Skip to content

cgwalters/storage

This branch is 1 commit ahead of, 633 commits behind containers/storage:main.

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date
Apr 24, 2024
May 10, 2024
Aug 22, 2023
Apr 15, 2024
May 31, 2024
Apr 15, 2024
May 26, 2023
May 28, 2024
Apr 15, 2024
Apr 15, 2024
May 23, 2024
May 13, 2024
Dec 5, 2015
Oct 6, 2020
May 26, 2023
Jun 3, 2016
Mar 2, 2021
Jun 10, 2021
Oct 26, 2017
Dec 31, 2015
Apr 15, 2024
Dec 31, 2015
Sep 12, 2023
Oct 31, 2018
Jun 10, 2021
May 17, 2024
Jun 13, 2023
Apr 18, 2023
May 26, 2023
May 10, 2024
Feb 28, 2022
May 23, 2024
May 23, 2024
Apr 23, 2024
Apr 23, 2024
May 26, 2023
Mar 31, 2023
May 6, 2021
Feb 29, 2024
Nov 29, 2022
Apr 15, 2024
Apr 15, 2024
May 22, 2024
Apr 14, 2023
Feb 15, 2024
Apr 3, 2021
Nov 16, 2023

Repository files navigation

storage is a Go library which aims to provide methods for storing filesystem layers, container images, and containers. A containers-storage CLI wrapper is also included for manual and scripting use.

To build the CLI wrapper, use 'make binary'.

Operations which use VMs expect to launch them using 'vagrant', defaulting to using its 'libvirt' provider. The boxes used are also available for the 'virtualbox' provider, and can be selected by setting $VAGRANT_PROVIDER to 'virtualbox' before kicking off the build.

The library manages three types of items: layers, images, and containers.

A layer is a copy-on-write filesystem which is notionally stored as a set of changes relative to its parent layer, if it has one. A given layer can only have one parent, but any layer can be the parent of multiple layers. Layers which are parents of other layers should be treated as read-only.

An image is a reference to a particular layer (its top layer), along with other information which the library can manage for the convenience of its caller. This information typically includes configuration templates for running a binary contained within the image's layers, and may include cryptographic signatures. Multiple images can reference the same layer, as the differences between two images may not be in their layer contents.

A container is a read-write layer which is a child of an image's top layer, along with information which the library can manage for the convenience of its caller. This information typically includes configuration information for running the specific container. Multiple containers can be derived from a single image.

Layers, images, and containers are represented primarily by 32 character hexadecimal IDs, but items of each kind can also have one or more arbitrary names attached to them, which the library will automatically resolve to IDs when they are passed in to API calls which expect IDs.

The library can store what it calls metadata for each of these types of items. This is expected to be a small piece of data, since it is cached in memory and stored along with the library's own bookkeeping information.

Additionally, the library can store one or more of what it calls big data for images and containers. This is a named chunk of larger data, which is only in memory when it is being read from or being written to its own disk file.

Contributing Information about contributing to this project.

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Go 92.3%
  • Shell 7.4%
  • Makefile 0.3%