LinuxKit
LinuxKit, a toolkit for building custom minimal, immutable Linux distributions.
- Secure defaults without compromising usability
- Everything is replaceable and customisable
- Immutable infrastructure applied to building Linux distributions
- Completely stateless, but persistent storage can be attached
- Easy tooling, with easy iteration
- Built with containers, for running containers
- Designed for building and running clustered applications, including but not limited to container orchestration such as Docker or Kubernetes
- Designed from the experience of building Docker Editions, but redesigned as a general-purpose toolkit
- Designed to be managed by external tooling, such as Infrakit or similar tools
- Includes a set of longer-term collaborative projects in various stages of development to innovate on kernel and userspace changes, particularly around security
Getting Started
LinuxKit uses the moby
tool for image builds, and the linuxkit
tool for pushing and running VM images.
Simple build instructions: use make
to build. This will build the tools in bin/
. Add this
to your PATH
or copy it to somewhere in your PATH
eg sudo cp bin/* /usr/local/bin/
. Or you can use sudo make install
.
If you already have go
installed you can use go get -u github.com/moby/tool/cmd/moby
to install
the moby
build tool, and go get -u github.com/linuxkit/linuxkit/src/cmd/linuxkit
to install the linuxkit
tool.
On MacOS there is a brew tap
available. Detailed instructions are at linuxkit/homebrew-linuxkit,
the short summary is
brew tap linuxkit/linuxkit
brew install --HEAD moby
brew install --HEAD linuxkit
Once you have built the tool, use moby build linuxkit.yml
to build the example configuration,
and linuxkit run linuxkit
to run locally. Use halt
to terminate on the console.
Build requirements:
- GNU
make
- Docker
- optionally
qemu
Booting and Testing
You can use linuxkit run <name>
or linuxkit run <name>.<format> to execute the image you created with
moby build .yml. This will use a suitable backend for your platform or you can choose one, for example VMWare. See
linuxkit run --help`.
Currently supported platforms are:
- Local hypervisors
- Cloud based platforms:
Running the Tests
The test suite uses rtf
To install this you should use make bin/rtf && make install
.
To run the test suite:
cd test
rtf -x run
This will run the tests and put the results in a the _results
directory!
Run control is handled using labels and with pattern matching.
To run add a label you may use:
rtf -x -l slow run
To run tests that match the pattern linuxkit.examples
you would use the following command:
rtf -x run linuxkit.examples
Building your own customised image
To customise, copy or modify the linuxkit.yml
to your own file.yml
or use one of the examples and then run moby build file.yml
to
generate its specified output. You can run the output with linuxkit run file
.
The yaml file specifies a kernel and base init system, a set of containers that are built into the generated image and started at boot time. You can specify the type
of artifact to build with the moby
tool eg moby build -output vhd linuxkit.yml
.
Yaml Specification
The yaml format specifies the image to be built:
kernel
specifies a kernel Docker image, containing a kernel and a filesystem tarball, eg containing modules. The example kernels are built from kernel/
init
is the base init
process Docker image, which is unpacked as the base system, containing init
, containerd
, runc
and a few tools. Built from pkg/init/
onboot
are the system containers, executed sequentially in order. They should terminate quickly when done.
services
is the system services, which normally run for the whole time the system is up
files
are additional files to add to the image
For a more detailed overview of the options see yaml documentation
Architecture and security
There is an overview of the architecture covering how the system works.
There is an overview of the security considerations and direction covering the security design of the system.
Roadmap
This project was extensively reworked from the code we are shipping in Docker Editions, and the result is not yet production quality. The plan is to return to production
quality during Q2 2017, and rebase the Docker Editions on this open source project.
This is an open project without fixed judgements, open to the community to set the direction. The guiding principles are:
- Security informs design
- Infrastructure as code: immutable, manageable with code
- Sensible, secure, and well-tested defaults
- An open, pluggable platform for diverse use cases
- Easy to use and participate in the project
- Built with containers, for portability and reproducibility
- Run with system containers, for isolation and extensibility
- A base for robust products
Development reports
There are weekly development reports summarizing work carried out in the week.
FAQ
See FAQ.
Released under the Apache 2.0 license.