db168 Serializes upload state to an HMAC token for subsequent requests
To support clustered registry, upload UUIDs must be recognizable by
registries that did not issue the UUID. By creating an HMAC verifiable
upload state token, registries can validate upload requests that other
instances authorized. The tokenProvider interface could also use a redis
store or other system for token handling in the future.
2015-01-05 14:27:05 -08:00
Stephen J Day
f1f610c6cd Decouple manifest signing and verification
It was probably ill-advised to couple manifest signing and verification to
their respective types. This changeset simply changes them from methods to
functions. These might not even be in this package in the future.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2015-01-02 15:46:47 -08:00
Stephen J Day
a4024b2f90 Move manifest to discrete package
Because manifests and their signatures are a discrete component of the
registry, we are moving the definitions into a separate package. This causes us
to lose some test coverage, but we can fill this in shortly. No changes have
been made to the external interfaces, but they are likely to come.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2015-01-02 13:23:11 -08:00