Refactor the progress printer creation to the caller-side of the
controller api. Then, instead of passing around status channels (and
progressMode strings), we can simply pass around the higher level
interface progress.Writer.
This has a couple of benefits:
- A simplified interface to the controller
- Allows us to correctly extract warnings out of the controller, so that
they can be displayed correctly from the client side.
Some extra work is required to make sure that we can pass a
progress.Printer into the debug monitor. If we want to keep it
persistent, then we need a way to temporarily suspend output from it,
otherwise it will continue printing as the monitor is prompting for
input from the user, and forwarding output from debug containers.
To handle this, we add two methods to the printer, `Pause` and
`Unpause`. `Pause` acts similarly to `Wait`, closing the printer, and
cleanly shutting down the display - however, the printer does not
terminate, and can later be resumed by a call to `Unpause`. This
provides a neater interface to the caller, instead of needing to
continually reconstruct printers for every single time we want to
produce progress output.
Signed-off-by: Justin Chadwell <me@jedevc.com>
We had some duplicated code between the basic runBuild and
launchControllerAndRunBuild.
This patch refactors out the common logic (since it's only really like
to keep growing), and has runBuild call into either the controller or
directly start the build depending on whether BUILDX_EXPERIMENTAL is
set.
Signed-off-by: Justin Chadwell <me@jedevc.com>
This ensures that the code used to capture and evaluated a result is
only executed when built through the controller. Otherwise, no build
result should be recorded.
This ensures that new code added to capture and store the build result
for debugging isn't used when BUILDX_EXPERIMENTAL is not set.
Signed-off-by: Justin Chadwell <me@jedevc.com>
In 566f41b598, we added a check to ensure
that we avoid resolving http URLs for Dockerfile. However, we have
another circumstance we should not resolve the path in - if the context
is a remote context, the dockerfile is resolved in that context (see
build.go#LoadInputs for more information).
Therefore, we should only resolve the dockerfile to a local directory if
the context is also resolved to a local directory.
Signed-off-by: Justin Chadwell <me@jedevc.com>
Dockerfiles can be HTTP URLs as well as local paths 🤦
We just copy the same logic we use for resolving context paths, and
apply it here as well.
Signed-off-by: Justin Chadwell <me@jedevc.com>
The updateContext function may make modifications to the build inputs,
creating either an SSH URL, or an SSH llb.State. In these cases, we need
to ensure that we appropriately expose the client's default agent.
Previously, we would only expose it if the remote context was a git URL,
however, we need to also ensure that if the input was used to override
the context (in the case of ReadRemoteFiles), that we expose the agent
here as well.
Signed-off-by: Justin Chadwell <me@jedevc.com>
BuildKit's gitutil package behaves slightly differently than moby's
urlutil, so we should rely on BuildKit's gitutil when detecting URLs to
avoid cases of accidentally producing invalid build requests that can
confuse users.
Signed-off-by: Justin Chadwell <me@jedevc.com>
This adds the following constraints to the new features:
- Explicit renaming with the `name` property is *only* permitted when
used with the `matrix` property.
- Group does not support either `name` or `matrix` (we may choose to
relax this constraint over time).
- All generated names must be unique.
Signed-off-by: Justin Chadwell <me@jedevc.com>