This change adds a CLI command to generate a default config.
This config checks the host operating system to apply specific
modifications that were previously captured in static config
files.
These include:
* select /sbin/ldconfig or /sbin/ldconfig.real depending on which exists on the host
* set the user to allow device access on SUSE-based systems
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change renames the struct for storing CLI flag values options over
config to avoid a conflict with the config package.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
Generate CDI specifications with 644 permissions to allow non-root clients to consume them
See merge request nvidia/container-toolkit/container-toolkit!381
By default, temporary files are created with permissions 600 and
this means that the files created when updating the ldcache are
not readable in non-root containers.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change adds an nvidia-ctk system create-device-nodes command for
creating NVIDIA device nodes. Currently this is limited to control devices
(nvidia-uvm, nvidia-uvm-tools, nvidia-modeset, nvidiactl).
A --dry-run mode is included for outputing commands that would be executed and
the driver root can be specified.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change allows nvcdi.New to return an error in addition to the
constructed library instead of panicing.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
CDI generation modes such as management and wsl don't require
NVML. This change removes the top-level instantiation of nvmllib
and replaces it with an instanitation in the nvml CDI spec generation
code.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change generates device folder permission hooks per device instead of
at a spec level. This ensures that the hook is not injected for a device that
does not have any nested device nodes.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
These changes add a wsl discovery mode to the nvidia-ctk cdi generate command.
If wsl mode is enabled, the driver store for the available devices is used as
the source for discovered entities.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change adds --discovery-mode flag to the nvidia-ctk cdi generate
command and plumbs this through to the CDI API.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change adds an nvcdi package that exposes a basic API for
CDI spec generation. This is used from the nvidia-ctk cdi generate
command and can be consumed by DRA implementations and the device plugin.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This makes the intent of the command line argument clearer since this
relates specifically to the root where the NVIDIA driver is installed.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change uses the `index` mode for the --device-name-strategy when
generating CDI specifications by default. This generates device names
such as nvidia.com/gpu=0 or nvidia.com/gpu=1:0 by default.
Note that this requires a CDI spec version of 0.5.0 and for consumers
(e.g. podman) that are only compatible with older versions one of the
other stragegies (`type-index` or `uuid`) should be used instead to
generate a v0.3.0 or v0.4.0 specification.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>