LXD
関連記事
LXD はコンテナ(LXC経由)および仮想マシン(QEMU経由)のマネージャー/ハイパーバイザーです。
目次
必要なソフトウェア
lxd パッケージをインストールします。
あるいは、インスタンスを自動起動する場合など、lxd.service
を直接、有効にすることもできます。
セットアップ
一般ユーザー用のコンテナ設定
一般ユーザー用のコンテナ(unprivileged containers)を使用することが推奨されます(違いについては Linux_Containers#Privileged_containers_or_unprivileged_containers を参照してください)。
このために、/etc/subuid
と /etc/subgid
の両方を変更します(これらのファイルが存在しない場合は、作成してください)。コンテナで使用する uid / gid のマッピングを各ユーザーに設定する必要があります。以下の例は単に root ユーザー(および systemd システムユニット)のためのものです:
usermod
コマンドを以下のように使用することもできます:
usermod -v 1000000-1000999999 -w 1000000-1000999999 root
または、上記のファイルを直接以下のように変更することもできます:
/etc/subuid
root:1000000:1000000000
/etc/subgid
root:1000000:1000000000
これで、すべてのコンテナはデフォルトで unprivileged
として起動されます。
代替方法については、特権コンテナの設定方法 を参照してください。
LXD の設定
LXD を使うにはストレージプールと (インターネットを使いたい場合) ネットワークを設定する必要があります。以下のコマンドを root で実行してください:
# lxd init
非特権ユーザーとして LXD にアクセス
デフォルトでは LXD デーモンは lxd
グループのユーザーからのアクセスを許可するので、ユーザーをグループに追加してください:
# usermod -a -G lxd <user>
使用方法
LXD consists of two parts:
- the daemon (the lxd binary)
- the client (the lxc binary)
The client is used to control one or multiple daemon(s).
The client can also be used to control remote LXD servers.
Overview of commands
You can get an overview of all available commands by typing:
$ lxc
Create a container
You can create a container with lxc launch
, for example:
$ lxc launch ubuntu:20.04
Container are based on images, that are downloaded from image servers or remote LXD servers.
You can see the list of already added servers with:
$ lxc remote list
You can list all images on a server with lxc image list
, for example:
$ lxc image list images:
This will show you all images on one of the default servers: images.linuxcontainers.org
You can also search for images by adding terms like the distribution name:
$ lxc image list images:debian
Launch a container with an image from a specific server with:
$ lxc launch servername:imagename
For example:
$ lxc launch images:centos/8/amd64 centos
To create an amd64 Arch container:
$ lxc launch images:archlinux/current/amd64 arch
Create a virtual machine
Just add the flag --vm
to lxc launch
:
$ lxc launch ubuntu:20.04 --vm
Use and manage a container or VM
See Instance managament in the official Getting Started Guide of LXD.
Container/VM configuration (optional)
You can add various options to instances (containers and VMs).
See Configuration of instances in the official Advanced Guide of LXD for details.
ヒントとテクニック
Access the containers by name on the host
This assumes that you are using the default bridge that it is named lxdbr0
and that you are using systemd-resolved.
# systemd-resolve --interface lxdbr0 --set-domain '~lxd' --set-dns $(lxc network get lxdbr0 ipv4.address | cut -d / -f 1)
You can now access the containers by name:
$ ping containername.lxd
Other solution
It seems that the systemd-resolve solution stops working after some time.
Another solution is to use systemd-networkd with the following lxd.network
(replace x
and y
to match your bridge IP):
/etc/systemd/network/lxd.network
[Match] Name=lxdbr0 [Network] DNS=10.x.y.1 Domains=~lxd IgnoreCarrierLoss=yes [Address] Address=10.x.y.1/24 Gateway=10.x.y.1
Use Wayland and Xorg applications
There are multiple methods to use GUI applications inside containers, you can find an overview in the official LXD forum.
The following method grants containers access to the host's sockets of Wayland (+Xwayland) or Xorg.
Add the following devices to a containers profile
See also LXD documentation regarding devices.
General device for the GPU:
mygpu: type: gpu
Device for the Wayland socket:
Waylandsocket: bind: container connect: unix:/run/user/1000/wayland-0 listen: unix:/mnt/wayland1/wayland-0 uid: "1000" gid: "1000" security.gid: "1000" security.uid: "1000" mode: "0777" type: proxy
Device for the Xorg (or Xwayland) Socket:
Xsocket: bind: container connect: unix:/tmp/.X11-unix/X0 listen: unix:/mnt/xorg1/X0 uid: "1000" gid: "1000" security.gid: "1000" security.uid: "1000" mode: "0777" type: proxy
Link the sockets to the right location inside the container
Shell script to link the Wayland socket:
#!/bin/sh mkdir /run/user/1000 ln -s /mnt/wayland1/wayland-0 /run/user/1000/wayland-0
Link the Xorg (or Xwayland) socket:
#!/bin/sh ln -s /mnt/xorg1/X0 /tmp/.X11-unix/X0
Add environment variables to the users config inside the container
For Wayland:
$ echo "export XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=/run/user/1000" >> ~/.profile $ echo "export WAYLAND_DISPLAY=wayland-0" >> ~/.profile $ echo "export QT_QPA_PLATFORM=wayland" >> ~/.profile
For Xorg (or Xwayland):
$ echo "export DISPLAY=:0" >> ~/.profile
Reload the ~/.profile
:
$ source ~/.profile
Install necessary software in the container
Necessary software needs to be added. For now, you can install an example GUI application; this will probably install all necessary packages as well.
Start GUI applications
Now, you should be able to start GUI applications inside the container (via terminal for example) and make them appear as a window on your hosts display.
You can try out glxgears for example.
Privileged containers
If you want to set up a privileged container, you must provide the config key security.privileged=true
.
Either during container creation:
$ lxc launch ubuntu:20.04 ubuntu -c security.privileged=true
Or for an already existing container, you may edit the configuration:
$ lxc config edit ubuntu
name: ubuntu profiles: - default config: ... security.privileged: "true" ...
Add a disk device
Read-Only
If you want to share a disk device from the host to a container, all you need to do is add a disk
device to your container. The virtual disk
device needs a name (only used internally in the LXC configuration file), a path on the host's filesystem pointing to the disk you want to mount, as well as a desired mountpoint on the container's filesystem.
$ lxc config device add containername virtualdiskname disk source=/path/to/host/disk/ path=/path/to/mountpoint/on/container
Read-Write (unprivileged container)
The preferred method for read/write access is to use the "shift" method included in LXD.
shift is based on Linux kernel functionality and available in two different versions:
- the most recent version is called "idmapped mounts" and is included in all upstream kernels >5.12 by default. So it is also included in the regular Arch Linux kernel (linux).
- the old version is called "shiftfs" and needs to be added manually to most kernels as a kernel module. It is available as a legacy version to support older kernels. You can take a look at this GitHub repo that uses the shiftfs kernel module from Ubuntu kernels: https://github.com/toby63/shiftfs-dkms
Shift should be available and activated by default on Arch with the regular Arch Linux kernel (linux) and the lxd package.
1. To check whether shift is available on your system, run lxc info
The first part of the output shows you:
kernel_features: idmapped_mounts: "true" shiftfs: "false"
If either idmapped_mounts or shiftfs is true, then your kernel includes it already and you can use shift. If it is not true, you should check your kernel version and might try the "shiftfs" legacy version mentioned above.
The second part of the output shows you either:
lxc_features: idmapped_mounts_v2: "true"
or:
lxc_features: shiftfs: "true"
If either idmapped_mounts or shiftfs is true, then LXD has already enabled it. If it is not enabled, you must enable it first.
2. Usage
Then you can simply set the "shift" config key to "true" in the disk device options. See: LXD Documentation on disk devices
See also: tutorial in the LXD forums
Bash completion doesn't work
This workaround may fix the issue:
# ln -s /usr/share/bash-completion/completions/lxd /usr/share/bash-completion/completions/lxc
トラブルシューティング
lxd-agent inside a virtual machine
Inside some virtual machine images the lxd-agent
is not enabled by default.
In this case you have to enable it manually, for example by mounting a 9p
network share. This requires console access with a valid user.
1. Login with lxc console
:
Replace virtualmachine-name
accordingly.
$ lxc console virtualmachine-name
Login as root:
$ su root
Mount the network share:
$ mount -t 9p config /mnt/
Go into the folder and run the install script (this will enable the lxd-agent inside the VM):
$ cd /mnt/ $ ./install.sh
After sucessful install, reboot with:
$ reboot
Afterwards the lxd-agent
is available and lxc exec
should work.
カーネルコンフィグの確認
デフォルトで Arch Linux のカーネルは Linux Containers とフロントエンドの LXD が動くようにコンパイルされています。カスタムカーネルを使っている場合やカーネルオプションを変更している場合、LXD が動かない場合があります。コンテナを実行できるようにカーネルが設定されているか確認してください:
$ lxc-checkconfig
Resource limits are not applied when viewed from inside a container
Install lxcfs and start lxcfs.service
.
lxd will need to be restarted. Enable lxcfs.service
for the service to be started at boot time.
Starting a virtual machine fails
If you see the error: Error: Required EFI firmware settings file missing: /usr/share/ovmf/x64/OVMF_VARS.ms.fd
Arch Linux does not distribute secure boot signed ovmf firmware, to boot virtual machines you need to disable secure boot for the time being.
$ lxc launch ubuntu:18.04 test-vm --vm -c security.secureboot=false
This can also be added to the default profile by doing:
$ lxc profile set default security.secureboot=false
No IPv4 with systemd-networkd
Starting with version version 244.1, systemd detects if /sys
is writable by containers. If it is, udev is automatically started and breaks IPv4 in unprivileged containers. See commit bf331d8 and discussion on linuxcontainers.
On containers created past 2020, there should already be a systemd.networkd.service
override to work around this issue, create it if it is not:
/etc/systemd/system/systemd-networkd.service.d/lxc.conf
[Service] BindReadOnlyPaths=/sys
You could also work around this issue by setting raw.lxc: lxc.mount.auto = proc:rw sys:ro
in the profile of the container to ensure /sys
is read-only for the entire container, although this may be problematic, as per the linked discussion above.
アンインストール
Stop and disable lxd.service
and lxd.socket
. Then uninstall the lxd package.
If you uninstalled the package without disabling the service, you might have a lingering broken symlink at /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.wants/lxd.service
.
If you want to remove all data:
# rm -r /var/lib/lxd
If you used any of the example networking configuration, you should remove those as well.