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[proposal] Update the devcontainer.json
schema to be able to represent a 'mergedConfiguration'
#206
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[proposal] Update the devcontainer.json
schema to be able to represent a 'mergedConfiguration'
#206
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devcontainer.json
schema
devcontainer.json
schemadevcontainer.json
schema
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Additionally:
customizations
is a map of objects in the devcontainer.json and a map of object arrays in the merged config.entrypoints
is not in the devcontainer.json, but is an array of strings in the merged config.
How would we represent the origins of the lifecycle commands, so we can log them?
devcontainer.json
schemadevcontainer.json
schema
devcontainer.json
schemadevcontainer.json
schema to be able to represent a 'mergedConfiguration'
Co-authored-by: Brigit Murtaugh <[email protected]>
📢 Open questions <NONE> |
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An optional parameter `$origin` is added to the `LifecycleCommandParallel` that supporting tools can use to indicate the source of the command. For example, this is useful for outputting in the creation log which Feature provided a certain lifecycle hook. The `$` notation is used to indicate this property is additional tooling metadata that should not be present in a user `devcontainer.json`. |
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Would $origin
be the qualified feature id with the version OR devcontainer.json
?
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Now that we have Feature dependencies and may have more than one Feature contributing configuration, we should use the "canonical ID" (for OCI Features, expanded with the SHA hash).
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Although i'm going back and forth here. At the end of the day, the intention I have for $origin
is to make it easier to understand from the logs what is happening. It may be more intuitive to print verbatim what is in the devcontainer.json
.
In the below example, the `entrypoint` property is contributed from two different sources. The merged `$entrypoints` property would be an array of two strings, one for each entrypoint. | ||
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```json | ||
"$entrypoints": [ |
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Are we ok with users including this in their devcontainer.json? I guess we might see this if we don't add a regular entrypoint property.
We don't have the $origin
here which would make sense for consistency.
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I think this is ok. I don't think we'll necessarily do anything with this value if it's in a devcontainer.json
as input, right? The source of truth is still in the image label - this section of the spec is as a standardized output for read-configuration
. I imagine all the $
are ignored during a build and used by humans/loggers.
Is there still an appetite for this? In our SDK/CLI I'm tempted to implement something similar to help wrangle types (ours is written in Go, so I unfortunately can't leverage such rich types to keep everything in one place). Something that would help additionally would be some test cases for how to merge configuration that implementing tools can run against, but that's a matter for another time I think. |
Thanks for the nudge @avidal, this is definitely something I still want us to move forward with. I'll give this spec's comments another pass right now |
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``` | ||
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An optional parameter `$origin` is added to the `LifecycleCommandParallel` that supporting tools can use to indicate the source of the command. For example, this is useful for outputting in the creation log which Feature provided a certain lifecycle hook. The `$` notation is used to indicate this property is additional tooling metadata that should not be present in a user `devcontainer.json`. |
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What is the $origin
of a bit of config that comes from the devcontainer.metadata
image label (assuming it doesn't carry one already)?
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If a section of metadata in devcontainer.metadata
doesn't already have an $origin
, we wouldn't anything. It had to come from somewhere (either a base dev container that defined the image, a Feature, or the user's current dev container). If omitted, we don't have any insight into where it came from and we'd need to log something generically in those cases.
```typescript | ||
{ | ||
// ...other devcontainer.json properties... | ||
onCreateCommand?: LifecycleCommand | LifecycleCommandParallel | LifecycleCommandParallel[] |
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I think that this means that a devcontainer-feature.json
could specify something like:
{"onCreateCommand": [{
"foo": "script/foo",
"$origin": "foo"
}, {
"foo": ["date > /tmp/last-ran"]
}]
Should it be considered an error if a devcontainer-feature.json
specifies a list of objects? Should tools ignore an $origin
property when reading from a json file directly (versus from image metadata)?
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Oh, this change specifically affects the schema for devcontainer.json
, I see. I hadn't realized that devcontainer-feature.json
has a distinct json schema.
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Yes, I don't think we'd want to update the devcontainer-feature.json
schema, which is very close to a devcontainer.json
but distinct. The goal of the $
properties as members of the devcontainer.json
is so that a command such as devcontainer read-configuration
can output a json object that is also a devcontainer.json. That's not the case today without these changes.
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The goal of the
$
properties as members of thedevcontainer.json
is so that a command such asdevcontainer read-configuration
can output a json object that is also a devcontainer.json. That's not the case today without these changes.
I've been thinking more about this, and I'm not sure that's a good thing to have in the spec itself...it seems like an implementation detail for the specific tool in question. The way some of the other comments read indicates that it'd be "valid" in a devcontainer.json
but not actually used (re: a comment above about $entrypoints
)...which kind of implies that the output of read-configuration
is not actually a devcontainer.json
.
That is, it seems like a "proper" implementation would use this schema to encode/decode metadata stored in the image label, and use it internally as the result of merging all of the various metadata sources, but it's not actually valid devcontainer.json
config. Effectively splitting out merged metadata into a separate schema and leaving the existing devcontainer.json
and devcontainer-feature.json
alone.
The way I've been thinking about it lately is that a *.json
contains two sets of data: config and metadata. I parse either devcontainer.json
or devcontainer-feature.json
into Config
or FeatureConfig
respectively, plus a Metadata
entry. I parse the image label into a MergedMetadata
entry. Internally I store the config and the merged metadata to drive the build process. I use the merged metadata to render into an image label. I print the config and merged metadata during debug output as two separate entities.
edit: The main reason I'm bringing this up is because it seems to me that this change may require significant explanation in the docs to reduce confusion for implementors vs declaring it as a distinct schema and indicating that it represents the results of the "merge logic table" and should be used as the entry for the devcontainer.metadata
image label.
Another couple of questions, since this is still in review: this proposal adds an Do we think it's just not important to be able to report on the origin of those properties? Whereas lifecycle commands can use the origin for output logging? |
The goal of this proposal is to:
devcontainer.json
schema