A BOSH release for deploying Guardian.
Guardian is a simple single-host OCI container manager. It implements the Garden API which is used in Cloud Foundry.
Clone it:
git clone https://github.com/cloudfoundry/garden-runc-release
cd garden-runc-release
git submodule update --init --recursive
See the bosh-lite
deployment wiki
page
The easiest way to start creating containers is to use the
gaol
command line client.
e.g. gaol -t 10.244.0.2:7777 create -n my-container
For more advanced use cases, you'll need to use the Garden client package for Golang.
The following doc provides an overview of security features on Garden vs Docker vs Kubernetes.
Garden has experimental support for running containers without requiring root privileges. Take a look at the rootless-containers.md doc for further info.
If you would like to enable rootless containers please read this document.
In order to help us extend Garden-runC, we recommend opening a Github issue to describe the proposed features or changes. We also welcome pull requests.
You can use other distributions or OS X for development since a good chunk of the unit tests work across alternative platforms, and you can run platform specific tests in a VM using Concourse CI.
In order to contribute to the project you may want some of the following installed:
- Git - Distributed version control system
- Go - The Go programming language
- Direnv - Environment management
- Fly CLI - Concourse CLI
- Virtualbox - Virtualization box
- Vagrant - Portable dev environment
Garden-runC uses git submodules to maintain its dependencies and components. Some of Garden-runC's important components currently are:
- Garden found under
src/garden
is the API server and client. - Guardian found under
src/guardian
is the Garden backend. - GrootFS found under
src/grootfs
downloads and manages root filesystems. - GATS
found under
src/garden-integration-tests
are the cross-backend integration tests of Garden.
Update:
- Garden Shed, previously found under
src/code.cloudfoundry.org/garden-shed
, has now been removed. GrootFS is now the default container rootfs management tool with no option to revert to Shed from versions above 1.16.8.
Set your $GOPATH
to <garden-runc-release-dir>/src/gopath
, or use Direnv to do this, as
below:
direnv allow
Concourse CI is used for running Garden-runC tests in a VM. It provides the Fly CLI for Linux and MacOSX. Instructions for deploying a single VM Concourse using BOSH can be found in the concourse-deployment repo
Once running, navigate to https://192.168.100.4:8080 in a web browser
and download the Fly CLI using the links found in
the bottom-right corner. Place the fly
binary somewhere on your $PATH
.
The tests use the Ginkgo BDD testing framework.
Assuming you have configured a Concourse and installed Ginkgo, you can run all
the tests by executing FLY_TARGET=<your concourse target> ./scripts/test
from the top level garden-runc-release
directory.
Note: The concourse-lite VM may need to be provisioned with more RAM If you start to see tests failing with 'out of disk' errors.
The integration tests can be executed in Concourse CI by using Fly CLI and
executing ./scripts/test
.
To run individual tests, use./scripts/remote-fly
:
# Set your concourse target
export GARDEN_REMOTE_ATC_URL=<target>
# Running Guardian tests
./scripts/remote-fly ci/tasks/guardian.yml
# Running Garden tests
./scripts/remote-fly ci/tasks/garden.yml
# Running Garden Integration tests
./scripts/remote-fly ci/tasks/gdn-linux.yml
# Running Garden Integration Windows Regression tests (aka Gats98)
WINDOWS_TEST_ROOTFS=docker:///microsoft/nanoserver:1709 ./scripts/remote-fly ci/tasks/gdn-linux.yml
It is possible to run the integration tests locally on a Linux based OS like Ubuntu, but we don't recommend it due to the dependencies required, and the need for parts of the testing suite to run as a privileged user. If you'd like to run them locally, you will need at least:
The tests can be executed without Concourse CLI by running ginkgo -r
command for any of the components:
# Running Garden unit tests
cd src/garden
ginkgo -r
# Running Guardian unit tests
cd src/guardian
ginkgo -r
It should be possible to run the unit tests on any system that satisfies golang build constraints.
Write code in a submodule:
cd src/guardian # for example
git checkout master
git pull
# test, code, test..
git commit
git push
Commit the changes, run the tests, and create a bump commit:
# from the garden-runc directory
./scripts/test-and-bump # or just ./scripts/bump if you've already run the tests
If you have a problem with garden-runc, don't panic! There is a tool that you can use to gather information useful for debugging issues on garden-runc-release deployments. Run this command on the deployment VM as root:
/var/vcap/packages/dontpanic/bin/dontpanic
N.B. From v1.18.3, if your BOSH environment has BPM enabled for Garden, dontpanic
should still be run from
the host, not from within the BPM container.
If running an earlier version of Garden, you can download the latest release of dontpanic
from its repo here and run it as root
from the VM running the Garden job.
eg: wget https://github.com/cloudfoundry/dontpanic/releases/download/v1.0/dontpanic && chmod +x ./dontpanic && ./dontpanic
.
N.B. If your BOSH environment has BPM enabled for Garden, dontpanic
should still be run from
the host, not from within the BPM container.
See the list of MAINTAINERS and their contact info.
Apache License 2.0