github.com/endocode/docker@v1.4.2-0.20160113120958-46eb4700391e/builder/dockerfile/evaluator.go (about) 1 // Package dockerfile is the evaluation step in the Dockerfile parse/evaluate pipeline. 2 // 3 // It incorporates a dispatch table based on the parser.Node values (see the 4 // parser package for more information) that are yielded from the parser itself. 5 // Calling NewBuilder with the BuildOpts struct can be used to customize the 6 // experience for execution purposes only. Parsing is controlled in the parser 7 // package, and this division of responsibility should be respected. 8 // 9 // Please see the jump table targets for the actual invocations, most of which 10 // will call out to the functions in internals.go to deal with their tasks. 11 // 12 // ONBUILD is a special case, which is covered in the onbuild() func in 13 // dispatchers.go. 14 // 15 // The evaluator uses the concept of "steps", which are usually each processable 16 // line in the Dockerfile. Each step is numbered and certain actions are taken 17 // before and after each step, such as creating an image ID and removing temporary 18 // containers and images. Note that ONBUILD creates a kinda-sorta "sub run" which 19 // includes its own set of steps (usually only one of them). 20 package dockerfile 21 22 import ( 23 "fmt" 24 "runtime" 25 "strings" 26 27 "github.com/docker/docker/builder/dockerfile/command" 28 "github.com/docker/docker/builder/dockerfile/parser" 29 ) 30 31 // Environment variable interpolation will happen on these statements only. 32 var replaceEnvAllowed = map[string]bool{ 33 command.Env: true, 34 command.Label: true, 35 command.Add: true, 36 command.Copy: true, 37 command.Workdir: true, 38 command.Expose: true, 39 command.Volume: true, 40 command.User: true, 41 command.StopSignal: true, 42 command.Arg: true, 43 } 44 45 // Certain commands are allowed to have their args split into more 46 // words after env var replacements. Meaning: 47 // ENV foo="123 456" 48 // EXPOSE $foo 49 // should result in the same thing as: 50 // EXPOSE 123 456 51 // and not treat "123 456" as a single word. 52 // Note that: EXPOSE "$foo" and EXPOSE $foo are not the same thing. 53 // Quotes will cause it to still be treated as single word. 54 var allowWordExpansion = map[string]bool{ 55 command.Expose: true, 56 } 57 58 var evaluateTable map[string]func(*Builder, []string, map[string]bool, string) error 59 60 func init() { 61 evaluateTable = map[string]func(*Builder, []string, map[string]bool, string) error{ 62 command.Env: env, 63 command.Label: label, 64 command.Maintainer: maintainer, 65 command.Add: add, 66 command.Copy: dispatchCopy, // copy() is a go builtin 67 command.From: from, 68 command.Onbuild: onbuild, 69 command.Workdir: workdir, 70 command.Run: run, 71 command.Cmd: cmd, 72 command.Entrypoint: entrypoint, 73 command.Expose: expose, 74 command.Volume: volume, 75 command.User: user, 76 command.StopSignal: stopSignal, 77 command.Arg: arg, 78 } 79 } 80 81 // This method is the entrypoint to all statement handling routines. 82 // 83 // Almost all nodes will have this structure: 84 // Child[Node, Node, Node] where Child is from parser.Node.Children and each 85 // node comes from parser.Node.Next. This forms a "line" with a statement and 86 // arguments and we process them in this normalized form by hitting 87 // evaluateTable with the leaf nodes of the command and the Builder object. 88 // 89 // ONBUILD is a special case; in this case the parser will emit: 90 // Child[Node, Child[Node, Node...]] where the first node is the literal 91 // "onbuild" and the child entrypoint is the command of the ONBUILD statement, 92 // such as `RUN` in ONBUILD RUN foo. There is special case logic in here to 93 // deal with that, at least until it becomes more of a general concern with new 94 // features. 95 func (b *Builder) dispatch(stepN int, ast *parser.Node) error { 96 cmd := ast.Value 97 upperCasedCmd := strings.ToUpper(cmd) 98 99 // To ensure the user is given a decent error message if the platform 100 // on which the daemon is running does not support a builder command. 101 if err := platformSupports(strings.ToLower(cmd)); err != nil { 102 return err 103 } 104 105 attrs := ast.Attributes 106 original := ast.Original 107 flags := ast.Flags 108 strList := []string{} 109 msg := fmt.Sprintf("Step %d : %s", stepN+1, upperCasedCmd) 110 111 if len(ast.Flags) > 0 { 112 msg += " " + strings.Join(ast.Flags, " ") 113 } 114 115 if cmd == "onbuild" { 116 if ast.Next == nil { 117 return fmt.Errorf("ONBUILD requires at least one argument") 118 } 119 ast = ast.Next.Children[0] 120 strList = append(strList, ast.Value) 121 msg += " " + ast.Value 122 123 if len(ast.Flags) > 0 { 124 msg += " " + strings.Join(ast.Flags, " ") 125 } 126 127 } 128 129 // count the number of nodes that we are going to traverse first 130 // so we can pre-create the argument and message array. This speeds up the 131 // allocation of those list a lot when they have a lot of arguments 132 cursor := ast 133 var n int 134 for cursor.Next != nil { 135 cursor = cursor.Next 136 n++ 137 } 138 msgList := make([]string, n) 139 140 var i int 141 // Append the build-time args to config-environment. 142 // This allows builder config to override the variables, making the behavior similar to 143 // a shell script i.e. `ENV foo bar` overrides value of `foo` passed in build 144 // context. But `ENV foo $foo` will use the value from build context if one 145 // isn't already been defined by a previous ENV primitive. 146 // Note, we get this behavior because we know that ProcessWord() will 147 // stop on the first occurrence of a variable name and not notice 148 // a subsequent one. So, putting the buildArgs list after the Config.Env 149 // list, in 'envs', is safe. 150 envs := b.runConfig.Env 151 for key, val := range b.options.BuildArgs { 152 if !b.isBuildArgAllowed(key) { 153 // skip build-args that are not in allowed list, meaning they have 154 // not been defined by an "ARG" Dockerfile command yet. 155 // This is an error condition but only if there is no "ARG" in the entire 156 // Dockerfile, so we'll generate any necessary errors after we parsed 157 // the entire file (see 'leftoverArgs' processing in evaluator.go ) 158 continue 159 } 160 envs = append(envs, fmt.Sprintf("%s=%s", key, val)) 161 } 162 for ast.Next != nil { 163 ast = ast.Next 164 var str string 165 str = ast.Value 166 if replaceEnvAllowed[cmd] { 167 var err error 168 var words []string 169 170 if allowWordExpansion[cmd] { 171 words, err = ProcessWords(str, envs) 172 if err != nil { 173 return err 174 } 175 strList = append(strList, words...) 176 } else { 177 str, err = ProcessWord(str, envs) 178 if err != nil { 179 return err 180 } 181 strList = append(strList, str) 182 } 183 } else { 184 strList = append(strList, str) 185 } 186 msgList[i] = ast.Value 187 i++ 188 } 189 190 msg += " " + strings.Join(msgList, " ") 191 fmt.Fprintln(b.Stdout, msg) 192 193 // XXX yes, we skip any cmds that are not valid; the parser should have 194 // picked these out already. 195 if f, ok := evaluateTable[cmd]; ok { 196 b.flags = NewBFlags() 197 b.flags.Args = flags 198 return f(b, strList, attrs, original) 199 } 200 201 return fmt.Errorf("Unknown instruction: %s", upperCasedCmd) 202 } 203 204 // platformSupports is a short-term function to give users a quality error 205 // message if a Dockerfile uses a command not supported on the platform. 206 func platformSupports(command string) error { 207 if runtime.GOOS != "windows" { 208 return nil 209 } 210 switch command { 211 case "expose", "user", "stopsignal", "arg": 212 return fmt.Errorf("The daemon on this platform does not support the command '%s'", command) 213 } 214 return nil 215 }