- Why I did it
Mellanox SDK APIs support python 2 at the moment.
- How I did it
Mellanox SDK APIs support python 2 at the moment.
- How to verify it
Add python 2 to Mellanox syncd only.
- Which release branch to backport (provide reason below if selected)
docker exec -t syncd /bin/bash -c "sx_api_dbg_generate_dump.py /home/sx_api_dbg_dump"
You can see that it will work and generate /home/sx_api_dbg_dump
Signed-off-by: allas <allas@nvidia.com>
**- Why I did it**
We were building a custom version of Supervisor because I had added patches to prevent hangs and crashes if the system clock ever rolled backward. Those changes were merged into the upstream Supervisor repo as of version 3.4.0 (http://supervisord.org/changes.html#id9), therefore, we should be able to simply install the vanilla package via pip. This will also allow us to easily move to Python 3, as Python 3 support was added in version 4.0.0.
**- How I did it**
- Remove Makefiles and patches for building supervisor package from source
- Install Python 3 supervisor package version 4.2.1 in Buster base container
- Also install Python 3 version of supervisord-dependent-startup in Buster base container
- Debian package installed binary in `/usr/bin/`, but pip package installs in `/usr/local/bin/`, so rather than update all absolute paths, I changed all references to simply call `supervisord` and let the system PATH find the executable to prevent future need for changes just in case we ever need to switch back to build a Debian package, then we won't need to modify these again.
- Install Python 2 supervisor package >= 3.4.0 in Stretch and Jessie base containers
Take advantage of an SDK environment variable to customize the location where sdk_socket exists.
In the latest SDK sdk_socket has been moved from /tmp to /var/run which is a better place to contain this kind of file.
However, this prevents the subdirs under /var/run from being mapped to different volumes. To resolve this, we take advantage of an SDK variable to designate the location of sdk_socket.
This requires every process that requires to access sdk_socket have this environment variable defined. However, to define environment variable for each process is less scalable. We take advantage of the docker scope environment variable to avoid that.
It depends on PR 4227
Add the same mechanism I developed for the SwSS service in #2845 to the syncd service. However, in order to cause the SwSS service to also exit and restart in this situation, I developed a docker-wait-any program which the SwSS service uses to wait for either the swss or syncd containers to exit.
- create a dockerfile-marcros.j2 file with all common operations
written as j2 macro
- use single dockerfile instruction for COPY and RUN commands
when possible to improve build time
- reorganize dockerfile instructions to make more cache friendly
(in case someday we will remove --no-cache to build docker images)
Signed-off-by: Stepan Blyschak <stepanb@mellanox.com>
* [build]: put stretch debian packages under target/debs/stretch/
* in stretch build phase, all debian packages built in that stage are placed under target/debs/stretch directory.
* for python-based debian packages, since they are really the same for jessie and stretch, they are placed under target/python-debs directory.
Signed-off-by: Guohan Lu <gulv@microsoft.com>
- Update SAI (added support of SN2740 profile).
- Update SDK to version 4.2.3130.
- Update FW to version 13.1224.0140.
- Update HW MGMT to version 1.0.0160.
- This PR allows supervisord to log syncd exit events to syslog
- Syncd dockers now are built from docker-config-engine instead of docker-base
- Supervisord in all syncd dockers now call syncd_start.s which is installed by sonic-sairedis repo
- Consolidate config.sh and start.sh scripts into one script (start.sh)
- Solve issue #435 - All dockers now run supervisord as their ENTRYPOINT
- All stdout/stderr output from processes managed by supervisord is now sent to syslog instead of their own files
- Supervisord log messages are now also sent to syslog
- Removed unused smartmontools package from docker-platform-monitor