entrypoint

command
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Published: Nov 5, 2024 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 29 Imported by: 0

README

entrypoint

This binary is used to override the entrypoint of a container by wrapping it and executing original entrypoint command in a subprocess.

Tekton uses this to make sure TaskRuns' steps are executed in order, only after sidecars are ready and previous steps have completed successfully.

Flags

The following flags are available:

  • -entrypoint: "original" command to be executed (as entrypoint). This will be executed as a sub-process on entrypoint
  • -post_file: file path to write once the sub-process has finished. If the sub-process failed, it will write to {{post_file}}.err instead of {{post_file}}.
  • -wait_file: file path to watch before starting the sub-process. It watches for {{wait_file}} and {{wait_file}}.err presence and will either execute the sub-process (in case of {{wait_file}}) or skip the execution, write to {{post_file}}.err and return an error (exitCode >= 0)
  • -wait_file_content: expects the wait_file to contain actual contents. It will continue watching for wait_file until it has content.
  • -stdout_path: If specified, the stdout of the sub-process will be copied to the given path on the local filesystem.
  • -stderr_path: If specified, the stderr of the sub-process will be copied to the given path on the local filesystem. It can be set to the same value as {{stdout_path}} so both streams are copied to the same file. However, there is no ordering guarantee on data copied from both streams.
  • -enable_spire: If set will enable signing of the results by SPIRE. Signing results by SPIRE ensures that no process other than the current process can tamper the results and go undetected.
  • -spire_socket_path: This flag makes sense only when enable_spire is set. When enable_spire is set, spire_socket_path is used to point to the SPIRE agent socket for SPIFFE workload API.

Any extra positional arguments are passed to the original entrypoint command.

Example

The following example of usage for entrypoint waits for /tekton/run/3/out file to exist and executes the command bash with args echo and hello, then writes the file /tekton/run/4/out, or /tekton/run/4/out.err in case the command fails.

entrypoint \
  -wait_file /tekton/run/3/out \
  -post_file /tekton/run/4/out \
  -entrypoint bash -- \
  echo hello

Waiting for Sidecars

In cases where the TaskRun's Pod has sidecar containers -- including, possibly, injected sidecars that Tekton itself didn't specify -- the first step should also wait until all those sidecars have reported as ready. Starting before sidecars are ready could lead to flaky errors if steps rely on the sidecar being ready to succeed.

To account for this, the Tekton controller starts TaskRun Pods with the first step's entrypoint binary configured to wait for a special file provided by the Kubernetes Downward API. This allows Tekton to write a Pod annotation when all sidecars report as ready, and for the value of that annotation to appear to the Pod as a file in a Volume. To the Pod, that file always exists, but without content until the annotation is set, so we instruct the entrypoint to wait for the -wait_file to contain contents before proceeding.

Example

The following example of usage for entrypoint waits for /tekton/downward/ready file to exist and contain actual contents (-wait_file_contents), and executes the command bash with args echo and hello, then writes the file /tekton/run/1/out, or /tekton/run/1/out.err in case the command fails.

entrypoint \
  -wait_file /tekton/downward/ready \
  -wait_file_contents \
  -post_file /tekton/run/1/out \
  -entrypoint bash -- \
  echo hello

cp Mode

In order to make the entrypoint binary available to the user's steps, it gets copied to a Volume that's shared with all the steps' containers as read-only. This is done in an initContainer pre-step, that runs before steps start.

To reduce external dependencies, the entrypoint binary actually copies itself to the shared Volume. When executed with the positional args of cp <src> <dst>, the entrypoint binary copies the <src> file to <dst> and exits.

It's executed as an initContainer in the TaskRun's Pod like:

initContainers:
- image: gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/entrypoint
  args:
  - cp
  - /ko-app/entrypoint  # <-- path to the entrypoint binary inside the image
  - /tekton/bin/entrypoint
  volumeMounts:
  - name: tekton-internal-bin
    mountPath: /tekton/bin

containers:
- image: user-image
  command:
  - /tekton/bin/entrypoint
  ... args to entrypoint ...
  volumeMounts:
  - name: tekton-internal-bin
    mountPath: /tekton/bin
    readonly: true

volumes:
- name: tekton-internal-bin
  volumeSource:
    emptyDir: {}

Documentation

Overview

Copyright 2021 The Tekton Authors

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

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