// TempLayerArchive creates a temporary archive of the given image's filesystem layer. // The archive is stored on disk and will be automatically deleted as soon as has been read. // If output is not nil, a human-readable progress bar will be written to it. // FIXME: does this belong in Graph? How about MktempFile, let the caller use it for archives? func (graph *Graph) TempLayerArchive(id string, compression archive.Compression, sf *utils.StreamFormatter, output io.Writer) (*archive.TempArchive, error) { image, err := graph.Get(id) if err != nil { return nil, err } tmp, err := graph.Mktemp("") if err != nil { return nil, err } a, err := image.TarLayer() if err != nil { return nil, err } progress := utils.ProgressReader(a, 0, output, sf, false, utils.TruncateID(id), "Buffering to disk") defer progress.Close() return archive.NewTempArchive(progress, tmp) }
// CmdTarLayer return the tarLayer of the image func (s *TagStore) CmdTarLayer(job *engine.Job) engine.Status { if len(job.Args) != 1 { return job.Errorf("usage: %s NAME", job.Name) } name := job.Args[0] if image, err := s.LookupImage(name); err == nil && image != nil { fs, err := image.TarLayer() if err != nil { return job.Error(err) } defer fs.Close() if written, err := io.Copy(job.Stdout, fs); err != nil { return job.Error(err) } else { log.Debugf("rendered layer for %s of [%d] size", image.ID, written) } return engine.StatusOK } return job.Errorf("No such image: %s", name) }