The entity using a runtime to create a container MUST be able to use the operations defined in this specification against that same container. Whether other entities using the same, or other, instance of the runtime can see that container is out of scope of this specification.
The state of a container includes the following properties:
-
ociVersion
(string, REQUIRED) is version of the Open Container Initiative Runtime Specification with which the state complies. -
id
(string, REQUIRED) is the container's ID. This MUST be unique across all containers on this host. There is no requirement that it be unique across hosts. -
status
(string, REQUIRED) is the runtime state of the container. The value MAY be one of:creating
: the container is being created (step 2 in the lifecycle)created
: the runtime has finished the create operation (after step 2 in the lifecycle), and the container process has neither exited nor executed the user-specified programrunning
: the container process has executed the user-specified program but has not exited (after step 5 in the lifecycle)stopped
: the container process has exited (step 7 in the lifecycle)
Additional values MAY be defined by the runtime, however, they MUST be used to represent new runtime states not defined above.
-
pid
(int, REQUIRED whenstatus
iscreated
orrunning
on Linux, OPTIONAL on other platforms) is the ID of the container process. For hooks executed in the runtime namespace, it is the pid as seen by the runtime. For hooks executed in the container namespace, it is the pid as seen by the container. -
bundle
(string, REQUIRED) is the absolute path to the container's bundle directory. This is provided so that consumers can find the container's configuration and root filesystem on the host. -
annotations
(map, OPTIONAL) contains the list of annotations associated with the container. If no annotations were provided then this property MAY either be absent or an empty map.
The state MAY include additional properties.
When serialized in JSON, the format MUST adhere to the following pattern:
{
"ociVersion": "0.2.0",
"id": "oci-container1",
"status": "running",
"pid": 4422,
"bundle": "/containers/redis",
"annotations": {
"myKey": "myValue"
}
}
See Query State for information on retrieving the state of a container.
The lifecycle describes the timeline of events that happen from when a container is created to when it ceases to exist.
- OCI compliant runtime's
create
command is invoked with a reference to the location of the bundle and a unique identifier. - The container's runtime environment MUST be created according to the configuration in
config.json
. If the runtime is unable to create the environment specified in theconfig.json
, it MUST generate an error. While the resources requested in theconfig.json
MUST be created, the user-specified program (fromprocess
) MUST NOT be run at this time. Any updates toconfig.json
after this step MUST NOT affect the container. - The
prestart
hooks MUST be invoked by the runtime. If anyprestart
hook fails, the runtime MUST generate an error, stop the container, and continue the lifecycle at step 12. - The
createRuntime
hooks MUST be invoked by the runtime. If anycreateRuntime
hook fails, the runtime MUST generate an error, stop the container, and continue the lifecycle at step 12. - The
createContainer
hooks MUST be invoked by the runtime. If anycreateContainer
hook fails, the runtime MUST generate an error, stop the container, and continue the lifecycle at step 12. - Runtime's
start
command is invoked with the unique identifier of the container. - The
startContainer
hooks MUST be invoked by the runtime. If anystartContainer
hook fails, the runtime MUST generate an error, stop the container, and continue the lifecycle at step 12. - The runtime MUST run the user-specified program, as specified by
process
. - The
poststart
hooks MUST be invoked by the runtime. If anypoststart
hook fails, the runtime MUST log a warning, but the remaining hooks and lifecycle continue as if the hook had succeeded. - The container process exits.
This MAY happen due to erroring out, exiting, crashing or the runtime's
kill
operation being invoked. - Runtime's
delete
command is invoked with the unique identifier of the container. - The container MUST be destroyed by undoing the steps performed during create phase (step 2).
- The
poststop
hooks MUST be invoked by the runtime. If anypoststop
hook fails, the runtime MUST log a warning, but the remaining hooks and lifecycle continue as if the hook had succeeded.
In cases where the specified operation generates an error, this specification does not mandate how, or even if, that error is returned or exposed to the user of an implementation. Unless otherwise stated, generating an error MUST leave the state of the environment as if the operation were never attempted - modulo any possible trivial ancillary changes such as logging.
In cases where the specified operation logs a warning, this specification does not mandate how, or even if, that warning is returned or exposed to the user of an implementation. Unless otherwise stated, logging a warning does not change the flow of the operation; it MUST continue as if the warning had not been logged.
Unless otherwise stated, runtimes MUST support the following operations.
Note: these operations are not specifying any command-line APIs, and the parameters are inputs for general operations.
state <container-id>
This operation MUST generate an error if it is not provided the ID of a container. Attempting to query a container that does not exist MUST generate an error. This operation MUST return the state of a container as specified in the State section.
create <container-id> <path-to-bundle>
This operation MUST generate an error if it is not provided a path to the bundle and the container ID to associate with the container. If the ID provided is not unique across all containers within the scope of the runtime, or is not valid in any other way, the implementation MUST generate an error and a new container MUST NOT be created. This operation MUST create a new container.
All of the properties configured in config.json
except for process
MUST be applied.
process.args
MUST NOT be applied until triggered by the start
operation.
The remaining process
properties MAY be applied by this operation.
If the runtime cannot apply a property as specified in the configuration, it MUST generate an error and a new container MUST NOT be created.
The runtime MAY validate config.json
against this spec, either generically or with respect to the local system capabilities, before creating the container (step 2).
Runtime callers who are interested in pre-create validation can run bundle-validation tools before invoking the create operation.
Any changes made to the config.json
file after this operation will not have an effect on the container.
start <container-id>
This operation MUST generate an error if it is not provided the container ID.
Attempting to start
a container that is not created
MUST have no effect on the container and MUST generate an error.
This operation MUST run the user-specified program as specified by process
.
This operation MUST generate an error if process
was not set.
kill <container-id> <signal>
This operation MUST generate an error if it is not provided the container ID.
Attempting to send a signal to a container that is neither created
nor running
MUST have no effect on the container and MUST generate an error.
This operation MUST send the specified signal to the container process.
delete <container-id>
This operation MUST generate an error if it is not provided the container ID.
Attempting to delete
a container that is not stopped
MUST have no effect on the container and MUST generate an error.
Deleting a container MUST delete the resources that were created during the create
step.
Note that resources associated with the container, but not created by this container, MUST NOT be deleted.
Once a container is deleted its ID MAY be used by a subsequent container.
Many of the operations specified in this specification have "hooks" that allow for additional actions to be taken before or after each operation. See runtime configuration for hooks for more information.