Hi,
I was playing about with flink using the docker images provided, however I noticed that the entry point is a bash script. There is a problem in using bash as the PID1 process in a docker container as docker sends SIGTERM, but bash doesn't send this to its child processes. This means for example that if a container was ever killed and a child process had a file open then the file may get corrupted. It's covered in more detail in a blog post here: https://blog.phusion.nl/2015/01/20/docker-and-the-pid-1-zombie-reaping-problem/ If this is a big enough concern should I raise a jira ticket? Kat |
Hi Kat,
yes, this looks like it may be an issue, please create the Jira ticket. Some background: Although docker-entrypoint.sh uses "exec" to run succeeding bash scripts for jobmanager.sh and taskmanager.sh, respectively, and thus replaces itself with these scripts, they do not seem to use exec themselves for foreground processes and thus may run into the problem you described. I may be wrong, but I did not find any other fallback to handle this in the current code base. Regards Nico On Monday, 10 April 2017 18:00:15 CEST Kathleen Sharp wrote: > Hi, > > I was playing about with flink using the docker images provided, > however I noticed that the entry point is a bash script. > > There is a problem in using bash as the PID1 process in a docker > container as docker sends SIGTERM, but bash doesn't send this to its > child processes. > > This means for example that if a container was ever killed and a child > process had a file open then the file may get corrupted. > > It's covered in more detail in a blog post here: > https://blog.phusion.nl/2015/01/20/docker-and-the-pid-1-zombie-reaping-probl > em/ > > If this is a big enough concern should I raise a jira ticket? > > Kat signature.asc (201 bytes) Download Attachment |
I concur with Nico. We're actively working on improving Flink-on-Docker, and this is a valid concern. -- Patrick Lucas On Tue, Apr 11, 2017 at 11:01 AM, Nico Kruber <[hidden email]> wrote: Hi Kat, |
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