Commit Graph

5 Commits (e9311bcc7463648f1042fb7557a81156ddbd2194)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sébastien Han c2f1dca823 docker: use a better method to pull images
We changed the way we declare image.
Prior to this patch we must have a "user/image:tag"
format, which is incompatible with non docker-hub registry where you
usually don't have a "user". On the docker hub a "user" is also
identified as a namespace, so for Ceph the user was "ceph".

Variables have been simplified with only:

* ceph_docker_image
* ceph_docker_image_tag

1. For docker hub images: ceph_docker_name: "ceph/daemon" will give
you the 'daemon' image of the 'ceph' user.

2. For non docker hub images: ceph_docker_name: "daemon" will simply
give you the "daemon" image.

Infrastructure playbooks have been modified as well.
The file group_vars/all.docker.yml.sample has been removed as well.
It is hard to maintain since we have to generate it manually. If
you want to configure specific variables for a specific daemon simply
edit group_vars/$DAEMON.yml

Fixes: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1420207
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
2017-02-09 17:57:18 +01:00
Andrew Schoen 25277587fa ceph-common: include ceph_docker_registry when fetching the image
Signed-off-by: Andrew Schoen <aschoen@redhat.com>
2017-01-16 09:51:20 -06:00
Ivan Font 6f5f6610a8 Support for docker image tags
Signed-off-by: Ivan Font <ivan.font@redhat.com>
2016-07-12 15:49:07 -07:00
Ivan Font a61b8ec071 Fail when we cannot retrieve docker image
If the docker image cannot be retrieved we will fail this task silently
and the playbook ultimately succeeds without a successful deployment.
This change makes it so we fail the playbook immediately.

Signed-off-by: Ivan Font <ivan.font@redhat.com>
2016-06-23 17:24:01 -07:00
Daniel Gryniewicz 9d08d74385 Allow running on local dev docker images
Docker makes it difficult to use images that are not on signed
registries.  This is a problem for developers, who likely won't have
access to a registry with proper signed certificates.

This allows the ability to use any docker image on the machine running
vagrant/ansible.  The way it works is that the image in question is
exported locally, then sent to each target box and imported there.

Signed-off-by: Daniel Gryniewicz <dang@redhat.com>
2016-06-03 14:52:21 -04:00