This mostly reverts the removal of the legacy deploy code that pushed image tars via the builder. It’s needed for users to avoid having to switch between CLI versions in order to push to legacy apps as well.
Note: this pins resin-sdk to 9.0.0-beta14 as I couldn’t get it to install otherwise — npm would always install 9.0.0-beta9 instead.
Change-Type: minor
Legacy behaviour is mostly retained. The most notable change in behaviour is that invoking `resin deploy` without options is now allowed (see help string how it behaves).
In this commit there are also the following notable changes:
- Deploy/Build are promoted to primary commands
- Extracts QEMU-related code to a new file
- Adds a utility file to retrieve the CLI version and its parts
- Adds a helper that can be used to manipulate display on capable clients
- Declares several new dependencies. Most are already indirectly installed via some dependency
Change-Type: minor
New version is 3.1.0.
The updated version is not backwards compatible as it removes all *Async methods that are in wide use in the CLI. The workaround for now is to manually promisify the client and replace all `new Docker()` calls with a shared function that returns a promisified client.
There are very few plugins in real-world use, we're not actively working
on this at all, and the current approach won't work once we move to
standalone node-less binary installation anyway.
Change-Type: major
Use the `--host` (short `-H`) option in the ssh command to access
the host OS of the device.
Direct host OS is enabled for devices with Resin OS >= 2.7.5.
Change-Type: minor
Connects-To: #736
Signed-off-by: Andreas Fitzek <andreas@resin.io>
Before this point, if you had an invalid token, an expired token, or a
token for a different site, you couldn't log out to clear it properly.
Not a big deal, but awkward and messy, and easily fixed.
Change-Type: patch
This is part of a general push to demodularize any code that isn't
realistically reusable outside resin-cli, to make the codebase easier to
manage and understand. Once this is done, we'll deprecate the original
module itself.
Change-Type: patch
This moves to --app and --uuid options, and deprecates the previous
format, but doesn't immediately remove it so this is not a breaking
change.
Connects-To: #691
Change-Type: minor
This would be a major change if the command was ever successful, but it
appears it hasn't ever worked for any available published version of
ResinOS, so it's not possible that there are users relying on it.
Change-Type: patch
The backend server that handles `resin ssh` now supports it.
Also removed the option from local ssh connections to devices, where it
basically has no effect (dropbear on devices supports it)
change-type: minor
fixes#568
Before this commit, the docker daemon would recieve the filename of the
.pem files, which would be interpreted as the body and would fail. This
commit ensures that the actual body of the pem files are sent to the
daemon.
Change-type: patch
Connects-to: #562
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>
The command line arg was taking `devicetype`, but the rest of the code
uses `deviceType`. Thus it was impossible to specify a device type
in practice to build a `Dockerfile.template`.
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Gergely Imreh <imrehg@gmail.com>
If build is ran through `resin deploy`, then logs will be stored and
uploaded to the database, where the dashboard can display them
Change-type: minor
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>
`resin build` had access to the `--nocache` and `--tag` options for
building with docker, but `resin deploy` did not. This commit adds the
options to the shared dockerUtils.appendOptions function.
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>
Upon changing the name of the source parameter from `context`, some
places weren't changed, this commit fixes that.
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>
Using `resin build` a user can now build an image on their own docker
daemon. The daemon can be accessed via a local socket, a remote host and
a remote host over a TLS socket. Project type resolution is supported.
Nocache and tagging of images is also supported.
Using `resin deploy` a user can now deploy an image to their fleet. The
image can either be built by `resin-cli`, plain Docker, or from a remote
source.
Change-type: minor
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>