Remove a wrongly added include which was added in commit3c2e77ee(Add a compatibility header for CentOS/RHEL 6, 2016-01-29) apparently to fix this compile error on centos 6: > In file included from > Godeps/_workspace/src/github.com/opencontainers/runc/libcontainer/nsenter/nsexec.c:20: > /usr/include/linux/netlink.h:35: error: expected specifier-qualifier-list before 'sa_family_t' The glibc bits/sockaddr.h says that this header should never be included directly[1]. Instead, sys/socket.h should be used. The problem was correctly fixed later, in commit394fb55(Fix build error on centos6, 2016-03-02) so the incorrect bits/sockaddr.h can safely be removed. This is needed to build musl libc. Fixes #761 [1]: https://github.molgen.mpg.de/git-mirror/glibc/blob/20003c49884422da7ffbc459cdeee768a6fee07b/bits/sockaddr.h#L20 Signed-off-by: Natanael Copa <natanael.copa@docker.com>
nsenter
The nsenter package registers a special init constructor that is called before
the Go runtime has a chance to boot. This provides us the ability to setns on
existing namespaces and avoid the issues that the Go runtime has with multiple
threads. This constructor will be called if this package is registered,
imported, in your go application.
The nsenter package will import "C" and it uses cgo
package. In cgo, if the import of "C" is immediately preceded by a comment, that comment,
called the preamble, is used as a header when compiling the C parts of the package.
So every time we import package nsenter, the C code function nsexec() would be
called. And package nsenter is now only imported in Docker execdriver, so every time
before we call execdriver.Exec(), that C code would run.
nsexec() will first check the environment variable _LIBCONTAINER_INITPID
which will give the process of the container that should be joined. Namespaces fd will
be found from /proc/[pid]/ns and set by setns syscall.
And then get the pipe number from _LIBCONTAINER_INITPIPE, error message could
be transfered through it. If tty is added, _LIBCONTAINER_CONSOLE_PATH will
have value and start a console for output.
Finally, nsexec() will clone a child process , exit the parent process and let
the Go runtime take over.