Documentation ¶
Index ¶
Constants ¶
const ( // MetadataInitial is the initial state of the metadata file which // contains metadata provided by the ECS Agent MetadataInitialText = "INITIAL" // MetadataReady is the final state of the metadata file which indicates // it has acquired all the data it needs (Currently from the Agent and Docker) MetadataReadyText = "READY" )
Variables ¶
This section is empty.
Functions ¶
This section is empty.
Types ¶
type DockerContainerMetadata ¶
type DockerContainerMetadata struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
DockerContainerMetadata keeps track of all metadata acquired from Docker inspection Has redundancies with engine.DockerContainerMetadata but this packages all docker metadata we want in the service so we can change features easily
type DockerMetadataClient ¶
type DockerMetadataClient interface {
InspectContainer(string, time.Duration) (*docker.Container, error)
}
DockerMetadataClient is a wrapper for the docker interface functions we need We use this as a dummy type to be able to pass in engine.DockerClient to our functions without creating import cycles We make it exported because we need to use it for testing (Using the MockDockerClient in engine package leads to import cycles) The problems described above are indications engine.DockerClient needs to be moved outside the engine package
type Manager ¶
type Manager interface { SetContainerInstanceARN(string) Create(*docker.Config, *docker.HostConfig, *api.Task, string) error Update(string, *api.Task, string) error Clean(string) error }
Manager is an interface that allows us to abstract away the metadata operations
func NewManager ¶
func NewManager(client DockerMetadataClient, cfg *config.Config) Manager
NewManager creates a metadataManager for a given DockerTaskEngine settings.
type Metadata ¶
type Metadata struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
Metadata packages all acquired metadata and is used to format it into JSON to write to the metadata file. We have it flattened, rather than simply containing the previous three structures to simplify JSON parsing and avoid exposing those structs in the final metadata file.
func (Metadata) MarshalJSON ¶
type MetadataStatus ¶
type MetadataStatus int32
MetadataStatus specifies the current update status of the metadata file. The purpose of this status is for users to check if the metadata file has reached the stage they need before they read the rest of the file to avoid race conditions (Since the final stage will need to be after the container starts up In the future the metadata may require multiple stages of update and these statuses should amended/appended accordingly.
const ( MetadataInitial MetadataStatus = iota MetadataReady )
func (MetadataStatus) MarshalText ¶
func (status MetadataStatus) MarshalText() (text []byte, err error)
func (*MetadataStatus) UnmarshalText ¶
func (status *MetadataStatus) UnmarshalText(text []byte) error
type Network ¶
type Network struct { NetworkMode string `json:"NetworkMode,omitempty"` IPv4Addresses []string `json:"IPv4Addresses,omitempty"` IPv6Addresses []string `json:"IPv6Addresses,omitempty"` }
Network is a struct that keeps track of metadata of a network interface
type NetworkMetadata ¶
type NetworkMetadata struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
NetworkMetadata keeps track of the data we parse from the Network Settings in docker containers. While most information is redundant with the internal Network struct, we keeps this wrapper in case we wish to add data specifically from the NetworkSettings
type TaskMetadata ¶
type TaskMetadata struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
TaskMetadata keeps track of all metadata associated with a task provided by AWS, does not depend on the creation of the container