The image id is no longer necessary to report the current state since
moving to v3 of the state endpoint and it is only kept for backwards
compatibility for some supervisor API endpoings.
Until now, `imageId` was part of the container name leading to longer
names than desired. This change removes the value from the container
name an modifies queries to look for the value in the image database.
This also removes the imageId from the log stream which should result in
reduced bandwidth usage.
Change-type: minor
The release id is not really necessary for reporting the current state
since v3 (it has been replaced by `releaseUuid`) and is only kept for
backwards compatibility for some supervisor API endpoints.
Until now, the `releaseId` was part o the container name, leading to
longer names than desired. This change removes the value from the
container name and modifies queries to look for the value in the image
database.
Change-type: minor
Relates-to: #2077
PR #2217 removed the expose configuration but also caused a regresion
where ports set via the `ports` configuration would no longer get
exposed to the host, despite portmappings being set. This fixes that
issue by exposing only those ports comming from port mappings.
Change-type: patch
/mnt/boot/os-release isn't always accurate so /mnt/root should be the source of truth.
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
The node-dbus module is unmaintained and a blocker for the update to
Node 18. Switching to our own node bindings for systemd solves this
issue
Relates-to: Shouqun/node-dbus#241
Change-type: patch
It's not an official status from container inspects, and the Supervisor
doesn't set it internally anywhere. It's better to remove it entirely as the
method by which Supervisor sets internal service statuses is by using a global
event emitter (reportNewStatus) which makes things difficult to test.
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
The previous implementation in #2170 of parsing the container status was too general,
because it relied on the mistaken assumption that a container would have a status of
`Stopped` if it was manually stopped. This turned out to be untrue, as manually stopped
containers were also getting restarted by the Supervisor due to their inspect status of
`exited`. With this, parsing the exit message became unavoidable as there are no other
clear ways to discern a container that has been manually stopped and shouldn't be started
from a container experiencing the Engine-host race condition issue (again, see #2170).
Since we're just parsing the exit error message, we don't need to worry about different behaviors
amongst restart policies, as any container with the error message on exit should be started.
Change-type: patch
Closes: #2178
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
This ensures target state has settled (since it seems that the 'applied' status
that's reported isn't 100% accurate and the actual Engine state may lag behind slightly)
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
There exists a race condition between Engine and a host resource that may not
be immediately created. In this race condition, if a container's compose config
depends on the existence of that host resource, such as a network interface, and the
Engine tries to create & start the container before the host resource is created, the
Engine will not reattempt to start the container, regardless of the restart policy.
This is undesireable behavior but seems to be the behavior as implemented by Docker.
To rectify this, the Supervisor state funnel noops for a grace period of 1 minute
after starting a container to see that the container's status has become 'running`.
If the container exits because of the race condition, the status becomes 'exited' and the
Supervisor will attempt to generate another start step. This noop-wait-start step loop
will repeat until the container is able to start.
If the container is never able to start, there was a problem in the host in the creation of the
host resource, and that should be fixed at the host level.
This commit does not handle the case of services with restart policies "no" or "on-failure"
which encounter this host race, as metadata from container inspects needs to be introduced
during step calculation in order to figure out whether services with those restart policies
need to be started. This will be fixed in a future PR.
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
Devices affected by the bug described in 1576, are also stuck with some
services in the `Downloaded` state, because the state engine does not
detect that the running services should be killed on a network change
even if they belong to a new release. This is a bug, which can be
replicated by the tests in this commit
Change-type: patch
These tests use the supervisor API to check that applying a target state
allows the device to eventually get to the desired target configuration.
This are high-level tests that work with real images and containers
using dind.
Change-type: patch
The actions now work by passing an intermediate state to the state
engine.
- doPurge first removes the user app from the target state and passes
that to the state engine for purging. Since intermediate state doesn't
remove images, this will have the effect of basically re-installing
the app.
- doRestart modifies the target state by first removing only the
services from the current state but keeping volumes and networks. This
has the same effect as before where services were stopped one by one
Change-type: patch
There were multiple places in the state engine that skipped some
operations while in local mode. In reality, all it's needed while in
local mode is to skip image and volume deletion.
This commit simplifies application-manager and compose app to be more
local mode agnostic and instead making the image deletion and volume
deletion configurable via function arguments.
This also has the benefit to make the treatment of local mode
applications more similar to cloud mode applications, allowing for
API endpoints to function the same way both modes.
Change-type: patch
The OS since v2.82.6 will monitor changes to config.json and restart
the relevant services to apply the changes. There is no need to trigger
restart of the services via the supervisor. Users on older OS versions
will need to update their OS or restart the services manually as OS
loses support after 2y.
Change-type: patch
Closes: #2160
From: c0b4fafe84
Restart-service checks that both services have restarted in its test assertion, which is
incorrect as restart-service should only restart one service.
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
As the Supervisor is a privileged container, it has access to host /dev, and therefore has access
to boot, data, and state balenaOS partitions. This commit sets up the framework for the following:
- Finds the /dev partition that corresponds to each partition based on partition label
- Mounts the partitions into set mountpoints in the device
- Removes reliance on env vars and mountpoints provided by host's start-balena-supervisor script
- Simplifies host path querying by centralizing these queries through methods in lib/host-utils.ts
This particular changes env vars for and mounts the boot partition.
Since the Supervisor would no longer rely on container `run` arguments provided by a host script,
this change moves Supervisor closer to being able to start itself (Supervisor-as-an-app).
Change-type: minor
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
The issue with the original Supervisor implementation of the firewall is that
on Supervisor start, the Supervisor flushes the INPUT chain of the filter table.
This doesn't play well with services that add to the INPUT chain on startup that
may start up before the Supervisor, such as certain NetworkManager connection
profiles. This change only replaces the BALENA-FIREWALL rule in the INPUT chain,
preserving the other rules as well as their order.
Closes: #1482
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
We have seen a few times devices with duplicated network names for some
reason. While we don't know the cause the networks get duplicates, this
can be disruptive for updates as trying to create a container referencing a duplicate
network results in a 400 error from the engine.
This commit finds and removes duplicate networks via the state engine,
this means that even if somehow a container could be referencing a
network that has been duplicated later somehow, this will remove the
container first.
While thies doesn't solve the problem of duplicate networks being
created in the first place, it will fix the state of the system to
correct the inconsistency.
Change-type: minor
Closes: #590
This includes:
- proxyvisor.js
- references in docs
- references device-state, api-binder, compose modules, API
- references in tests
The commit also adds a migration to remove the 4 dependent device tables from the DB.
Change-type: minor
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
This includes:
- /v1/apps/:appId/(stop|start)
- /v2/applications/:appId/(restart|stop|start)-service
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
This also adds a 500 response with the old key if the API key
refresh was unsuccessful. Previously, if the key refresh was
unsuccessful, this would result in an UnhandledPromiseRejection.
This is a new interface.
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
This means that dynamic import statements will emit actual `import`
statements rather than being translated to `require`, the benefit being
that we can now import ES modules via dynamic imports
Change-type: patch
This PR changes the way the supervisor reads and writes files from /mnt/boot. Reads will
now use the [fatrw utility](https://github.com/balena-os/fatrw/) as a way to minimize corruption of
files in the boot partition, and thus preventing possible bricking of the device.
Since this basically changes the way a lot of configurations are read, this work was being blocked because of
the way tests were being done. While there still remain a couple of legacy tests to be migrated, this PR disables
test:legacy tests when running npm run test, as the work on refactoring those tests is in progress (see #2048) and
fatrw integration is of higher priority.
Change-type: minor
getImagesForCleanup used to query the Engine for the Supervisor
image, which is unnecessary given that the Supervisor has access
to constants.supervisorImage. Thus, this Engine query is removed.
The method is simplified and made more clear, and
imageManager.isCleanupNeeded doesn't need to be stubbed in tests.
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
This eliminates chances of host-Docker address collision for apps such
as the Supervisor where all services have host networking.
Closes: #2062
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
This means that configuration backend tests no longer use stubs and
(mostly) avoid internal dependencies in the tests. Instead of stubs and
mock-fs, the tests use [testfs](https://github.com/balena-io-modules/mocha-pod#working-with-the-filesystem)
which allows working with a real filesystem and ensuring everything is
re-set between tests.
This is the last change needed in order to be able to merge #1971. Here is the list of changes
- [x] Migrate splash image backend tests
- [x] Migrate extlinux backend tests
- [x] Migrate config.txt backend tests
- [x] Migrate extra-uenv config tests
- [x] Migrate odmdata config tests
- [x] Migrate config utils tests
- [x] Migrate device-config tests
Change-type: patch
Also remove system interface check from ensureSupervisorNetwork.
Previously `ensure` was a Bluebird promise which wasn't awaited in
its composition step. This has been here for some time and may contribute
to issues with duplicate networks. The conversion to native Promises
allows `ensure` to be awaited, hopefully reducing instances of duplicate
networks.
Removing the system interface check for /sys/class/net/supervisor0
because it's superfluous given that the Engine creates the interface
with NetworkManager. It also makes testing a lot more difficult to set up
as /sys/class/net isn't a directory that can be written to for emulating
system interface creation / removal.
Relates-to: https://github.com/balena-os/balena-supervisor/issues/1110
Change-type: minor
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>
Previously it was set at /mnt/root/sys/class/net, which is
the same as /sys/class/net because Supervisor has a network
mode of `host`.
Signed-off-by: Christina Ying Wang <christina@balena.io>