nsinit

command
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Published: Feb 23, 2016 License: Apache-2.0, Apache-2.0 Imports: 22 Imported by: 0

README

nsinit

nsinit is a cli application which demonstrates the use of libcontainer. It is able to spawn new containers or join existing containers.

How to build?

First add the libcontainer/vendor into your GOPATH. It's because libcontainer vendors all its dependencies, so it can be built predictably.

export GOPATH=$GOPATH:/your/path/to/libcontainer/vendor

Then get into the nsinit folder and get the imported file. Use make command to make the nsinit binary.

cd libcontainer/nsinit
go get
make

We have finished compiling the nsinit package, but a root filesystem must be provided for use along with a container configuration file.

Choose a proper place to run your container. For example we use /busybox.

mkdir /busybox 
curl -sSL 'https://github.com/jpetazzo/docker-busybox/raw/buildroot-2014.11/rootfs.tar' | tar -xC /busybox

Then you may need to write a configuration file named container.json in the /busybox folder. Environment, networking, and different capabilities for the container are specified in this file. The configuration is used for each process executed inside the container.

See the sample_configs folder for examples of what the container configuration should look like.

cp libcontainer/sample_configs/minimal.json /busybox/container.json
cd /busybox

You can customize container.json per your needs. After that, nsinit is ready to work.

To execute /bin/bash in the current directory as a container just run the following as root:

nsinit exec --tty --config container.json /bin/bash

If you wish to spawn another process inside the container while your current bash session is running, run the same command again to get another bash shell (or change the command). If the original process (PID 1) dies, all other processes spawned inside the container will be killed and the namespace will be removed.

You can identify if a process is running in a container by looking to see if state.json is in the root of the directory.

You may also specify an alternate root directory from where the container.json file is read and where the state.json file will be saved.

How to use?

Currently nsinit has 9 commands. Type nsinit -h to list all of them. And for every alternative command, you can also use --help to get more detailed help documents. For example, nsinit config --help.

nsinit cli application is implemented using cli.go. Lots of details are handled in cli.go, so the implementation of nsinit itself is very clean and clear.

  • config It will generate a standard configuration file for a container. By default, it will generate as the template file in config.go. It will modify the template if you have specified some configuration by options.
  • exec Starts a container and execute a new command inside it. Besides common options, it has some special options as below.
    • --tty,-t: allocate a TTY to the container.
    • --config: you can specify a configuration file. By default, it will use template configuration.
    • --id: specify the ID for a container. By default, the id is "nsinit".
    • --user,-u: set the user, uid, and/or gid for the process. By default the value is "root".
    • --cwd: set the current working dir.
    • --env: set environment variables for the process.
  • init It's an internal command that is called inside the container's namespaces to initialize the namespace and exec the user's process. It should not be called externally.
  • oom Display oom notifications for a container, you should specify container id.
  • pause Pause the container's processes, you should specify container id. It will use cgroup freeze subsystem to help.
  • unpause Unpause the container's processes. Same with pause.
  • stats Display statistics for the container, it will mainly show cgroup and network statistics.
  • state Get the container's current state. You can also read the state from state.json in your container_id folder.
  • checkpoint Checkpoint a running container. You can read this for more detailed information about options.
    • --id: specify the ID for a container. By default, the id is "nsinit".
    • --image-path: path for saving criu image files. You must specify this option.
    • --work-path: path for saving work files and logs. By default it will generate a folder named "criu.work" in root directory.
    • --leave-running: leave the process running after checkpointing.
    • --tcp-established: allow open tcp connections.
    • --ext-unix-sk: allow external unix sockets.
    • --shell-job: allow shell jobs.
    • --page-server: ADDRESS:PORT of the page server. The dump image can be sent to a criu page server if we have a page server.
  • restore Restore a container from a previous checkpoint. Options are almost the same with checkpoint and --image-path must be specified.
  • help, h Shows a list of commands or help for one command.

Documentation

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