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Simple test container for aufs whiteout sanity checks

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docker-aufs-sanity

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This repo contains a Dockerfile defining the container dctrud/docker-aufs-sanity on docker hub.

This is a small docker container that can be used to test container software that extracts docker multi-layer images (e.g. Singularity), to ensure that they handle aufs whiteout correctly.

If your extraction of docker layers handles whiteout correctly then you should see the following when you run the container:

$ docker run dctrud/docker-aufs-sanity
/test
/test/normal-dir
/test/normal-dir/file1
/test/normal-dir/file2
/test/whiteout-dir
/test/whiteout-dir/file2
/test/whiteout-file
/test/whiteout-file/file2

If your aufs extraction is incorrect you will likely see an additional file1 inside the directories whiteout-dir/, whiteout-file/, or both. You will also likely see the whiteout marker files (beginning .wh.) E.g. with Singularity v2.4:

$ singularity run docker://dctrud/docker-aufs-sanity
/test
/test/normal-dir
/test/normal-dir/file1
/test/normal-dir/file2
/test/whiteout-dir
/test/whiteout-dir/file1
/test/whiteout-dir/.wh.file1
/test/whiteout-dir/file2
/test/whiteout-file
/test/whiteout-file/file1
/test/whiteout-file/file2
/test/whiteout-file/.wh.file1
/test/.wh.whiteout-dir

Explanation

Each Dockerfile RUN step creates a separate container filesystem layer, with content that builds upon previous layers. When you rm a file inside a RUN step it must be removed from your container - but the RUN cannot modify the previous immutable layers. Docker uses the aufs whiteout standard to record when you rm a file that was created in a previous layer. If you create a file file1 in layer 1, and remove it in layer 2, then the tar for layer 2 will contain a hidden marker file .wh.file1 which tells us we should remove file1 as we extract layer 2.

About this test

Here we create 3 directories to test directory, file, and no whiteout.

Directory Whiteout

Directory /test/whiteout-dir/ is created, and has a single file, file1 added inside it.

We then remove file1 and /test/whiteout-dir/ itself. At this point there is no /test/whiteout-dir/ visible in our container. Docker will mark this by creating a whiteout file /test/.wh.whiteout-dir in the layer tar, which instructs the extracting tool to remove the directory during extraction, just as we did in our Dockerfile RUN steps.

Finally we recreate /test/whiteout-dir/ and put a new file file2 into it.

If we extract our container layers correctly we should see /test/whiteout-dir/ containing a single file named file2.

File Whiteout

Directory /test/whiteout-file/ is created, and has a single file, file1 added inside it. In a later RUN step we add a new file file2 into the directory.

Finally, we remove /test/whiteout-file/file1 in a RUN step. Docker will mark this by creating a whiteout file /test/whiteout-file/.wh.file1 in the layer tar, which instructs the extracting tool to remove file1 during extraction, just as we did in our Dockerfile RUN steps.

If we extract our container layers correctly we should see /test/whiteout-file/ containing a single file named file2.

No Whiteout

Directory /test/normal-dir/ has two files, file1 and file2, added to it with no removals made in later RUN steps.

If we extract our container layers correctly we should see /test/normal-dir/ containing both file1 and file2.

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Simple test container for aufs whiteout sanity checks

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