* Adding docker_container
* If state absent, stop the container before attempting to remove. Fixed status running check.
* If container absent, stop before removing. Fix container status check.
Apologies, but I no longer use this module day-to-day myself, and I don't have the bandwidth right now to effectively triage changes in any kind of timely fashion.
Hello!
I wanted stop the containers matched only by image name, but can't do this, if I not set cmd in playbook.
This behavior confused me.
If cmd or entrypoint is defined for running container, but not defined in playbook, makes matching behavior as this sample:
https://github.com/ansible/ansible-modules-core/blob/devel/cloud/docker/docker.py#L463
The ulimit will be specified as a list and separated by colons. The
hard limit is optional, in which case it is equal to the soft limit.
The ulimits are compared to the ulimits of the container and added
or adjusted accordingly on by a reload.
The module ensures that ulimits are available in the capabilities
iff ulimits is passes as a parameter.
restart_containers(containers.running) may try to restart containers
that are deleted when looping through get_differing_containers()
fix this by refreshing list after first loop
Previously the logging module hard coded the default logging driver. This means
if the docker daemon is started with a different logging driver, the ansible
module would continually restart it when run.
This fix adds a call to docker.Client.info(), which is inspected if a logging
driver is not supplied in the playbook, and the container only restarted if
the logging driver applied differs from the configured default.
In usage, this has solved issues with using alternative logging drivers.
Give user a course of action in the case where the suggestions do not
work. This will hopefully allow us to work through any further issues
much faster.
Check commit enables using tls when using the docker_image module. It
also removes the default for docker_url which doesn't allow us to check
for DOCKER_HOST which is a more sane default. This allows you to use
docker_image on OSX but more documentation is needed.
Since we now have several exceptions to the assumption that the
result of the pull would be on the last status line returned by
docker-py's pull(), I've changed the function so that it looks
through the status lines and returns what if finds on it.
Despite the repeated `break`s, the code seems simpler and a little
more coherent like this. From what I've checked using
`https://github.com/jlafon/ansible-profile`, the execution time is
mostly the same.
When pulling an image using Docker 1.8, it seems the output
JSON stream has an empty dict at the very end. This causes
ansible to fail when pulling an image, as it's expecting a
status message in that dict which it uses to determine whether
it had to download the image or not. As a bit of an ugly hack
for that which remains backward compatible, try the last item
in the stream, and if it's an empty dict, take the last-but-one
item instead.
The strip() is needed as the exact value appears to be '{}/r/n';
we could just match that, but it seems like the kind of thing
where maybe it'd happen to just be '{}/n' or '{}' or something
in some cases, so let's just use strip() in case.
A recent change [1] in docker between v1.8.2 and v1.8.3 changed what
is returned in the json when inspecting an image. Five variables which
could have been expected before will now be omited when empty. Only
one of those variables is being addressed in the docker, ExposedPorts.
Unfortunately there was also no API version change on this so this
can't be easily corrected with pinning the API to the older version.
This does a get() which will return None if the variable is not in the
dict formed from the json that was returned. Everything else works the
same way.
[1] 9098628b29