This change adds a "required" option to the new toml config
that controls whether a default config is returned or not.
This is useful from the NVIDIA Container Runtime Hook, where
/run/driver/nvidia/etc/nvidia-container-runtime/config.toml
is checked before the standard path.
This fixes a bug where the default config was always applied
when this config was not used.
See https://github.com/NVIDIA/nvidia-container-toolkit/issues/106
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change renames the csv.library-search-path option to
library-search-path so as to be more generally applicable in
future. Note that the option is still only applied in csv mode.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This chagne simplifies the nvidia-ctk config default command.
By default it now outputs the default config to STDOUT, and can
optionally output this to file.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change introduced a config.Toml type that is used as the base for
config file processing and manipulation. This ensures that configs --
including commented values -- can be handled consistently.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change ensures that the Config structs from internal.Config
are used for the NVIDIA Container Runtime Hook config too.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change extends the nvidia-ctk runtime configure command
with a --config-mode=oci-hook that creates an OCI hook json file.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
If the config.toml has an empty root specified, this could be
passed to the NVIDIA Container CLI through the --root flag
which causes argument parsing to fail. This change only
adds the --root flag if the config option is specified
and is non-empty.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change ensures that the nvidia-ctk config default command
generates a config file that is compatible with the official documentation
to, for example, disable cgroups in the NVIDIA Container CLI.
This requires that whitespace around comments is stripped before outputing the
contets.
This also adds an option to load a config and modify it in-place instead. This can
be triggered as a post-install step, for example.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This changes splits the functionality in the internal system package
into two packages: one for dealing with devices and one for dealing
with kernel modules. This removes ambiguity around the meaning of
driver / device roots in each case.
In each case, a root can be specified where device nodes are created
or kernel modules loaded.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change adds a --create-device-nodes option to the
nvidia-ctk system create-dev-char-symlinks command to create
device nodes. The currently only creates control device nodes.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
These changes add a --load-kernel-modules option to the
nvidia-ctk system commands. If specified the NVIDIA kernel modules
(nvidia, nvidia-uvm, and nvidia-modeset) are loaded before any
operations on device nodes are performed.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change adds an nvidia-container-runtime-hook.path config option
to allow the path used for the prestart hook to be overridden. This
is useful in cases where multiple NVIDIA Container Toolkit installations
are present.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This change adds a symlinks.Resolve function for resolving symlinks and
updates usages across the code to make use of it.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
This chagne allows the csv mode option to specified in the
nvidia-ctk cdi generate command and adds a --csv.file option
that can be repeated to specify the CSV files to be processed.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
The nvcid api is extended to allow for merged device options to
be specified. If any options are specified, then a merged device
is generated.
Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
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 change adds an nvidia-container-runtime.cdi executable that
overrides the runtime mode from the config to "cdi".
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>