This commit introduces support for configuring mount propagation when
mounting volumes with the `volume_mount` stanza on Linux targets.
Similar to Kubernetes, we expose 3 options for configuring mount
propagation:
- private, which is equivalent to `rprivate` on Linux, which does not allow the
container to see any new nested mounts after the chroot was created.
- host-to-task, which is equivalent to `rslave` on Linux, which allows new mounts
that have been created _outside of the container_ to be visible
inside the container after the chroot is created.
- bidirectional, which is equivalent to `rshared` on Linux, which allows both
the container to see new mounts created on the host, but
importantly _allows the container to create mounts that are
visible in other containers an don the host_
private and host-to-task are safe, but bidirectional mounts can be
dangerous, as if the code inside a container creates a mount, and does
not clean it up before tearing down the container, it can cause bad
things to happen inside the kernel.
To add a layer of safety here, we require that the user has ReadWrite
permissions on the volume before allowing bidirectional mounts, as a
defense in depth / validation case, although creating mounts should also require
a priviliged execution environment inside the container.
Without passing the network isolation configuration to the executor,
java tasks are not placed in the same network namespace as the other
processes in their task group, which breaks Consul Connect.
The docker creation API calls may fail with http errors (e.g. timeout)
even if container was successfully created.
Here, we force remove container if we got unexpected failure. We
already do this in some error handlers, and this commit updates all
paths.
I stopped short from a more aggressive refactoring, as the code is ripe
for refactoring and would rather do that in another PR.
This handles a bug where we may start a container successfully, yet we
fail due to retries and startContainer not being idempotent call.
Here, we ensure that when starting a container fails with 500 error,
the retry succeeds if container was started successfully.
hclspec.NewLiteral does not quote its values, which caused `3m` to be
parsed as a nonsensical literal which broke the plugin loader during
initialization. By quoting the value here, it starts correctly.