paunch

paunch

Utility to launch and manage containers using YAML based configuration data

Features

  • Single host only, operations are performed via the docker client on the currently configured docker service.
  • Zero external state, only labels on running containers are used when determining which containers an operation will perform on.
  • Single threaded and blocking, containers which are not configured to detach will halt further configuration until they exit.
  • Co-exists with other container configuration tools. Only containers created by paunch will be modified by paunch. Unique container names are assigned if the desired name is taken, and containers are renamed when the desired name becomes available.
  • Accessable via the paunch command line utility, or by importing python package paunch.
  • Builtin debug command lets you see how individual containers are run, get configuration information for them, and run them any way you need to.

Running Paunch Commands

The only state that paunch is aware of is the labels that it sets on running containers, so it is up to the user to keep track of what paunch configs should be running so that others can be deleted on cleanup. For these examples we’re going to store that state in a simple text file:

$ touch paunch-state.txt

We’ll start of by deleting any containers that were started by previous calls to paunch apply:

$ paunch --verbose cleanup $(cat paunch-state.txt)

Next we’ll apply a simple hello-world config found in examples/hello-world.yml which contains the following:

hello:
  image: hello-world
  detach: false

Applied by running:

$ paunch --verbose apply --file examples/hello-world.yml --config-id hi
$ echo hi >> paunch-state.txt

A container called hello will be created, print a Hello World message, then exit. You can confirm that it still exists by running docker ps -a.

Now lets try running the exact same paunch apply command:

$ paunch --verbose apply --file examples/hello-world.yml --config-id hi

This will not make any changes at all due to the idempotency behaviour of paunch.

Lets try again with a unique –config-id:

$ paunch --verbose apply --file examples/hello-world.yml --config-id hi-again
$ echo hi-again >> paunch-state.txt

Doing a docker ps -a now will show that there are now 2 containers, one called hello and the other called hello-(random suffix). Lets delete the one associated with the hi config-id:

$ cat paunch-state.txt
$ echo hi-again > paunch-state.txt
$ cat paunch-state.txt
$ paunch --verbose cleanup $(cat paunch-state.txt)

Doing a docker ps -a will show that the original hello container has been deleted and hello-(random suffix) has been renamed to hello

Generally paunch cleanup will be run first to delete containers for configs that are no longer apply. Then a series of paunch apply commands can be run. If these apply calls are part of a live upgrade where a mixture of old and new containers are left running, the upgrade can be completed in the next run to paunch cleanup with the updated list of config-id state.

Paunch can also be used as a library by other tools. By default running the paunch command won’t affect these other containers due to the different managed_by label being set on those containers. For example if you wanted to run paunch commands masquerading as the heat-agents docker-cmd hook then you can run:

paunch --verbose apply --file examples/hello-world.yml --config-id hi --managed-by docker-cmd

This will result in a hello container being run, which will be deleted the next time the docker-cmd hook does its own cleanup run since it won’t be aware of a config_id called hi.

Idempotency Behaviour

In many cases the user will want to use the same –config-id with changed config data. The aim of the idempotency behaviour is to leave containers running when their config has not changed, but replace containers which have modified config.

When paunch apply is run with the same --config-id but modified config data, the following logic is applied:

  • For each existing container with a matching config_id and managed_by: * delete containers which no longer exist in config * delete containers with missing config_data label * delete containers where config_data label differs from current config
  • Do a full rename to desired names since deletes have occured
  • Only create containers from config if there is no container running with that name
  • exec actions will be run regardless, so commands they run may require their own idempotency behaviour

Only configuration data is used to determine whether something has changed to trigger replacing the container during apply. This means that changing the contents of a file referred to in env_file will not trigger replacement unless something else changes in the configuration data (such as the path specified in env_file).

The most common reason to restart containers is to have them running with an updated image. As such it is recommended that stable image tags such as latest are not used when specifying the image, and that changing the release version tag in the configuration data is the recommended way of propagating image changes to the running containers.

Debugging with Paunch

The paunch debug command allows you to perform specific actions on a given container. This can be used to:

  • Run a container with a specific configuration.
  • Dump the configuration of a given container in either json or yaml.
  • Output the docker command line used to start the container.
  • Run a container with any configuration additions you wish such that you can run it with a shell as any user etc.

The configuration options you will likely be interested in here include:

--file <file>         YAML or JSON file containing configuration data
--action <name>       Action can be one of: "dump-json", "dump-yaml",
                      "print-cmd", or "run"
--container <name>    Name of the container you wish to manipulate
--interactive         Run container in interactive mode - modifies config
                      and execution of container
--shell               Similar to interactive but drops you into a shell
--user <name>         Start container as the specified user
--overrides <name>    JSON configuration information used to override
                      default config values

file is the name of the configuration file to use containing the configuration for the container you wish to use.

Here is an example of using paunch debug to start a root shell inside the test container:

# paunch debug --file examples/hello-world.yml --interactive --shell --user root --container hello --action run

This will drop you an interactive session inside the hello world container starting /bin/bash running as root.

To see how this container is started normally:

# paunch debug --file examples/hello-world.yml --container hello --action print-cmd

You can also dump the configuration of this to a file so you can edit it and rerun it with different a different configuration. This is more useful when there are multiple configurations in a single file:

# paunch debug --file examples/hello-world.yml --container hello --action dump-json > hello.json

You can then use hello.json as your --file argument after editing it to your liking.

You can also add any configuration elements you wish on the command line to test paunch or debug containers etc. In this example I’m running the hello container with net=host.

# paunch debug --file examples/hello-world.yml --overrides '{"net": "host"}' --container hello --action run

Configuration Format

The current format is loosely based on a subset of the docker-compose v1 format with modifications. The intention is for the format to evolve to faithfully implement existing formats such as the Kubernetes Pod format.

The top-level of the YAML format is a dict where the keys (generally) correspond to the name of the container to be created. The following config creates 2 containers called hello1 and hello2:

hello1:
  image: hello-world
hello2:
  image: hello-world

The values are a dict which specifies the arguments that are used when the container is launched. Supported keys which comply with the docker-compose v1 format are as follows:

command:
String or list. Overrides the default command.
detach:
Boolean, defaults to true. If true the container is run in the background. If false then paunch will block until the container has exited.
environment:
List of the format [‘KEY1=value1’, ‘KEY2=value2’]. Sets environment variables that are available to the process launched in the container.
env_file:
List of file paths containing line delimited environment variables.
image:
String, mandatory. Specify the image to start the container from. Can either be a repositorys/tag or a partial image ID.
net:
String. Set the network mode for the container.
pid:
String. Set the PID mode for the container.
uts:
String. Set the UTS namespace for the container.
privileged:
Boolean, defaults to false. If true, give extended privileges to this container.
restart:
String. Restart policy to apply when a container exits.
remove:
Boolean: Remove container after running.
interactive:
Boolean: Run container in interactive mode.
tty:
Boolean: Allocate a tty to interact with the container.
user:
String. Sets the username or UID used and optionally the groupname or GID for the specified command.
volumes:
List of strings. Specify the bind mount for this container.
volumes_from:
List of strings. Mount volumes from the specified container(s).
log_tag:
String. Set the log tag for the specified container.
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