]> git.proxmox.com Git - mirror_lxc.git/blob - doc/lxc.container.conf.sgml.in
conf: support mount propagation
[mirror_lxc.git] / doc / lxc.container.conf.sgml.in
1 <!--
2
3 lxc: linux Container library
4
5 (C) Copyright IBM Corp. 2007, 2008
6
7 Authors:
8 Daniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano at free.fr>
9
10 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
11 modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
12 License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
13 version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
14
15 This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
16 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
17 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
18 Lesser General Public License for more details.
19
20 You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
21 License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
22 Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
23
24 -->
25
26 <!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC @docdtd@ [
27
28 <!ENTITY seealso SYSTEM "@builddir@/see_also.sgml">
29 ]>
30
31 <refentry>
32
33 <docinfo><date>@LXC_GENERATE_DATE@</date></docinfo>
34
35 <refmeta>
36 <refentrytitle>lxc.container.conf</refentrytitle>
37 <manvolnum>5</manvolnum>
38 </refmeta>
39
40 <refnamediv>
41 <refname>lxc.container.conf</refname>
42
43 <refpurpose>
44 LXC container configuration file
45 </refpurpose>
46 </refnamediv>
47
48 <refsect1>
49 <title>Description</title>
50
51 <para>
52 LXC is the well-known and heavily tested low-level Linux container
53 runtime. It is in active development since 2008 and has proven itself in
54 critical production environments world-wide. Some of its core contributors
55 are the same people that helped to implement various well-known
56 containerization features inside the Linux kernel.
57 </para>
58
59 <para>
60 LXC's main focus is system containers. That is, containers which offer an
61 environment as close as possible as the one you'd get from a VM but
62 without the overhead that comes with running a separate kernel and
63 simulating all the hardware.
64 </para>
65
66 <para>
67 This is achieved through a combination of kernel security features such as
68 namespaces, mandatory access control and control groups.
69 </para>
70
71 <para>
72 LXC has supports unprivileged containers. Unprivileged containers are
73 containers that are run without any privilege. This requires support for
74 user namespaces in the kernel that the container is run on. LXC was the
75 first runtime to support unprivileged containers after user namespaces
76 were merged into the mainline kernel.
77 </para>
78
79 <para>
80 In essence, user namespaces isolate given sets of UIDs and GIDs. This is
81 achieved by establishing a mapping between a range of UIDs and GIDs on the
82 host to a different (unprivileged) range of UIDs and GIDs in the
83 container. The kernel will translate this mapping in such a way that
84 inside the container all UIDs and GIDs appear as you would expect from the
85 host whereas on the host these UIDs and GIDs are in fact unprivileged. For
86 example, a process running as UID and GID 0 inside the container might
87 appear as UID and GID 100000 on the host. The implementation and working
88 details can be gathered from the corresponding user namespace man page.
89 UID and GID mappings can be defined with the <option>lxc.idmap</option>
90 key.
91 </para>
92
93 <para>
94 Linux containers are defined with a simple configuration file. Each
95 option in the configuration file has the form <command>key =
96 value</command> fitting in one line. The "#" character means the line is a
97 comment. List options, like capabilities and cgroups options, can be used
98 with no value to clear any previously defined values of that option.
99 </para>
100
101 <para>
102 LXC namespaces configuration keys by using single dots. This means complex
103 configuration keys such as <option>lxc.net.0</option> expose various
104 subkeys such as <option>lxc.net.0.type</option>,
105 <option>lxc.net.0.link</option>, <option>lxc.net.0.ipv6.address</option>, and
106 others for even more fine-grained configuration.
107 </para>
108
109 <refsect2>
110 <title>Configuration</title>
111 <para>
112 In order to ease administration of multiple related containers, it is
113 possible to have a container configuration file cause another file to be
114 loaded. For instance, network configuration can be defined in one common
115 file which is included by multiple containers. Then, if the containers
116 are moved to another host, only one file may need to be updated.
117 </para>
118
119 <variablelist>
120 <varlistentry>
121 <term>
122 <option>lxc.include</option>
123 </term>
124 <listitem>
125 <para>
126 Specify the file to be included. The included file must be
127 in the same valid lxc configuration file format.
128 </para>
129 </listitem>
130 </varlistentry>
131 </variablelist>
132 </refsect2>
133
134 <refsect2>
135 <title>Architecture</title>
136 <para>
137 Allows one to set the architecture for the container. For example, set a
138 32bits architecture for a container running 32bits binaries on a 64bits
139 host. This fixes the container scripts which rely on the architecture to
140 do some work like downloading the packages.
141 </para>
142
143 <variablelist>
144 <varlistentry>
145 <term>
146 <option>lxc.arch</option>
147 </term>
148 <listitem>
149 <para>
150 Specify the architecture for the container.
151 </para>
152 <para>
153 Some valid options are
154 <option>x86</option>,
155 <option>i686</option>,
156 <option>x86_64</option>,
157 <option>amd64</option>
158 </para>
159 </listitem>
160 </varlistentry>
161 </variablelist>
162
163 </refsect2>
164
165 <refsect2>
166 <title>Hostname</title>
167 <para>
168 The utsname section defines the hostname to be set for the container.
169 That means the container can set its own hostname without changing the
170 one from the system. That makes the hostname private for the container.
171 </para>
172 <variablelist>
173 <varlistentry>
174 <term>
175 <option>lxc.uts.name</option>
176 </term>
177 <listitem>
178 <para>
179 specify the hostname for the container
180 </para>
181 </listitem>
182 </varlistentry>
183 </variablelist>
184 </refsect2>
185
186 <refsect2>
187 <title>Halt signal</title>
188 <para>
189 Allows one to specify signal name or number sent to the container's
190 init process to cleanly shutdown the container. Different init systems
191 could use different signals to perform clean shutdown sequence. This
192 option allows the signal to be specified in kill(1) fashion, e.g.
193 SIGPWR, SIGRTMIN+14, SIGRTMAX-10 or plain number. The default signal is
194 SIGPWR.
195 </para>
196 <variablelist>
197 <varlistentry>
198 <term>
199 <option>lxc.signal.halt</option>
200 </term>
201 <listitem>
202 <para>
203 specify the signal used to halt the container
204 </para>
205 </listitem>
206 </varlistentry>
207 </variablelist>
208 </refsect2>
209
210 <refsect2>
211 <title>Reboot signal</title>
212 <para>
213 Allows one to specify signal name or number to reboot the container.
214 This option allows signal to be specified in kill(1) fashion, e.g.
215 SIGTERM, SIGRTMIN+14, SIGRTMAX-10 or plain number. The default signal
216 is SIGINT.
217 </para>
218 <variablelist>
219 <varlistentry>
220 <term>
221 <option>lxc.signal.reboot</option>
222 </term>
223 <listitem>
224 <para>
225 specify the signal used to reboot the container
226 </para>
227 </listitem>
228 </varlistentry>
229 </variablelist>
230 </refsect2>
231
232 <refsect2>
233 <title>Stop signal</title>
234 <para>
235 Allows one to specify signal name or number to forcibly shutdown the
236 container. This option allows signal to be specified in kill(1) fashion,
237 e.g. SIGKILL, SIGRTMIN+14, SIGRTMAX-10 or plain number. The default
238 signal is SIGKILL.
239 </para>
240 <variablelist>
241 <varlistentry>
242 <term>
243 <option>lxc.signal.stop</option>
244 </term>
245 <listitem>
246 <para>
247 specify the signal used to stop the container
248 </para>
249 </listitem>
250 </varlistentry>
251 </variablelist>
252 </refsect2>
253
254 <refsect2>
255 <title>Init command</title>
256 <para>
257 Sets the command to use as the init system for the containers.
258 </para>
259 <variablelist>
260 <varlistentry>
261 <term>
262 <option>lxc.execute.cmd</option>
263 </term>
264 <listitem>
265 <para>
266 Absolute path from container rootfs to the binary to run by default. This
267 mostly makes sense for <command>lxc-execute</command>.
268 </para>
269 </listitem>
270 </varlistentry>
271 </variablelist>
272 <variablelist>
273 <varlistentry>
274 <term>
275 <option>lxc.init.cmd</option>
276 </term>
277 <listitem>
278 <para>
279 Absolute path from container rootfs to the binary to use as init. This
280 mostly makes sense for <command>lxc-start</command>. Default is <command>/sbin/init</command>.
281 </para>
282 </listitem>
283 </varlistentry>
284 </variablelist>
285 </refsect2>
286
287 <refsect2>
288 <title>Init working directory</title>
289 <para>
290 Sets the absolute path inside the container as the working directory for the containers.
291 LXC will switch to this directory before executing init.
292 </para>
293 <variablelist>
294 <varlistentry>
295 <term>
296 <option>lxc.init.cwd</option>
297 </term>
298 <listitem>
299 <para>
300 Absolute path inside the container to use as the working directory.
301 </para>
302 </listitem>
303 </varlistentry>
304 </variablelist>
305 </refsect2>
306
307 <refsect2>
308 <title>Init ID</title>
309 <para>
310 Sets the UID/GID to use for the init system, and subsequent commands.
311 Note that using a non-root UID when booting a system container will
312 likely not work due to missing privileges. Setting the UID/GID is mostly
313 useful when running application containers.
314
315 Defaults to: UID(0), GID(0)
316 </para>
317 <variablelist>
318 <varlistentry>
319 <term>
320 <option>lxc.init.uid</option>
321 </term>
322 <listitem>
323 <para>
324 UID to use for init.
325 </para>
326 </listitem>
327 </varlistentry>
328 <varlistentry>
329 <term>
330 <option>lxc.init.gid</option>
331 </term>
332 <listitem>
333 <para>
334 GID to use for init.
335 </para>
336 </listitem>
337 </varlistentry>
338 </variablelist>
339 </refsect2>
340
341 <refsect2>
342 <title>Proc</title>
343 <para>
344 Configure proc filesystem for the container.
345 </para>
346 <variablelist>
347 <varlistentry>
348 <term>
349 <option>lxc.proc.[proc file name]</option>
350 </term>
351 <listitem>
352 <para>
353 Specify the proc file name to be set. The file name available
354 are those listed under /proc/PID/.
355 Example:
356 </para>
357 <programlisting>
358 lxc.proc.oom_score_adj = 10
359 </programlisting>
360 </listitem>
361 </varlistentry>
362 </variablelist>
363 </refsect2>
364
365 <refsect2>
366 <title>Ephemeral</title>
367 <para>
368 Allows one to specify whether a container will be destroyed on shutdown.
369 </para>
370 <variablelist>
371 <varlistentry>
372 <term>
373 <option>lxc.ephemeral</option>
374 </term>
375 <listitem>
376 <para>
377 The only allowed values are 0 and 1. Set this to 1 to destroy a
378 container on shutdown.
379 </para>
380 </listitem>
381 </varlistentry>
382 </variablelist>
383 </refsect2>
384
385 <refsect2>
386 <title>Network</title>
387 <para>
388 The network section defines how the network is virtualized in
389 the container. The network virtualization acts at layer
390 two. In order to use the network virtualization, parameters
391 must be specified to define the network interfaces of the
392 container. Several virtual interfaces can be assigned and used
393 in a container even if the system has only one physical
394 network interface.
395 </para>
396 <variablelist>
397 <varlistentry>
398 <term>
399 <option>lxc.net</option>
400 </term>
401 <listitem>
402 <para>
403 may be used without a value to clear all previous network options.
404 </para>
405 </listitem>
406 </varlistentry>
407 <varlistentry>
408 <term>
409 <option>lxc.net.[i].type</option>
410 </term>
411 <listitem>
412 <para>
413 specify what kind of network virtualization to be used
414 for the container.
415 Multiple networks can be specified by using an additional index
416 <option>i</option>
417 after all <option>lxc.net.*</option> keys. For example,
418 <option>lxc.net.0.type = veth</option> and
419 <option>lxc.net.1.type = veth</option> specify two different
420 networks of the same type. All keys sharing the same index
421 <option>i</option> will be treated as belonging to the same
422 network. For example, <option>lxc.net.0.link = br0</option>
423 will belong to <option>lxc.net.0.type</option>.
424 Currently, the different virtualization types can be:
425 </para>
426
427 <para>
428 <option>none:</option> will cause the container to share
429 the host's network namespace. This means the host
430 network devices are usable in the container. It also
431 means that if both the container and host have upstart as
432 init, 'halt' in a container (for instance) will shut down the
433 host.
434 </para>
435
436 <para>
437 <option>empty:</option> will create only the loopback
438 interface.
439 </para>
440
441 <para>
442 <option>veth:</option> a virtual ethernet pair
443 device is created with one side assigned to the container
444 and the other side attached to a bridge specified by
445 the <option>lxc.net.[i].link</option> option.
446 If the bridge is not specified, then the veth pair device
447 will be created but not attached to any bridge.
448 Otherwise, the bridge has to be created on the system
449 before starting the container.
450 <command>lxc</command> won't handle any
451 configuration outside of the container.
452 By default, <command>lxc</command> chooses a name for the
453 network device belonging to the outside of the
454 container, but if you wish to handle
455 this name yourselves, you can tell <command>lxc</command>
456 to set a specific name with
457 the <option>lxc.net.[i].veth.pair</option> option (except for
458 unprivileged containers where this option is ignored for security
459 reasons).
460 </para>
461
462 <para>
463 <option>vlan:</option> a vlan interface is linked with
464 the interface specified by
465 the <option>lxc.net.[i].link</option> and assigned to
466 the container. The vlan identifier is specified with the
467 option <option>lxc.net.[i].vlan.id</option>.
468 </para>
469
470 <para>
471 <option>macvlan:</option> a macvlan interface is linked
472 with the interface specified by
473 the <option>lxc.net.[i].link</option> and assigned to
474 the container.
475 <option>lxc.net.[i].macvlan.mode</option> specifies the
476 mode the macvlan will use to communicate between
477 different macvlan on the same upper device. The accepted
478 modes are <option>private</option>, <option>vepa</option>,
479 <option>bridge</option> and <option>passthru</option>.
480 In <option>private</option> mode, the device never
481 communicates with any other device on the same upper_dev (default).
482 In <option>vepa</option> mode, the new Virtual Ethernet Port
483 Aggregator (VEPA) mode, it assumes that the adjacent
484 bridge returns all frames where both source and
485 destination are local to the macvlan port, i.e. the
486 bridge is set up as a reflective relay. Broadcast
487 frames coming in from the upper_dev get flooded to all
488 macvlan interfaces in VEPA mode, local frames are not
489 delivered locally. In <option>bridge</option> mode, it
490 provides the behavior of a simple bridge between
491 different macvlan interfaces on the same port. Frames
492 from one interface to another one get delivered directly
493 and are not sent out externally. Broadcast frames get
494 flooded to all other bridge ports and to the external
495 interface, but when they come back from a reflective
496 relay, we don't deliver them again. Since we know all
497 the MAC addresses, the macvlan bridge mode does not
498 require learning or STP like the bridge module does. In
499 <option>passthru</option> mode, all frames received by
500 the physical interface are forwarded to the macvlan
501 interface. Only one macvlan interface in <option>passthru</option>
502 mode is possible for one physical interface.
503 </para>
504
505 <para>
506 <option>phys:</option> an already existing interface
507 specified by the <option>lxc.net.[i].link</option> is
508 assigned to the container.
509 </para>
510 </listitem>
511 </varlistentry>
512
513 <varlistentry>
514 <term>
515 <option>lxc.net.[i].flags</option>
516 </term>
517 <listitem>
518 <para>
519 Specify an action to do for the network.
520 </para>
521
522 <para><option>up:</option> activates the interface.
523 </para>
524 </listitem>
525 </varlistentry>
526
527 <varlistentry>
528 <term>
529 <option>lxc.net.[i].link</option>
530 </term>
531 <listitem>
532 <para>
533 Specify the interface to be used for real network traffic.
534 </para>
535 </listitem>
536 </varlistentry>
537
538 <varlistentry>
539 <term>
540 <option>lxc.net.[i].mtu</option>
541 </term>
542 <listitem>
543 <para>
544 Specify the maximum transfer unit for this interface.
545 </para>
546 </listitem>
547 </varlistentry>
548
549 <varlistentry>
550 <term>
551 <option>lxc.net.[i].name</option>
552 </term>
553 <listitem>
554 <para>
555 The interface name is dynamically allocated, but if another name
556 is needed because the configuration files being used by the
557 container use a generic name, eg. eth0, this option will rename
558 the interface in the container.
559 </para>
560 </listitem>
561 </varlistentry>
562
563 <varlistentry>
564 <term>
565 <option>lxc.net.[i].hwaddr</option>
566 </term>
567 <listitem>
568 <para>
569 The interface mac address is dynamically allocated by default to
570 the virtual interface, but in some cases, this is needed to
571 resolve a mac address conflict or to always have the same
572 link-local ipv6 address. Any "x" in address will be replaced by
573 random value, this allows setting hwaddr templates.
574 </para>
575 </listitem>
576 </varlistentry>
577
578 <varlistentry>
579 <term>
580 <option>lxc.net.[i].ipv4.address</option>
581 </term>
582 <listitem>
583 <para>
584 Specify the ipv4 address to assign to the virtualized interface.
585 Several lines specify several ipv4 addresses. The address is in
586 format x.y.z.t/m, eg. 192.168.1.123/24.
587 </para>
588 </listitem>
589 </varlistentry>
590
591 <varlistentry>
592 <term>
593 <option>lxc.net.[i].ipv4.gateway</option>
594 </term>
595 <listitem>
596 <para>
597 Specify the ipv4 address to use as the gateway inside the
598 container. The address is in format x.y.z.t, eg. 192.168.1.123.
599
600 Can also have the special value <option>auto</option>,
601 which means to take the primary address from the bridge
602 interface (as specified by the
603 <option>lxc.net.[i].link</option> option) and use that as
604 the gateway. <option>auto</option> is only available when
605 using the <option>veth</option> and
606 <option>macvlan</option> network types.
607 </para>
608 </listitem>
609 </varlistentry>
610
611 <varlistentry>
612 <term>
613 <option>lxc.net.[i].ipv6.address</option>
614 </term>
615 <listitem>
616 <para>
617 Specify the ipv6 address to assign to the virtualized
618 interface. Several lines specify several ipv6 addresses. The
619 address is in format x::y/m, eg.
620 2003:db8:1:0:214:1234:fe0b:3596/64
621 </para>
622 </listitem>
623 </varlistentry>
624
625 <varlistentry>
626 <term>
627 <option>lxc.net.[i].ipv6.gateway</option>
628 </term>
629 <listitem>
630 <para>
631 Specify the ipv6 address to use as the gateway inside the
632 container. The address is in format x::y, eg. 2003:db8:1:0::1
633
634 Can also have the special value <option>auto</option>,
635 which means to take the primary address from the bridge
636 interface (as specified by the
637 <option>lxc.net.[i].link</option> option) and use that as
638 the gateway. <option>auto</option> is only available when
639 using the <option>veth</option> and
640 <option>macvlan</option> network types.
641 </para>
642 </listitem>
643 </varlistentry>
644
645 <varlistentry>
646 <term>
647 <option>lxc.net.[i].script.up</option>
648 </term>
649 <listitem>
650 <para>
651 Add a configuration option to specify a script to be
652 executed after creating and configuring the network used
653 from the host side.
654 </para>
655
656 <para>
657 In addition to the information available to all hooks. The
658 following information is provided to the script:
659 <itemizedlist>
660 <listitem>
661 <para>
662 LXC_HOOK_TYPE: the hook type. This is either 'up' or 'down'.
663 </para>
664 </listitem>
665
666 <listitem>
667 <para>
668 LXC_HOOK_SECTION: the section type 'net'.
669 </para>
670 </listitem>
671
672 <listitem>
673 <para>
674 LXC_NET_TYPE: the network type. This is one of the valid
675 network types listed here (e.g. 'macvlan', 'veth').
676 </para>
677 </listitem>
678
679 <listitem>
680 <para>
681 LXC_NET_PARENT: the parent device on the host. This is only
682 set for network types 'mavclan', 'veth', 'phys'.
683 </para>
684 </listitem>
685
686 <listitem>
687 <para>
688 LXC_NET_PEER: the name of the peer device on the host. This is
689 only set for 'veth' network types. Note that this information
690 is only available when <option>lxc.hook.version</option> is set
691 to 1.
692 </para>
693 </listitem>
694 </itemizedlist>
695
696 Whether this information is provided in the form of environment
697 variables or as arguments to the script depends on the value of
698 <option>lxc.hook.version</option>. If set to 1 then information is
699 provided in the form of environment variables. If set to 0
700 information is provided as arguments to the script.
701 </para>
702
703 <para>
704 Standard output from the script is logged at debug level.
705 Standard error is not logged, but can be captured by the
706 hook redirecting its standard error to standard output.
707 </para>
708 </listitem>
709 </varlistentry>
710
711 <varlistentry>
712 <term>
713 <option>lxc.net.[i].script.down</option>
714 </term>
715 <listitem>
716 <para>
717 Add a configuration option to specify a script to be
718 executed before destroying the network used from the
719 host side.
720 </para>
721
722 <para>
723 In addition to the information available to all hooks. The
724 following information is provided to the script:
725 <itemizedlist>
726 <listitem>
727 <para>
728 LXC_HOOK_TYPE: the hook type. This is either 'up' or 'down'.
729 </para>
730 </listitem>
731
732 <listitem>
733 <para>
734 LXC_HOOK_SECTION: the section type 'net'.
735 </para>
736 </listitem>
737
738 <listitem>
739 <para>
740 LXC_NET_TYPE: the network type. This is one of the valid
741 network types listed here (e.g. 'macvlan', 'veth').
742 </para>
743 </listitem>
744
745 <listitem>
746 <para>
747 LXC_NET_PARENT: the parent device on the host. This is only
748 set for network types 'mavclan', 'veth', 'phys'.
749 </para>
750 </listitem>
751
752 <listitem>
753 <para>
754 LXC_NET_PEER: the name of the peer device on the host. This is
755 only set for 'veth' network types. Note that this information
756 is only available when <option>lxc.hook.version</option> is set
757 to 1.
758 </para>
759 </listitem>
760 </itemizedlist>
761
762 Whether this information is provided in the form of environment
763 variables or as arguments to the script depends on the value of
764 <option>lxc.hook.version</option>. If set to 1 then information is
765 provided in the form of environment variables. If set to 0
766 information is provided as arguments to the script.
767 </para>
768
769 <para>
770 Standard output from the script is logged at debug level.
771 Standard error is not logged, but can be captured by the
772 hook redirecting its standard error to standard output.
773 </para>
774 </listitem>
775 </varlistentry>
776 </variablelist>
777 </refsect2>
778
779 <refsect2>
780 <title>New pseudo tty instance (devpts)</title>
781 <para>
782 For stricter isolation the container can have its own private
783 instance of the pseudo tty.
784 </para>
785 <variablelist>
786 <varlistentry>
787 <term>
788 <option>lxc.pty.max</option>
789 </term>
790 <listitem>
791 <para>
792 If set, the container will have a new pseudo tty
793 instance, making this private to it. The value specifies
794 the maximum number of pseudo ttys allowed for a pts
795 instance (this limitation is not implemented yet).
796 </para>
797 </listitem>
798 </varlistentry>
799 </variablelist>
800 </refsect2>
801
802 <refsect2>
803 <title>Container system console</title>
804 <para>
805 If the container is configured with a root filesystem and the
806 inittab file is setup to use the console, you may want to specify
807 where the output of this console goes.
808 </para>
809 <variablelist>
810
811 <varlistentry>
812 <term>
813 <option>lxc.console.buffer.size</option>
814 </term>
815 <listitem>
816 <para>
817 Setting this option instructs liblxc to allocate an in-memory
818 ringbuffer. The container's console output will be written to the
819 ringbuffer. Note that ringbuffer must be at least as big as a
820 standard page size. When passed a value smaller than a single page
821 size liblxc will allocate a ringbuffer of a single page size. A page
822 size is usually 4kB.
823
824 The keyword 'auto' will cause liblxc to allocate a ringbuffer of
825 128kB.
826
827 When manually specifying a size for the ringbuffer the value should
828 be a power of 2 when converted to bytes. Valid size prefixes are
829 'kB', 'MB', 'GB'. (Note that all conversions are based on multiples
830 of 1024. That means 'kb' == 'KiB', 'MB' == 'MiB', 'GB' == 'GiB'.)
831 </para>
832 </listitem>
833 </varlistentry>
834
835 <varlistentry>
836 <term>
837 <option>lxc.console.buffer.logfile</option>
838 </term>
839 <listitem>
840 <para>
841 Setting this option instructs liblxc to write the in-memory
842 ringbuffer to disk. For performance reasons liblxc will only write
843 the in-memory ringbuffer to disk when requested. Note that the this
844 option is only used by liblxc when
845 <option>lxc.console.buffer.size</option> is set.
846
847 By default liblxc will dump the contents of the in-memory ringbuffer
848 to disk when the container terminates. This allows users to diagnose
849 boot failures when the container crashed before an API request to
850 retrieve the in-memory ringbuffer could be sent or handled.
851 </para>
852 </listitem>
853 </varlistentry>
854
855 <varlistentry>
856 <term>
857 <option>lxc.console.logfile</option>
858 </term>
859 <listitem>
860 <para>
861 Specify a path to a file where the console output will be written.
862 Note that in contrast to the on-disk ringbuffer logfile this file
863 will keep growing potentially filling up the users disks if not
864 rotated and deleted. This problem can also be avoided by using the
865 in-memory ringbuffer options
866 <option>lxc.console.buffer.size</option> and
867 <option>lxc.console.buffer.logfile</option>.
868 </para>
869 </listitem>
870 </varlistentry>
871
872 <varlistentry>
873 <term>
874 <option>lxc.console.rotate</option>
875 </term>
876 <listitem>
877 <para>
878 Whether to rotate the console logfile specified in
879 <option>lxc.console.logfile</option>. Users can send an API
880 request to rotate the logfile. Note that the old logfile will have
881 the same name as the original with the suffix ".1" appended.
882
883 Users wishing to prevent the console log file from filling the
884 disk should rotate the logfile and delete it if unneeded. This
885 problem can also be avoided by using the in-memory ringbuffer
886 options <option>lxc.console.buffer.size</option> and
887 <option>lxc.console.buffer.logfile</option>.
888 </para>
889 </listitem>
890 </varlistentry>
891
892 <varlistentry>
893 <term>
894 <option>lxc.console.path</option>
895 </term>
896 <listitem>
897 <para>
898 Specify a path to a device to which the console will be
899 attached. The keyword 'none' will simply disable the
900 console. Note, when specifying 'none' and creating a device node
901 for the console in the container at /dev/console or bind-mounting
902 the hosts's /dev/console into the container at /dev/console the
903 container will have direct access to the hosts's /dev/console.
904 This is dangerous when the container has write access to the
905 device and should thus be used with caution.
906 </para>
907 </listitem>
908 </varlistentry>
909 </variablelist>
910 </refsect2>
911
912 <refsect2>
913 <title>Console through the ttys</title>
914 <para>
915 This option is useful if the container is configured with a root
916 filesystem and the inittab file is setup to launch a getty on the
917 ttys. The option specifies the number of ttys to be available for
918 the container. The number of gettys in the inittab file of the
919 container should not be greater than the number of ttys specified
920 in this option, otherwise the excess getty sessions will die and
921 respawn indefinitely giving annoying messages on the console or in
922 <filename>/var/log/messages</filename>.
923 </para>
924 <variablelist>
925 <varlistentry>
926 <term>
927 <option>lxc.tty.max</option>
928 </term>
929 <listitem>
930 <para>
931 Specify the number of tty to make available to the
932 container.
933 </para>
934 </listitem>
935 </varlistentry>
936 </variablelist>
937 </refsect2>
938
939 <refsect2>
940 <title>Console devices location</title>
941 <para>
942 LXC consoles are provided through Unix98 PTYs created on the
943 host and bind-mounted over the expected devices in the container.
944 By default, they are bind-mounted over <filename>/dev/console</filename>
945 and <filename>/dev/ttyN</filename>. This can prevent package upgrades
946 in the guest. Therefore you can specify a directory location (under
947 <filename>/dev</filename> under which LXC will create the files and
948 bind-mount over them. These will then be symbolically linked to
949 <filename>/dev/console</filename> and <filename>/dev/ttyN</filename>.
950 A package upgrade can then succeed as it is able to remove and replace
951 the symbolic links.
952 </para>
953 <variablelist>
954 <varlistentry>
955 <term>
956 <option>lxc.tty.dir</option>
957 </term>
958 <listitem>
959 <para>
960 Specify a directory under <filename>/dev</filename>
961 under which to create the container console devices. Note that LXC
962 will move any bind-mounts or device nodes for /dev/console into
963 this directory.
964 </para>
965 </listitem>
966 </varlistentry>
967 </variablelist>
968 </refsect2>
969
970 <refsect2>
971 <title>/dev directory</title>
972 <para>
973 By default, lxc creates a few symbolic links (fd,stdin,stdout,stderr)
974 in the container's <filename>/dev</filename> directory but does not
975 automatically create device node entries. This allows the container's
976 <filename>/dev</filename> to be set up as needed in the container
977 rootfs. If lxc.autodev is set to 1, then after mounting the container's
978 rootfs LXC will mount a fresh tmpfs under <filename>/dev</filename>
979 (limited to 500k) and fill in a minimal set of initial devices.
980 This is generally required when starting a container containing
981 a "systemd" based "init" but may be optional at other times. Additional
982 devices in the containers /dev directory may be created through the
983 use of the <option>lxc.hook.autodev</option> hook.
984 </para>
985 <variablelist>
986 <varlistentry>
987 <term>
988 <option>lxc.autodev</option>
989 </term>
990 <listitem>
991 <para>
992 Set this to 0 to stop LXC from mounting and populating a minimal
993 <filename>/dev</filename> when starting the container.
994 </para>
995 </listitem>
996 </varlistentry>
997 </variablelist>
998 </refsect2>
999
1000 <refsect2>
1001 <title>Mount points</title>
1002 <para>
1003 The mount points section specifies the different places to be
1004 mounted. These mount points will be private to the container
1005 and won't be visible by the processes running outside of the
1006 container. This is useful to mount /etc, /var or /home for
1007 examples.
1008 </para>
1009 <para>
1010 NOTE - LXC will generally ensure that mount targets and relative
1011 bind-mount sources are properly confined under the container
1012 root, to avoid attacks involving over-mounting host directories
1013 and files. (Symbolic links in absolute mount sources are ignored)
1014 However, if the container configuration first mounts a directory which
1015 is under the control of the container user, such as /home/joe, into
1016 the container at some <filename>path</filename>, and then mounts
1017 under <filename>path</filename>, then a TOCTTOU attack would be
1018 possible where the container user modifies a symbolic link under
1019 his home directory at just the right time.
1020 </para>
1021 <variablelist>
1022 <varlistentry>
1023 <term>
1024 <option>lxc.mount.fstab</option>
1025 </term>
1026 <listitem>
1027 <para>
1028 specify a file location in
1029 the <filename>fstab</filename> format, containing the
1030 mount information. The mount target location can and in
1031 most cases should be a relative path, which will become
1032 relative to the mounted container root. For instance,
1033 </para>
1034 <programlisting>
1035 proc proc proc nodev,noexec,nosuid 0 0
1036 </programlisting>
1037 <para>
1038 Will mount a proc filesystem under the container's /proc,
1039 regardless of where the root filesystem comes from. This
1040 is resilient to block device backed filesystems as well as
1041 container cloning.
1042 </para>
1043 <para>
1044 Note that when mounting a filesystem from an
1045 image file or block device the third field (fs_vfstype)
1046 cannot be auto as with
1047 <citerefentry>
1048 <refentrytitle>mount</refentrytitle>
1049 <manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
1050 </citerefentry>
1051 but must be explicitly specified.
1052 </para>
1053 </listitem>
1054 </varlistentry>
1055
1056 <varlistentry>
1057 <term>
1058 <option>lxc.mount.entry</option>
1059 </term>
1060 <listitem>
1061 <para>
1062 Specify a mount point corresponding to a line in the
1063 fstab format.
1064
1065 Moreover lxc supports mount propagation, such as rslave or
1066 rprivate, and adds three additional mount options.
1067 <option>optional</option> don't fail if mount does not work.
1068 <option>create=dir</option> or <option>create=file</option>
1069 to create dir (or file) when the point will be mounted.
1070 <option>relative</option> source path is taken to be relative to
1071 the mounted container root. For instance,
1072 </para>
1073 <screen>
1074 dev/null proc/kcore none bind,relative 0 0
1075 </screen>
1076 <para>
1077 Will expand dev/null to ${<option>LXC_ROOTFS_MOUNT</option>}/dev/null,
1078 and mount it to proc/kcore inside the container.
1079 </para>
1080 </listitem>
1081 </varlistentry>
1082
1083 <varlistentry>
1084 <term>
1085 <option>lxc.mount.auto</option>
1086 </term>
1087 <listitem>
1088 <para>
1089 specify which standard kernel file systems should be
1090 automatically mounted. This may dramatically simplify
1091 the configuration. The file systems are:
1092 </para>
1093 <itemizedlist>
1094 <listitem>
1095 <para>
1096 <option>proc:mixed</option> (or <option>proc</option>):
1097 mount <filename>/proc</filename> as read-write, but
1098 remount <filename>/proc/sys</filename> and
1099 <filename>/proc/sysrq-trigger</filename> read-only
1100 for security / container isolation purposes.
1101 </para>
1102 </listitem>
1103 <listitem>
1104 <para>
1105 <option>proc:rw</option>: mount
1106 <filename>/proc</filename> as read-write
1107 </para>
1108 </listitem>
1109 <listitem>
1110 <para>
1111 <option>sys:mixed</option> (or <option>sys</option>):
1112 mount <filename>/sys</filename> as read-only but with
1113 /sys/devices/virtual/net writable.
1114 </para>
1115 </listitem>
1116 <listitem>
1117 <para>
1118 <option>sys:ro</option>:
1119 mount <filename>/sys</filename> as read-only
1120 for security / container isolation purposes.
1121 </para>
1122 </listitem>
1123 <listitem>
1124 <para>
1125 <option>sys:rw</option>: mount
1126 <filename>/sys</filename> as read-write
1127 </para>
1128 </listitem>
1129 <listitem>
1130 <para>
1131 <option>cgroup:mixed</option>:
1132 mount a tmpfs to <filename>/sys/fs/cgroup</filename>,
1133 create directories for all hierarchies to which
1134 the container is added, create subdirectories
1135 there with the name of the cgroup, and bind-mount
1136 the container's own cgroup into that directory.
1137 The container will be able to write to its own
1138 cgroup directory, but not the parents, since they
1139 will be remounted read-only.
1140 </para>
1141 </listitem>
1142 <listitem>
1143 <para>
1144 <option>cgroup:ro</option>: similar to
1145 <option>cgroup:mixed</option>, but everything will
1146 be mounted read-only.
1147 </para>
1148 </listitem>
1149 <listitem>
1150 <para>
1151 <option>cgroup:rw</option>: similar to
1152 <option>cgroup:mixed</option>, but everything will
1153 be mounted read-write. Note that the paths leading
1154 up to the container's own cgroup will be writable,
1155 but will not be a cgroup filesystem but just part
1156 of the tmpfs of <filename>/sys/fs/cgroup</filename>
1157 </para>
1158 </listitem>
1159 <listitem>
1160 <para>
1161 <option>cgroup</option> (without specifier):
1162 defaults to <option>cgroup:rw</option> if the
1163 container retains the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability,
1164 <option>cgroup:mixed</option> otherwise.
1165 </para>
1166 </listitem>
1167 <listitem>
1168 <para>
1169 <option>cgroup-full:mixed</option>:
1170 mount a tmpfs to <filename>/sys/fs/cgroup</filename>,
1171 create directories for all hierarchies to which
1172 the container is added, bind-mount the hierarchies
1173 from the host to the container and make everything
1174 read-only except the container's own cgroup. Note
1175 that compared to <option>cgroup</option>, where
1176 all paths leading up to the container's own cgroup
1177 are just simple directories in the underlying
1178 tmpfs, here
1179 <filename>/sys/fs/cgroup/$hierarchy</filename>
1180 will contain the host's full cgroup hierarchy,
1181 albeit read-only outside the container's own cgroup.
1182 This may leak quite a bit of information into the
1183 container.
1184 </para>
1185 </listitem>
1186 <listitem>
1187 <para>
1188 <option>cgroup-full:ro</option>: similar to
1189 <option>cgroup-full:mixed</option>, but everything
1190 will be mounted read-only.
1191 </para>
1192 </listitem>
1193 <listitem>
1194 <para>
1195 <option>cgroup-full:rw</option>: similar to
1196 <option>cgroup-full:mixed</option>, but everything
1197 will be mounted read-write. Note that in this case,
1198 the container may escape its own cgroup. (Note also
1199 that if the container has CAP_SYS_ADMIN support
1200 and can mount the cgroup filesystem itself, it may
1201 do so anyway.)
1202 </para>
1203 </listitem>
1204 <listitem>
1205 <para>
1206 <option>cgroup-full</option> (without specifier):
1207 defaults to <option>cgroup-full:rw</option> if the
1208 container retains the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability,
1209 <option>cgroup-full:mixed</option> otherwise.
1210 </para>
1211 </listitem>
1212 </itemizedlist>
1213 <para>
1214 If cgroup namespaces are enabled, then any <option>cgroup</option>
1215 auto-mounting request will be ignored, since the container can
1216 mount the filesystems itself, and automounting can confuse the
1217 container init.
1218 </para>
1219 <para>
1220 Note that if automatic mounting of the cgroup filesystem
1221 is enabled, the tmpfs under
1222 <filename>/sys/fs/cgroup</filename> will always be
1223 mounted read-write (but for the <option>:mixed</option>
1224 and <option>:ro</option> cases, the individual
1225 hierarchies,
1226 <filename>/sys/fs/cgroup/$hierarchy</filename>, will be
1227 read-only). This is in order to work around a quirk in
1228 Ubuntu's
1229 <citerefentry>
1230 <refentrytitle>mountall</refentrytitle>
1231 <manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
1232 </citerefentry>
1233 command that will cause containers to wait for user
1234 input at boot if
1235 <filename>/sys/fs/cgroup</filename> is mounted read-only
1236 and the container can't remount it read-write due to a
1237 lack of CAP_SYS_ADMIN.
1238 </para>
1239 <para>
1240 Examples:
1241 </para>
1242 <programlisting>
1243 lxc.mount.auto = proc sys cgroup
1244 lxc.mount.auto = proc:rw sys:rw cgroup-full:rw
1245 </programlisting>
1246 </listitem>
1247 </varlistentry>
1248
1249 </variablelist>
1250 </refsect2>
1251
1252 <refsect2>
1253 <title>Root file system</title>
1254 <para>
1255 The root file system of the container can be different than that
1256 of the host system.
1257 </para>
1258 <variablelist>
1259 <varlistentry>
1260 <term>
1261 <option>lxc.rootfs.path</option>
1262 </term>
1263 <listitem>
1264 <para>
1265 specify the root file system for the container. It can
1266 be an image file, a directory or a block device. If not
1267 specified, the container shares its root file system
1268 with the host.
1269 </para>
1270 <para>
1271 For directory or simple block-device backed containers,
1272 a pathname can be used. If the rootfs is backed by a nbd
1273 device, then <filename>nbd:file:1</filename> specifies that
1274 <filename>file</filename> should be attached to a nbd device,
1275 and partition 1 should be mounted as the rootfs.
1276 <filename>nbd:file</filename> specifies that the nbd device
1277 itself should be mounted. <filename>overlayfs:/lower:/upper</filename>
1278 specifies that the rootfs should be an overlay with <filename>/upper</filename>
1279 being mounted read-write over a read-only mount of <filename>/lower</filename>.
1280 <filename>aufs:/lower:/upper</filename> does the same using aufs in place
1281 of overlayfs. For both <filename>overlayfs</filename> and
1282 <filename>aufs</filename> multiple <filename>/lower</filename>
1283 directories can be specified. <filename>loop:/file</filename> tells lxc to attach
1284 <filename>/file</filename> to a loop device and mount the loop device.
1285 </para>
1286 </listitem>
1287 </varlistentry>
1288
1289 <varlistentry>
1290 <term>
1291 <option>lxc.rootfs.mount</option>
1292 </term>
1293 <listitem>
1294 <para>
1295 where to recursively bind <option>lxc.rootfs.path</option>
1296 before pivoting. This is to ensure success of the
1297 <citerefentry>
1298 <refentrytitle><command>pivot_root</command></refentrytitle>
1299 <manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
1300 </citerefentry>
1301 syscall. Any directory suffices, the default should
1302 generally work.
1303 </para>
1304 </listitem>
1305 </varlistentry>
1306
1307 <varlistentry>
1308 <term>
1309 <option>lxc.rootfs.options</option>
1310 </term>
1311 <listitem>
1312 <para>
1313 extra mount options to use when mounting the rootfs.
1314 </para>
1315 </listitem>
1316 </varlistentry>
1317
1318 </variablelist>
1319 </refsect2>
1320
1321 <refsect2>
1322 <title>Control group</title>
1323 <para>
1324 The control group section contains the configuration for the
1325 different subsystem. <command>lxc</command> does not check the
1326 correctness of the subsystem name. This has the disadvantage
1327 of not detecting configuration errors until the container is
1328 started, but has the advantage of permitting any future
1329 subsystem.
1330 </para>
1331 <variablelist>
1332 <varlistentry>
1333 <term>
1334 <option>lxc.cgroup.[controller name]</option>
1335 </term>
1336 <listitem>
1337 <para>
1338 Specify the control group value to be set on a legacy cgroup
1339 hierarchy. The controller name is the literal name of the control
1340 group. The permitted names and the syntax of their values is not
1341 dictated by LXC, instead it depends on the features of the Linux
1342 kernel running at the time the container is started, eg.
1343 <option>lxc.cgroup.cpuset.cpus</option>
1344 </para>
1345 </listitem>
1346 </varlistentry>
1347 <varlistentry>
1348 <term>
1349 <option>lxc.cgroup2.[controller name]</option>
1350 </term>
1351 <listitem>
1352 <para>
1353 Specify the control group value to be set on the unified cgroup
1354 shierarchy. The controller name is the literal name of the control
1355 group. The permitted names and the syntax of their values is not
1356 dictated by LXC, instead it depends on the features of the Linux
1357 kernel running at the time the container is started, eg.
1358 <option>lxc.cgroup2.memory.high</option>
1359 </para>
1360 </listitem>
1361 </varlistentry>
1362 <varlistentry>
1363 <term>
1364 <option>lxc.cgroup.dir</option>
1365 </term>
1366 <listitem>
1367 <para>
1368 specify a directory or path in which the container's cgroup will
1369 be created. For example, setting
1370 <option>lxc.cgroup.dir = my-cgroup/first</option> for a container
1371 named "c1" will create the container's cgroup as a sub-cgroup of
1372 "my-cgroup". For example, if the user's current cgroup "my-user"
1373 is located in the root cgroup of the cpuset controller in a
1374 cgroup v1 hierarchy this would create the cgroup
1375 "/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset/my-user/my-cgroup/first/c1" for the
1376 container. Any missing cgroups will be created by LXC. This
1377 presupposes that the user has write access to its current cgroup.
1378 </para>
1379 </listitem>
1380 </varlistentry>
1381 </variablelist>
1382 </refsect2>
1383
1384 <refsect2>
1385 <title>Capabilities</title>
1386 <para>
1387 The capabilities can be dropped in the container if this one
1388 is run as root.
1389 </para>
1390 <variablelist>
1391 <varlistentry>
1392 <term>
1393 <option>lxc.cap.drop</option>
1394 </term>
1395 <listitem>
1396 <para>
1397 Specify the capability to be dropped in the container. A
1398 single line defining several capabilities with a space
1399 separation is allowed. The format is the lower case of
1400 the capability definition without the "CAP_" prefix,
1401 eg. CAP_SYS_MODULE should be specified as
1402 sys_module. See
1403 <citerefentry>
1404 <refentrytitle><command>capabilities</command></refentrytitle>
1405 <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
1406 </citerefentry>.
1407 If used with no value, lxc will clear any drop capabilities
1408 specified up to this point.
1409 </para>
1410 </listitem>
1411 </varlistentry>
1412 <varlistentry>
1413 <term>
1414 <option>lxc.cap.keep</option>
1415 </term>
1416 <listitem>
1417 <para>
1418 Specify the capability to be kept in the container. All other
1419 capabilities will be dropped. When a special value of "none" is
1420 encountered, lxc will clear any keep capabilities specified up
1421 to this point. A value of "none" alone can be used to drop all
1422 capabilities.
1423 </para>
1424 </listitem>
1425 </varlistentry>
1426 </variablelist>
1427 </refsect2>
1428
1429 <refsect2>
1430 <title>Namespaces</title>
1431 <para>
1432 A namespace can be cloned (<option>lxc.namespace.clone</option>),
1433 kept (<option>lxc.namespace.keep</option>) or shared
1434 (<option>lxc.namespace.share.[namespace identifier]</option>).
1435 </para>
1436 <variablelist>
1437 <varlistentry>
1438 <term>
1439 <option>lxc.namespace.clone</option>
1440 </term>
1441 <listitem>
1442 <para>
1443 Specify namespaces which the container is supposed to be created
1444 with. The namespaces to create are specified as a space separated
1445 list. Each namespace must correspond to one of the standard
1446 namespace identifiers as seen in the
1447 <filename>/proc/PID/ns</filename> directory.
1448 When <option>lxc.namespace.clone</option> is not explicitly set all
1449 namespaces supported by the kernel and the current configuration
1450 will be used.
1451 </para>
1452
1453 <para>
1454 To create a new mount, net and ipc namespace set
1455 <option>lxc.namespace.clone=mount net ipc</option>.
1456 </para>
1457 </listitem>
1458 </varlistentry>
1459
1460 <varlistentry>
1461 <term>
1462 <option>lxc.namespace.keep</option>
1463 </term>
1464 <listitem>
1465 <para>
1466 Specify namespaces which the container is supposed to inherit from
1467 the process that created it. The namespaces to keep are specified as
1468 a space separated list. Each namespace must correspond to one of the
1469 standard namespace identifiers as seen in the
1470 <filename>/proc/PID/ns</filename> directory.
1471 The <option>lxc.namespace.keep</option> is a
1472 blacklist option, i.e. it is useful when enforcing that containers
1473 must keep a specific set of namespaces.
1474 </para>
1475
1476 <para>
1477 To keep the network, user and ipc namespace set
1478 <option>lxc.namespace.keep=user net ipc</option>.
1479 </para>
1480
1481 <para>
1482 Note that sharing pid namespaces will likely not work with most init
1483 systems.
1484 </para>
1485
1486 <para>
1487 Note that if the container requests a new user namespace and the
1488 container wants to inherit the network namespace it needs to inherit
1489 the user namespace as well.
1490 </para>
1491 </listitem>
1492 </varlistentry>
1493
1494 <varlistentry>
1495 <term>
1496 <option>lxc.namespace.share.[namespace identifier]</option>
1497 </term>
1498 <listitem>
1499 <para>
1500 Specify a namespace to inherit from another container or process.
1501 The <option>[namespace identifier]</option> suffix needs to be
1502 replaced with one of the namespaces that appear in the
1503 <filename>/proc/PID/ns</filename> directory.
1504 </para>
1505
1506 <para>
1507 To inherit the namespace from another process set the
1508 <option>lxc.namespace.share.[namespace identifier]</option> to the PID of
1509 the process, e.g. <option>lxc.namespace.share.net=42</option>.
1510 </para>
1511
1512 <para>
1513 To inherit the namespace from another container set the
1514 <option>lxc.namespace.share.[namespace identifier]</option> to the name of
1515 the container, e.g. <option>lxc.namespace.share.pid=c3</option>.
1516 </para>
1517
1518 <para>
1519 To inherit the namespace from another container located in a
1520 different path than the standard liblxc path set the
1521 <option>lxc.namespace.share.[namespace identifier]</option> to the full
1522 path to the container, e.g.
1523 <option>lxc.namespace.share.user=/opt/c3</option>.
1524 </para>
1525
1526 <para>
1527 In order to inherit namespaces the caller needs to have sufficient
1528 privilege over the process or container.
1529 </para>
1530
1531 <para>
1532 Note that sharing pid namespaces between system containers will
1533 likely not work with most init systems.
1534 </para>
1535
1536 <para>
1537 Note that if two processes are in different user namespaces and one
1538 process wants to inherit the other's network namespace it usually
1539 needs to inherit the user namespace as well.
1540 </para>
1541 </listitem>
1542 </varlistentry>
1543 </variablelist>
1544 </refsect2>
1545
1546 <refsect2>
1547 <title>Resource limits</title>
1548 <para>
1549 The soft and hard resource limits for the container can be changed.
1550 Unprivileged containers can only lower them. Resources which are not
1551 explicitly specified will be inherited.
1552 </para>
1553 <variablelist>
1554 <varlistentry>
1555 <term>
1556 <option>lxc.prlimit.[limit name]</option>
1557 </term>
1558 <listitem>
1559 <para>
1560 Specify the resource limit to be set. A limit is specified as two
1561 colon separated values which are either numeric or the word
1562 'unlimited'. A single value can be used as a shortcut to set both
1563 soft and hard limit to the same value. The permitted names the
1564 "RLIMIT_" resource names in lowercase without the "RLIMIT_"
1565 prefix, eg. RLIMIT_NOFILE should be specified as "nofile". See
1566 <citerefentry>
1567 <refentrytitle><command>setrlimit</command></refentrytitle>
1568 <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
1569 </citerefentry>.
1570 If used with no value, lxc will clear the resource limit
1571 specified up to this point. A resource with no explicitly
1572 configured limitation will be inherited from the process starting
1573 up the container.
1574 </para>
1575 </listitem>
1576 </varlistentry>
1577 </variablelist>
1578 </refsect2>
1579
1580 <refsect2>
1581 <title>Sysctl</title>
1582 <para>
1583 Configure kernel parameters for the container.
1584 </para>
1585 <variablelist>
1586 <varlistentry>
1587 <term>
1588 <option>lxc.sysctl.[kernel parameters name]</option>
1589 </term>
1590 <listitem>
1591 <para>
1592 Specify the kernel parameters to be set. The parameters available
1593 are those listed under /proc/sys/.
1594 Note that not all sysctls are namespaced. Changing Non-namespaced
1595 sysctls will cause the system-wide setting to be modified.
1596 <citerefentry>
1597 <refentrytitle><command>sysctl</command></refentrytitle>
1598 <manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
1599 </citerefentry>.
1600 If used with no value, lxc will clear the parameters specified up
1601 to this point.
1602 </para>
1603 </listitem>
1604 </varlistentry>
1605 </variablelist>
1606 </refsect2>
1607
1608 <refsect2>
1609 <title>Apparmor profile</title>
1610 <para>
1611 If lxc was compiled and installed with apparmor support, and the host
1612 system has apparmor enabled, then the apparmor profile under which the
1613 container should be run can be specified in the container
1614 configuration. The default is <command>lxc-container-default-cgns</command>
1615 if the host kernel is cgroup namespace aware, or
1616 <command>lxc-container-default</command> othewise.
1617 </para>
1618 <variablelist>
1619 <varlistentry>
1620 <term>
1621 <option>lxc.apparmor.profile</option>
1622 </term>
1623 <listitem>
1624 <para>
1625 Specify the apparmor profile under which the container should
1626 be run. To specify that the container should be unconfined,
1627 use
1628 </para>
1629 <programlisting>lxc.apparmor.profile = unconfined</programlisting>
1630 <para>
1631 If the apparmor profile should remain unchanged (i.e. if you
1632 are nesting containers and are already confined), then use
1633 </para>
1634 <programlisting>lxc.apparmor.profile = unchanged</programlisting>
1635 </listitem>
1636 </varlistentry>
1637 <varlistentry>
1638 <term>
1639 <option>lxc.apparmor.allow_incomplete</option>
1640 </term>
1641 <listitem>
1642 <para>
1643 Apparmor profiles are pathname based. Therefore many file
1644 restrictions require mount restrictions to be effective against
1645 a determined attacker. However, these mount restrictions are not
1646 yet implemented in the upstream kernel. Without the mount
1647 restrictions, the apparmor profiles still protect against accidental
1648 damager.
1649 </para>
1650 <para>
1651 If this flag is 0 (default), then the container will not be
1652 started if the kernel lacks the apparmor mount features, so that a
1653 regression after a kernel upgrade will be detected. To start the
1654 container under partial apparmor protection, set this flag to 1.
1655 </para>
1656 </listitem>
1657 </varlistentry>
1658 </variablelist>
1659 </refsect2>
1660
1661 <refsect2>
1662 <title>SELinux context</title>
1663 <para>
1664 If lxc was compiled and installed with SELinux support, and the host
1665 system has SELinux enabled, then the SELinux context under which the
1666 container should be run can be specified in the container
1667 configuration. The default is <command>unconfined_t</command>,
1668 which means that lxc will not attempt to change contexts.
1669 See @DATADIR@/lxc/selinux/lxc.te for an example policy and more
1670 information.
1671 </para>
1672 <variablelist>
1673 <varlistentry>
1674 <term>
1675 <option>lxc.selinux.context</option>
1676 </term>
1677 <listitem>
1678 <para>
1679 Specify the SELinux context under which the container should
1680 be run or <command>unconfined_t</command>. For example
1681 </para>
1682 <programlisting>lxc.selinux.context = system_u:system_r:lxc_t:s0:c22</programlisting>
1683 </listitem>
1684 </varlistentry>
1685 </variablelist>
1686 </refsect2>
1687
1688 <refsect2>
1689 <title>Seccomp configuration</title>
1690 <para>
1691 A container can be started with a reduced set of available
1692 system calls by loading a seccomp profile at startup. The
1693 seccomp configuration file must begin with a version number
1694 on the first line, a policy type on the second line, followed
1695 by the configuration.
1696 </para>
1697 <para>
1698 Versions 1 and 2 are currently supported. In version 1, the
1699 policy is a simple whitelist. The second line therefore must
1700 read "whitelist", with the rest of the file containing one (numeric)
1701 sycall number per line. Each syscall number is whitelisted,
1702 while every unlisted number is blacklisted for use in the container
1703 </para>
1704
1705 <para>
1706 In version 2, the policy may be blacklist or whitelist,
1707 supports per-rule and per-policy default actions, and supports
1708 per-architecture system call resolution from textual names.
1709 </para>
1710 <para>
1711 An example blacklist policy, in which all system calls are
1712 allowed except for mknod, which will simply do nothing and
1713 return 0 (success), looks like:
1714 </para>
1715
1716 <programlisting>
1717 2
1718 blacklist
1719 mknod errno 0
1720 </programlisting>
1721
1722 <variablelist>
1723 <varlistentry>
1724 <term>
1725 <option>lxc.seccomp.profile</option>
1726 </term>
1727 <listitem>
1728 <para>
1729 Specify a file containing the seccomp configuration to
1730 load before the container starts.
1731 </para>
1732 </listitem>
1733 </varlistentry>
1734 </variablelist>
1735 </refsect2>
1736
1737 <refsect2>
1738 <title>PR_SET_NO_NEW_PRIVS</title>
1739 <para>
1740 With PR_SET_NO_NEW_PRIVS active execve() promises not to grant
1741 privileges to do anything that could not have been done without
1742 the execve() call (for example, rendering the set-user-ID and
1743 set-group-ID mode bits, and file capabilities non-functional).
1744 Once set, this bit cannot be unset. The setting of this bit is
1745 inherited by children created by fork() and clone(), and preserved
1746 across execve().
1747 Note that PR_SET_NO_NEW_PRIVS is applied after the container has
1748 changed into its intended AppArmor profile or SElinux context.
1749 </para>
1750 <variablelist>
1751 <varlistentry>
1752 <term>
1753 <option>lxc.no_new_privs</option>
1754 </term>
1755 <listitem>
1756 <para>
1757 Specify whether the PR_SET_NO_NEW_PRIVS flag should be set for the
1758 container. Set to 1 to activate.
1759 </para>
1760 </listitem>
1761 </varlistentry>
1762 </variablelist>
1763 </refsect2>
1764
1765 <refsect2>
1766 <title>UID mappings</title>
1767 <para>
1768 A container can be started in a private user namespace with
1769 user and group id mappings. For instance, you can map userid
1770 0 in the container to userid 200000 on the host. The root
1771 user in the container will be privileged in the container,
1772 but unprivileged on the host. Normally a system container
1773 will want a range of ids, so you would map, for instance,
1774 user and group ids 0 through 20,000 in the container to the
1775 ids 200,000 through 220,000.
1776 </para>
1777 <variablelist>
1778 <varlistentry>
1779 <term>
1780 <option>lxc.idmap</option>
1781 </term>
1782 <listitem>
1783 <para>
1784 Four values must be provided. First a character, either
1785 'u', or 'g', to specify whether user or group ids are
1786 being mapped. Next is the first userid as seen in the
1787 user namespace of the container. Next is the userid as
1788 seen on the host. Finally, a range indicating the number
1789 of consecutive ids to map.
1790 </para>
1791 </listitem>
1792 </varlistentry>
1793 </variablelist>
1794 </refsect2>
1795
1796 <refsect2>
1797 <title>Container hooks</title>
1798 <para>
1799 Container hooks are programs or scripts which can be executed
1800 at various times in a container's lifetime.
1801 </para>
1802 <para>
1803 When a container hook is executed, additional information is passed
1804 along. The <option>lxc.hook.version</option> argument can be used to
1805 determine if the following arguments are passed as command line
1806 arguments or through environment variables. The arguments are:
1807 <itemizedlist>
1808 <listitem><para> Container name. </para></listitem>
1809 <listitem><para> Section (always 'lxc'). </para></listitem>
1810 <listitem><para> The hook type (i.e. 'clone' or 'pre-mount'). </para></listitem>
1811 <listitem><para> Additional arguments. In the
1812 case of the clone hook, any extra arguments passed to
1813 lxc-clone will appear as further arguments to the hook.
1814 In the case of the stop hook, paths to filedescriptors
1815 for each of the container's namespaces along with their types
1816 are passed. </para></listitem>
1817 </itemizedlist>
1818 The following environment variables are set:
1819 <itemizedlist>
1820 <listitem><para> LXC_CGNS_AWARE: indicator whether the container is
1821 cgroup namespace aware. </para></listitem>
1822 <listitem><para> LXC_CONFIG_FILE: the path to the container
1823 configuration file. </para></listitem>
1824 <listitem><para> LXC_HOOK_TYPE: the hook type (e.g. 'clone', 'mount',
1825 'pre-mount'). Note that the existence of this environment variable is
1826 conditional on the value of <option>lxc.hook.version</option>. If it
1827 is set to 1 then LXC_HOOK_TYPE will be set.
1828 </para></listitem>
1829 <listitem><para> LXC_HOOK_SECTION: the section type (e.g. 'lxc',
1830 'net'). Note that the existence of this environment variable is
1831 conditional on the value of <option>lxc.hook.version</option>. If it
1832 is set to 1 then LXC_HOOK_SECTION will be set.
1833 </para></listitem>
1834 <listitem><para> LXC_HOOK_VERSION: the version of the hooks. This
1835 value is identical to the value of the container's
1836 <option>lxc.hook.version</option> config item. If it is set to 0 then
1837 old-style hooks are used. If it is set to 1 then new-style hooks are
1838 used. </para></listitem>
1839 <listitem><para> LXC_LOG_LEVEL: the container's log level. </para></listitem>
1840 <listitem><para> LXC_NAME: is the container's name. </para></listitem>
1841 <listitem><para> LXC_[NAMESPACE IDENTIFIER]_NS: path under
1842 /proc/PID/fd/ to a file descriptor referring to the container's
1843 namespace. For each preserved namespace type there will be a separate
1844 environment variable. These environment variables will only be set if
1845 <option>lxc.hook.version</option> is set to 1. </para></listitem>
1846 <listitem><para> LXC_ROOTFS_MOUNT: the path to the mounted root filesystem. </para></listitem>
1847 <listitem><para> LXC_ROOTFS_PATH: this is the lxc.rootfs.path entry
1848 for the container. Note this is likely not where the mounted rootfs is
1849 to be found, use LXC_ROOTFS_MOUNT for that. </para></listitem>
1850 <listitem><para> LXC_SRC_NAME: in the case of the clone hook, this is
1851 the original container's name. </para></listitem>
1852 </itemizedlist>
1853 </para>
1854 <para>
1855 Standard output from the hooks is logged at debug level.
1856 Standard error is not logged, but can be captured by the
1857 hook redirecting its standard error to standard output.
1858 </para>
1859 <variablelist>
1860 <varlistentry>
1861 <term>
1862 <option>lxc.hook.version</option>
1863 </term>
1864 <listitem>
1865 <para>
1866 To pass the arguments in new style via environment variables set to
1867 1 otherwise set to 0 to pass them as arguments.
1868 This setting affects all hooks arguments that were traditionally
1869 passed as arguments to the script. Specifically, it affects the
1870 container name, section (e.g. 'lxc', 'net') and hook type (e.g.
1871 'clone', 'mount', 'pre-mount') arguments. If new-style hooks are
1872 used then the arguments will be available as environment variables.
1873 The container name will be set in LXC_NAME. (This is set
1874 independently of the value used for this config item.) The section
1875 will be set in LXC_HOOK_SECTION and the hook type will be set in
1876 LXC_HOOK_TYPE.
1877 It also affects how the paths to file descriptors referring to the
1878 container's namespaces are passed. If set to 1 then for each
1879 namespace a separate environment variable LXC_[NAMESPACE
1880 IDENTIFIER]_NS will be set. If set to 0 then the paths will be
1881 passed as arguments to the stop hook.
1882 </para>
1883 </listitem>
1884 </varlistentry>
1885 </variablelist>
1886 <variablelist>
1887 <varlistentry>
1888 <term>
1889 <option>lxc.hook.pre-start</option>
1890 </term>
1891 <listitem>
1892 <para>
1893 A hook to be run in the host's namespace before the
1894 container ttys, consoles, or mounts are up.
1895 </para>
1896 </listitem>
1897 </varlistentry>
1898 </variablelist>
1899 <variablelist>
1900 <varlistentry>
1901 <term>
1902 <option>lxc.hook.pre-mount</option>
1903 </term>
1904 <listitem>
1905 <para>
1906 A hook to be run in the container's fs namespace but before
1907 the rootfs has been set up. This allows for manipulation
1908 of the rootfs, i.e. to mount an encrypted filesystem. Mounts
1909 done in this hook will not be reflected on the host (apart from
1910 mounts propagation), so they will be automatically cleaned up
1911 when the container shuts down.
1912 </para>
1913 </listitem>
1914 </varlistentry>
1915 </variablelist>
1916 <variablelist>
1917 <varlistentry>
1918 <term>
1919 <option>lxc.hook.mount</option>
1920 </term>
1921 <listitem>
1922 <para>
1923 A hook to be run in the container's namespace after
1924 mounting has been done, but before the pivot_root.
1925 </para>
1926 </listitem>
1927 </varlistentry>
1928 </variablelist>
1929 <variablelist>
1930 <varlistentry>
1931 <term>
1932 <option>lxc.hook.autodev</option>
1933 </term>
1934 <listitem>
1935 <para>
1936 A hook to be run in the container's namespace after
1937 mounting has been done and after any mount hooks have
1938 run, but before the pivot_root, if
1939 <option>lxc.autodev</option> == 1.
1940 The purpose of this hook is to assist in populating the
1941 /dev directory of the container when using the autodev
1942 option for systemd based containers. The container's /dev
1943 directory is relative to the
1944 ${<option>LXC_ROOTFS_MOUNT</option>} environment
1945 variable available when the hook is run.
1946 </para>
1947 </listitem>
1948 </varlistentry>
1949 </variablelist>
1950 <variablelist>
1951 <varlistentry>
1952 <term>
1953 <option>lxc.hook.start-host</option>
1954 </term>
1955 <listitem>
1956 <para>
1957 A hook to be run in the host's namespace after the
1958 container has been setup, and immediately before starting
1959 the container init.
1960 </para>
1961 </listitem>
1962 </varlistentry>
1963 </variablelist>
1964 <variablelist>
1965 <varlistentry>
1966 <term>
1967 <option>lxc.hook.start</option>
1968 </term>
1969 <listitem>
1970 <para>
1971 A hook to be run in the container's namespace immediately
1972 before executing the container's init. This requires the
1973 program to be available in the container.
1974 </para>
1975 </listitem>
1976 </varlistentry>
1977 </variablelist>
1978 <variablelist>
1979 <varlistentry>
1980 <term>
1981 <option>lxc.hook.stop</option>
1982 </term>
1983 <listitem>
1984 <para>
1985 A hook to be run in the host's namespace with references
1986 to the container's namespaces after the container has been shut
1987 down. For each namespace an extra argument is passed to the hook
1988 containing the namespace's type and a filename that can be used to
1989 obtain a file descriptor to the corresponding namespace, separated
1990 by a colon. The type is the name as it would appear in the
1991 <filename>/proc/PID/ns</filename> directory.
1992 For instance for the mount namespace the argument usually looks
1993 like <filename>mnt:/proc/PID/fd/12</filename>.
1994 </para>
1995 </listitem>
1996 </varlistentry>
1997 </variablelist>
1998 <variablelist>
1999 <varlistentry>
2000 <term>
2001 <option>lxc.hook.post-stop</option>
2002 </term>
2003 <listitem>
2004 <para>
2005 A hook to be run in the host's namespace after the
2006 container has been shut down.
2007 </para>
2008 </listitem>
2009 </varlistentry>
2010 </variablelist>
2011 <variablelist>
2012 <varlistentry>
2013 <term>
2014 <option>lxc.hook.clone</option>
2015 </term>
2016 <listitem>
2017 <para>
2018 A hook to be run when the container is cloned to a new one.
2019 See <citerefentry><refentrytitle><command>lxc-clone</command></refentrytitle>
2020 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> for more information.
2021 </para>
2022 </listitem>
2023 </varlistentry>
2024 </variablelist>
2025 <variablelist>
2026 <varlistentry>
2027 <term>
2028 <option>lxc.hook.destroy</option>
2029 </term>
2030 <listitem>
2031 <para>
2032 A hook to be run when the container is destroyed.
2033 </para>
2034 </listitem>
2035 </varlistentry>
2036 </variablelist>
2037 </refsect2>
2038
2039 <refsect2>
2040 <title>Container hooks Environment Variables</title>
2041 <para>
2042 A number of environment variables are made available to the startup
2043 hooks to provide configuration information and assist in the
2044 functioning of the hooks. Not all variables are valid in all
2045 contexts. In particular, all paths are relative to the host system
2046 and, as such, not valid during the <option>lxc.hook.start</option> hook.
2047 </para>
2048 <variablelist>
2049 <varlistentry>
2050 <term>
2051 <option>LXC_NAME</option>
2052 </term>
2053 <listitem>
2054 <para>
2055 The LXC name of the container. Useful for logging messages
2056 in common log environments. [<option>-n</option>]
2057 </para>
2058 </listitem>
2059 </varlistentry>
2060 </variablelist>
2061 <variablelist>
2062 <varlistentry>
2063 <term>
2064 <option>LXC_CONFIG_FILE</option>
2065 </term>
2066 <listitem>
2067 <para>
2068 Host relative path to the container configuration file. This
2069 gives the container to reference the original, top level,
2070 configuration file for the container in order to locate any
2071 additional configuration information not otherwise made
2072 available. [<option>-f</option>]
2073 </para>
2074 </listitem>
2075 </varlistentry>
2076 </variablelist>
2077 <variablelist>
2078 <varlistentry>
2079 <term>
2080 <option>LXC_CONSOLE</option>
2081 </term>
2082 <listitem>
2083 <para>
2084 The path to the console output of the container if not NULL.
2085 [<option>-c</option>] [<option>lxc.console.path</option>]
2086 </para>
2087 </listitem>
2088 </varlistentry>
2089 </variablelist>
2090 <variablelist>
2091 <varlistentry>
2092 <term>
2093 <option>LXC_CONSOLE_LOGPATH</option>
2094 </term>
2095 <listitem>
2096 <para>
2097 The path to the console log output of the container if not NULL.
2098 [<option>-L</option>]
2099 </para>
2100 </listitem>
2101 </varlistentry>
2102 </variablelist>
2103 <variablelist>
2104 <varlistentry>
2105 <term>
2106 <option>LXC_ROOTFS_MOUNT</option>
2107 </term>
2108 <listitem>
2109 <para>
2110 The mount location to which the container is initially bound.
2111 This will be the host relative path to the container rootfs
2112 for the container instance being started and is where changes
2113 should be made for that instance.
2114 [<option>lxc.rootfs.mount</option>]
2115 </para>
2116 </listitem>
2117 </varlistentry>
2118 </variablelist>
2119 <variablelist>
2120 <varlistentry>
2121 <term>
2122 <option>LXC_ROOTFS_PATH</option>
2123 </term>
2124 <listitem>
2125 <para>
2126 The host relative path to the container root which has been
2127 mounted to the rootfs.mount location.
2128 [<option>lxc.rootfs.path</option>]
2129 </para>
2130 </listitem>
2131 </varlistentry>
2132 </variablelist>
2133 <variablelist>
2134 <varlistentry>
2135 <term>
2136 <option>LXC_SRC_NAME</option>
2137 </term>
2138 <listitem>
2139 <para>
2140 Only for the clone hook. Is set to the original container name.
2141 </para>
2142 </listitem>
2143 </varlistentry>
2144 </variablelist>
2145 <variablelist>
2146 <varlistentry>
2147 <term>
2148 <option>LXC_TARGET</option>
2149 </term>
2150 <listitem>
2151 <para>
2152 Only for the stop hook. Is set to "stop" for a container
2153 shutdown or "reboot" for a container reboot.
2154 </para>
2155 </listitem>
2156 </varlistentry>
2157 </variablelist>
2158 <variablelist>
2159 <varlistentry>
2160 <term>
2161 <option>LXC_CGNS_AWARE</option>
2162 </term>
2163 <listitem>
2164 <para>
2165 If unset, then this version of lxc is not aware of cgroup
2166 namespaces. If set, it will be set to 1, and lxc is aware
2167 of cgroup namespaces. Note this does not guarantee that
2168 cgroup namespaces are enabled in the kernel. This is used
2169 by the lxcfs mount hook.
2170 </para>
2171 </listitem>
2172 </varlistentry>
2173 </variablelist>
2174 </refsect2>
2175 <refsect2>
2176 <title>Logging</title>
2177 <para>
2178 Logging can be configured on a per-container basis. By default,
2179 depending upon how the lxc package was compiled, container startup
2180 is logged only at the ERROR level, and logged to a file named after
2181 the container (with '.log' appended) either under the container path,
2182 or under @LOGPATH@.
2183 </para>
2184 <para>
2185 Both the default log level and the log file can be specified in the
2186 container configuration file, overriding the default behavior. Note
2187 that the configuration file entries can in turn be overridden by the
2188 command line options to <command>lxc-start</command>.
2189 </para>
2190 <variablelist>
2191 <varlistentry>
2192 <term>
2193 <option>lxc.log.level</option>
2194 </term>
2195 <listitem>
2196 <para>
2197 The level at which to log. The log level is an integer in
2198 the range of 0..8 inclusive, where a lower number means more
2199 verbose debugging. In particular 0 = trace, 1 = debug, 2 =
2200 info, 3 = notice, 4 = warn, 5 = error, 6 = critical, 7 =
2201 alert, and 8 = fatal. If unspecified, the level defaults
2202 to 5 (error), so that only errors and above are logged.
2203 </para>
2204 <para>
2205 Note that when a script (such as either a hook script or a
2206 network interface up or down script) is called, the script's
2207 standard output is logged at level 1, debug.
2208 </para>
2209 </listitem>
2210 </varlistentry>
2211 <varlistentry>
2212 <term>
2213 <option>lxc.log.file</option>
2214 </term>
2215 <listitem>
2216 <para>
2217 The file to which logging info should be written.
2218 </para>
2219 </listitem>
2220 </varlistentry>
2221 <varlistentry>
2222 <term>
2223 <option>lxc.log.syslog</option>
2224 </term>
2225 <listitem>
2226 <para>
2227 Send logging info to syslog. It respects the log level defined in
2228 <command>lxc.log.level</command>. The argument should be the syslog
2229 facility to use, valid ones are: daemon, local0, local1, local2,
2230 local3, local4, local5, local5, local6, local7.
2231 </para>
2232 </listitem>
2233 </varlistentry>
2234 </variablelist>
2235 </refsect2>
2236
2237 <refsect2>
2238 <title>Autostart</title>
2239 <para>
2240 The autostart options support marking which containers should be
2241 auto-started and in what order. These options may be used by LXC tools
2242 directly or by external tooling provided by the distributions.
2243 </para>
2244
2245 <variablelist>
2246 <varlistentry>
2247 <term>
2248 <option>lxc.start.auto</option>
2249 </term>
2250 <listitem>
2251 <para>
2252 Whether the container should be auto-started.
2253 Valid values are 0 (off) and 1 (on).
2254 </para>
2255 </listitem>
2256 </varlistentry>
2257 <varlistentry>
2258 <term>
2259 <option>lxc.start.delay</option>
2260 </term>
2261 <listitem>
2262 <para>
2263 How long to wait (in seconds) after the container is
2264 started before starting the next one.
2265 </para>
2266 </listitem>
2267 </varlistentry>
2268 <varlistentry>
2269 <term>
2270 <option>lxc.start.order</option>
2271 </term>
2272 <listitem>
2273 <para>
2274 An integer used to sort the containers when auto-starting
2275 a series of containers at once.
2276 </para>
2277 </listitem>
2278 </varlistentry>
2279 <varlistentry>
2280 <term>
2281 <option>lxc.monitor.unshare</option>
2282 </term>
2283 <listitem>
2284 <para>
2285 If not zero the mount namespace will be unshared from the host
2286 before initializing the container (before running any pre-start
2287 hooks). This requires the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability at startup.
2288 Default is 0.
2289 </para>
2290 </listitem>
2291 </varlistentry>
2292 <varlistentry>
2293 <term>
2294 <option>lxc.group</option>
2295 </term>
2296 <listitem>
2297 <para>
2298 A multi-value key (can be used multiple times) to put the
2299 container in a container group. Those groups can then be
2300 used (amongst other things) to start a series of related
2301 containers.
2302 </para>
2303 </listitem>
2304 </varlistentry>
2305 </variablelist>
2306 </refsect2>
2307
2308 <refsect2>
2309 <title>Autostart and System Boot</title>
2310 <para>
2311 Each container can be part of any number of groups or no group at all.
2312 Two groups are special. One is the NULL group, i.e. the container does
2313 not belong to any group. The other group is the "onboot" group.
2314 </para>
2315
2316 <para>
2317 When the system boots with the LXC service enabled, it will first
2318 attempt to boot any containers with lxc.start.auto == 1 that is a member
2319 of the "onboot" group. The startup will be in order of lxc.start.order.
2320 If an lxc.start.delay has been specified, that delay will be honored
2321 before attempting to start the next container to give the current
2322 container time to begin initialization and reduce overloading the host
2323 system. After starting the members of the "onboot" group, the LXC system
2324 will proceed to boot containers with lxc.start.auto == 1 which are not
2325 members of any group (the NULL group) and proceed as with the onboot
2326 group.
2327 </para>
2328
2329 </refsect2>
2330
2331 <refsect2>
2332 <title>Container Environment</title>
2333 <para>
2334 If you want to pass environment variables into the container (that
2335 is, environment variables which will be available to init and all of
2336 its descendents), you can use <command>lxc.environment</command>
2337 parameters to do so. Be careful that you do not pass in anything
2338 sensitive; any process in the container which doesn't have its
2339 environment scrubbed will have these variables available to it, and
2340 environment variables are always available via
2341 <command>/proc/PID/environ</command>.
2342 </para>
2343
2344 <para>
2345 This configuration parameter can be specified multiple times; once
2346 for each environment variable you wish to configure.
2347 </para>
2348
2349 <variablelist>
2350 <varlistentry>
2351 <term>
2352 <option>lxc.environment</option>
2353 </term>
2354 <listitem>
2355 <para>
2356 Specify an environment variable to pass into the container.
2357 Example:
2358 </para>
2359 <programlisting>
2360 lxc.environment = APP_ENV=production
2361 lxc.environment = SYSLOG_SERVER=192.0.2.42
2362 </programlisting>
2363 </listitem>
2364 </varlistentry>
2365 </variablelist>
2366 </refsect2>
2367
2368 </refsect1>
2369
2370 <refsect1>
2371 <title>Examples</title>
2372 <para>
2373 In addition to the few examples given below, you will find
2374 some other examples of configuration file in @DOCDIR@/examples
2375 </para>
2376 <refsect2>
2377 <title>Network</title>
2378 <para>This configuration sets up a container to use a veth pair
2379 device with one side plugged to a bridge br0 (which has been
2380 configured before on the system by the administrator). The
2381 virtual network device visible in the container is renamed to
2382 eth0.</para>
2383 <programlisting>
2384 lxc.uts.name = myhostname
2385 lxc.net.0.type = veth
2386 lxc.net.0.flags = up
2387 lxc.net.0.link = br0
2388 lxc.net.0.name = eth0
2389 lxc.net.0.hwaddr = 4a:49:43:49:79:bf
2390 lxc.net.0.ipv4.address = 10.2.3.5/24 10.2.3.255
2391 lxc.net.0.ipv6.address = 2003:db8:1:0:214:1234:fe0b:3597
2392 </programlisting>
2393 </refsect2>
2394
2395 <refsect2>
2396 <title>UID/GID mapping</title>
2397 <para>This configuration will map both user and group ids in the
2398 range 0-9999 in the container to the ids 100000-109999 on the host.
2399 </para>
2400 <programlisting>
2401 lxc.idmap = u 0 100000 10000
2402 lxc.idmap = g 0 100000 10000
2403 </programlisting>
2404 </refsect2>
2405
2406 <refsect2>
2407 <title>Control group</title>
2408 <para>This configuration will setup several control groups for
2409 the application, cpuset.cpus restricts usage of the defined cpu,
2410 cpus.share prioritize the control group, devices.allow makes
2411 usable the specified devices.</para>
2412 <programlisting>
2413 lxc.cgroup.cpuset.cpus = 0,1
2414 lxc.cgroup.cpu.shares = 1234
2415 lxc.cgroup.devices.deny = a
2416 lxc.cgroup.devices.allow = c 1:3 rw
2417 lxc.cgroup.devices.allow = b 8:0 rw
2418 </programlisting>
2419 </refsect2>
2420
2421 <refsect2>
2422 <title>Complex configuration</title>
2423 <para>This example show a complex configuration making a complex
2424 network stack, using the control groups, setting a new hostname,
2425 mounting some locations and a changing root file system.</para>
2426 <programlisting>
2427 lxc.uts.name = complex
2428 lxc.net.0.type = veth
2429 lxc.net.0.flags = up
2430 lxc.net.0.link = br0
2431 lxc.net.0.hwaddr = 4a:49:43:49:79:bf
2432 lxc.net.0.ipv4.address = 10.2.3.5/24 10.2.3.255
2433 lxc.net.0.ipv6.address = 2003:db8:1:0:214:1234:fe0b:3597
2434 lxc.net.0.ipv6.address = 2003:db8:1:0:214:5432:feab:3588
2435 lxc.net.1.type = macvlan
2436 lxc.net.1.flags = up
2437 lxc.net.1.link = eth0
2438 lxc.net.1.hwaddr = 4a:49:43:49:79:bd
2439 lxc.net.1.ipv4.address = 10.2.3.4/24
2440 lxc.net.1.ipv4.address = 192.168.10.125/24
2441 lxc.net.1.ipv6.address = 2003:db8:1:0:214:1234:fe0b:3596
2442 lxc.net.2.type = phys
2443 lxc.net.2.flags = up
2444 lxc.net.2.link = dummy0
2445 lxc.net.2.hwaddr = 4a:49:43:49:79:ff
2446 lxc.net.2.ipv4.address = 10.2.3.6/24
2447 lxc.net.2.ipv6.address = 2003:db8:1:0:214:1234:fe0b:3297
2448 lxc.cgroup.cpuset.cpus = 0,1
2449 lxc.cgroup.cpu.shares = 1234
2450 lxc.cgroup.devices.deny = a
2451 lxc.cgroup.devices.allow = c 1:3 rw
2452 lxc.cgroup.devices.allow = b 8:0 rw
2453 lxc.mount.fstab = /etc/fstab.complex
2454 lxc.mount.entry = /lib /root/myrootfs/lib none ro,bind 0 0
2455 lxc.rootfs.path = dir:/mnt/rootfs.complex
2456 lxc.cap.drop = sys_module mknod setuid net_raw
2457 lxc.cap.drop = mac_override
2458 </programlisting>
2459 </refsect2>
2460
2461 </refsect1>
2462
2463 <refsect1>
2464 <title>See Also</title>
2465 <simpara>
2466 <citerefentry>
2467 <refentrytitle><command>chroot</command></refentrytitle>
2468 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
2469 </citerefentry>,
2470
2471 <citerefentry>
2472 <refentrytitle><command>pivot_root</command></refentrytitle>
2473 <manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
2474 </citerefentry>,
2475
2476 <citerefentry>
2477 <refentrytitle><filename>fstab</filename></refentrytitle>
2478 <manvolnum>5</manvolnum>
2479 </citerefentry>,
2480
2481 <citerefentry>
2482 <refentrytitle><filename>capabilities</filename></refentrytitle>
2483 <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
2484 </citerefentry>
2485 </simpara>
2486 </refsect1>
2487
2488 &seealso;
2489
2490 <refsect1>
2491 <title>Author</title>
2492 <para>Daniel Lezcano <email>daniel.lezcano@free.fr</email></para>
2493 </refsect1>
2494
2495 </refentry>
2496
2497 <!-- Keep this comment at the end of the file
2498 Local variables:
2499 mode: sgml
2500 sgml-omittag:t
2501 sgml-shorttag:t
2502 sgml-minimize-attributes:nil
2503 sgml-always-quote-attributes:t
2504 sgml-indent-step:2
2505 sgml-indent-data:t
2506 sgml-parent-document:nil
2507 sgml-default-dtd-file:nil
2508 sgml-exposed-tags:nil
2509 sgml-local-catalogs:nil
2510 sgml-local-ecat-files:nil
2511 End:
2512 -->