As of April 1, Docker Hub rate limits tightened. With only 10 pulls/hr/IP, we're
likely to encounter test failures. Switch all Docker images getting pulled from
this repository to use the HashiCorp managed registry mirror.
Note that most of our tests in `drivers/docker` don't pull from the remote
registry but load a local image, while others will need to pull from the remote
and fetch different images depending on OS/arch. Refactor the definition of test
task configuration to make it clear which is which, and de-factor some false
sharing of setup functions.
Updates the E2E tests to use that registry by configuring the Docker
daemon. This required changing out a few container images that we don't have in
the registry, but these new images are all smaller. There are a couple of tests
that still use explicitly-tagged `docker.io` images or other third-party
registries, which have been left in place.
Ref: https://hashicorp.atlassian.net/browse/NET-12233
update E2E images to those in the registry mirror
fix windows and docklog test build
fix stopsignal test
mop-up
more mop-up
* Use unix:// prefix for CSI_ENDPOINT variable by default
* Some plugins have strict validation over the format of the
`CSI_ENDPOINT` variable, and unfortunately not all plugins
agree. Allow the user to override the `CSI_ENDPOINT` to workaround
those cases.
* Update all demos and tests with CSI_ENDPOINT
This changeset provides two basic e2e tests for CSI plugins targeting
common AWS use cases.
The EBS test launches the EBS plugin (controller + nodes) and registers
an EBS volume as a Nomad CSI volume. We deploy a job that writes to
the volume, stop that job, and reuse the volume for another job which
should be able to read the data written by the first job.
The EFS test launches the EFS plugin (nodes-only) and registers an EFS
volume as a Nomad CSI volume. We deploy a job that writes to the
volume, stop that job, and reuse the volume for another job which
should be able to read the data written by the first job.
The writer jobs mount the CSI volume at a location within the alloc
dir.