]> git.proxmox.com Git - pve-docs.git/blame_incremental - pct.adoc
some small spelling/grammar fixes
[pve-docs.git] / pct.adoc
... / ...
CommitLineData
1[[chapter_pct]]
2ifdef::manvolnum[]
3pct(1)
4======
5:pve-toplevel:
6
7NAME
8----
9
10pct - Tool to manage Linux Containers (LXC) on Proxmox VE
11
12
13SYNOPSIS
14--------
15
16include::pct.1-synopsis.adoc[]
17
18DESCRIPTION
19-----------
20endif::manvolnum[]
21
22ifndef::manvolnum[]
23Proxmox Container Toolkit
24=========================
25:pve-toplevel:
26endif::manvolnum[]
27ifdef::wiki[]
28:title: Linux Container
29endif::wiki[]
30
31Containers are a lightweight alternative to fully virtualized
32VMs. Instead of emulating a complete Operating System (OS), containers
33simply use the OS of the host they run on. This implies that all
34containers use the same kernel, and that they can access resources
35from the host directly.
36
37This is great because containers do not waste CPU power nor memory due
38to kernel emulation. Container run-time costs are close to zero and
39usually negligible. But there are also some drawbacks you need to
40consider:
41
42* You can only run Linux based OS inside containers, i.e. it is not
43 possible to run FreeBSD or MS Windows inside.
44
45* For security reasons, access to host resources needs to be
46 restricted. This is done with AppArmor, SecComp filters and other
47 kernel features. Be prepared that some syscalls are not allowed
48 inside containers.
49
50{pve} uses https://linuxcontainers.org/[LXC] as underlying container
51technology. We consider LXC as low-level library, which provides
52countless options. It would be too difficult to use those tools
53directly. Instead, we provide a small wrapper called `pct`, the
54"Proxmox Container Toolkit".
55
56The toolkit is tightly coupled with {pve}. That means that it is aware
57of the cluster setup, and it can use the same network and storage
58resources as fully virtualized VMs. You can even use the {pve}
59firewall, or manage containers using the HA framework.
60
61Our primary goal is to offer an environment as one would get from a
62VM, but without the additional overhead. We call this "System
63Containers".
64
65NOTE: If you want to run micro-containers (with docker, rkt, ...), it
66is best to run them inside a VM.
67
68
69Technology Overview
70-------------------
71
72* LXC (https://linuxcontainers.org/)
73
74* Integrated into {pve} graphical user interface (GUI)
75
76* Easy to use command line tool `pct`
77
78* Access via {pve} REST API
79
80* lxcfs to provide containerized /proc file system
81
82* AppArmor/Seccomp to improve security
83
84* CRIU: for live migration (planned)
85
86* Use latest available kernels (4.4.X)
87
88* Image based deployment (templates)
89
90* Use {pve} storage library
91
92* Container setup from host (network, DNS, storage, ...)
93
94
95Security Considerations
96-----------------------
97
98Containers use the same kernel as the host, so there is a big attack
99surface for malicious users. You should consider this fact if you
100provide containers to totally untrusted people. In general, fully
101virtualized VMs provide better isolation.
102
103The good news is that LXC uses many kernel security features like
104AppArmor, CGroups and PID and user namespaces, which makes containers
105usage quite secure.
106
107Guest Operating System Configuration
108------------------------------------
109
110We normally try to detect the operating system type inside the
111container, and then modify some files inside the container to make
112them work as expected. Here is a short list of things we do at
113container startup:
114
115set /etc/hostname:: to set the container name
116
117modify /etc/hosts:: to allow lookup of the local hostname
118
119network setup:: pass the complete network setup to the container
120
121configure DNS:: pass information about DNS servers
122
123adapt the init system:: for example, fix the number of spawned getty processes
124
125set the root password:: when creating a new container
126
127rewrite ssh_host_keys:: so that each container has unique keys
128
129randomize crontab:: so that cron does not start at the same time on all containers
130
131Changes made by {PVE} are enclosed by comment markers:
132
133----
134# --- BEGIN PVE ---
135<data>
136# --- END PVE ---
137----
138
139Those markers will be inserted at a reasonable location in the
140file. If such a section already exists, it will be updated in place
141and will not be moved.
142
143Modification of a file can be prevented by adding a `.pve-ignore.`
144file for it. For instance, if the file `/etc/.pve-ignore.hosts`
145exists then the `/etc/hosts` file will not be touched. This can be a
146simple empty file creatd via:
147
148 # touch /etc/.pve-ignore.hosts
149
150Most modifications are OS dependent, so they differ between different
151distributions and versions. You can completely disable modifications
152by manually setting the `ostype` to `unmanaged`.
153
154OS type detection is done by testing for certain files inside the
155container:
156
157Ubuntu:: inspect /etc/lsb-release (`DISTRIB_ID=Ubuntu`)
158
159Debian:: test /etc/debian_version
160
161Fedora:: test /etc/fedora-release
162
163RedHat or CentOS:: test /etc/redhat-release
164
165ArchLinux:: test /etc/arch-release
166
167Alpine:: test /etc/alpine-release
168
169Gentoo:: test /etc/gentoo-release
170
171NOTE: Container start fails if the configured `ostype` differs from the auto
172detected type.
173
174
175[[pct_container_images]]
176Container Images
177----------------
178
179Container images, sometimes also referred to as ``templates'' or
180``appliances'', are `tar` archives which contain everything to run a
181container. You can think of it as a tidy container backup. Like most
182modern container toolkits, `pct` uses those images when you create a
183new container, for example:
184
185 pct create 999 local:vztmpl/debian-8.0-standard_8.0-1_amd64.tar.gz
186
187{pve} itself ships a set of basic templates for most common
188operating systems, and you can download them using the `pveam` (short
189for {pve} Appliance Manager) command line utility. You can also
190download https://www.turnkeylinux.org/[TurnKey Linux] containers using
191that tool (or the graphical user interface).
192
193Our image repositories contain a list of available images, and there
194is a cron job run each day to download that list. You can trigger that
195update manually with:
196
197 pveam update
198
199After that you can view the list of available images using:
200
201 pveam available
202
203You can restrict this large list by specifying the `section` you are
204interested in, for example basic `system` images:
205
206.List available system images
207----
208# pveam available --section system
209system archlinux-base_2015-24-29-1_x86_64.tar.gz
210system centos-7-default_20160205_amd64.tar.xz
211system debian-6.0-standard_6.0-7_amd64.tar.gz
212system debian-7.0-standard_7.0-3_amd64.tar.gz
213system debian-8.0-standard_8.0-1_amd64.tar.gz
214system ubuntu-12.04-standard_12.04-1_amd64.tar.gz
215system ubuntu-14.04-standard_14.04-1_amd64.tar.gz
216system ubuntu-15.04-standard_15.04-1_amd64.tar.gz
217system ubuntu-15.10-standard_15.10-1_amd64.tar.gz
218----
219
220Before you can use such a template, you need to download them into one
221of your storages. You can simply use storage `local` for that
222purpose. For clustered installations, it is preferred to use a shared
223storage so that all nodes can access those images.
224
225 pveam download local debian-8.0-standard_8.0-1_amd64.tar.gz
226
227You are now ready to create containers using that image, and you can
228list all downloaded images on storage `local` with:
229
230----
231# pveam list local
232local:vztmpl/debian-8.0-standard_8.0-1_amd64.tar.gz 190.20MB
233----
234
235The above command shows you the full {pve} volume identifiers. They include
236the storage name, and most other {pve} commands can use them. For
237example you can delete that image later with:
238
239 pveam remove local:vztmpl/debian-8.0-standard_8.0-1_amd64.tar.gz
240
241
242[[pct_container_storage]]
243Container Storage
244-----------------
245
246Traditional containers use a very simple storage model, only allowing
247a single mount point, the root file system. This was further
248restricted to specific file system types like `ext4` and `nfs`.
249Additional mounts are often done by user provided scripts. This turned
250out to be complex and error prone, so we try to avoid that now.
251
252Our new LXC based container model is more flexible regarding
253storage. First, you can have more than a single mount point. This
254allows you to choose a suitable storage for each application. For
255example, you can use a relatively slow (and thus cheap) storage for
256the container root file system. Then you can use a second mount point
257to mount a very fast, distributed storage for your database
258application. See section <<pct_mount_points,Mount Points>> for further
259details.
260
261The second big improvement is that you can use any storage type
262supported by the {pve} storage library. That means that you can store
263your containers on local `lvmthin` or `zfs`, shared `iSCSI` storage,
264or even on distributed storage systems like `ceph`. It also enables us
265to use advanced storage features like snapshots and clones. `vzdump`
266can also use the snapshot feature to provide consistent container
267backups.
268
269Last but not least, you can also mount local devices directly, or
270mount local directories using bind mounts. That way you can access
271local storage inside containers with zero overhead. Such bind mounts
272also provide an easy way to share data between different containers.
273
274
275FUSE Mounts
276~~~~~~~~~~~
277
278WARNING: Because of existing issues in the Linux kernel's freezer
279subsystem the usage of FUSE mounts inside a container is strongly
280advised against, as containers need to be frozen for suspend or
281snapshot mode backups.
282
283If FUSE mounts cannot be replaced by other mounting mechanisms or storage
284technologies, it is possible to establish the FUSE mount on the Proxmox host
285and use a bind mount point to make it accessible inside the container.
286
287
288Using Quotas Inside Containers
289~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
290
291Quotas allow to set limits inside a container for the amount of disk
292space that each user can use. This only works on ext4 image based
293storage types and currently does not work with unprivileged
294containers.
295
296Activating the `quota` option causes the following mount options to be
297used for a mount point:
298`usrjquota=aquota.user,grpjquota=aquota.group,jqfmt=vfsv0`
299
300This allows quotas to be used like you would on any other system. You
301can initialize the `/aquota.user` and `/aquota.group` files by running
302
303----
304quotacheck -cmug /
305quotaon /
306----
307
308and edit the quotas via the `edquota` command. Refer to the documentation
309of the distribution running inside the container for details.
310
311NOTE: You need to run the above commands for every mount point by passing
312the mount point's path instead of just `/`.
313
314
315Using ACLs Inside Containers
316~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
317
318The standard Posix **A**ccess **C**ontrol **L**ists are also available inside containers.
319ACLs allow you to set more detailed file ownership than the traditional user/
320group/others model.
321
322
323[[pct_settings]]
324Container Settings
325------------------
326
327[[pct_general]]
328General Settings
329~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
330
331[thumbnail="gui-create-ct-general.png"]
332
333General settings of a container include
334
335* the *Node* : the physical server on which the container will run
336* the *CT ID*: a unique number in this {pve} installation used to identify your container
337* *Hostname*: the hostname of the container
338* *Resource Pool*: a logical group of containers and VMs
339* *Password*: the root password of the container
340* *SSH Public Key*: a public key for connecting to the root account over SSH
341* *Unprivileged container*: this option allows to choose at creation time
342if you want to create a privileged or unprivileged container.
343
344
345Privileged Containers
346^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
347
348Security is done by dropping capabilities, using mandatory access
349control (AppArmor), SecComp filters and namespaces. The LXC team
350considers this kind of container as unsafe, and they will not consider
351new container escape exploits to be security issues worthy of a CVE
352and quick fix. So you should use this kind of containers only inside a
353trusted environment, or when no untrusted task is running as root in
354the container.
355
356
357Unprivileged Containers
358^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
359
360This kind of containers use a new kernel feature called user
361namespaces. The root UID 0 inside the container is mapped to an
362unprivileged user outside the container. This means that most security
363issues (container escape, resource abuse, ...) in those containers
364will affect a random unprivileged user, and so would be a generic
365kernel security bug rather than an LXC issue. The LXC team thinks
366unprivileged containers are safe by design.
367
368NOTE: If the container uses systemd as an init system, please be
369aware the systemd version running inside the container should be equal
370or greater than 220.
371
372[[pct_cpu]]
373CPU
374~~~
375
376[thumbnail="gui-create-ct-cpu.png"]
377
378You can restrict the number of visible CPUs inside the container using
379the `cores` option. This is implemented using the Linux 'cpuset'
380cgroup (**c**ontrol *group*). A special task inside `pvestatd` tries
381to distribute running containers among available CPUs. You can view
382the assigned CPUs using the following command:
383
384----
385# pct cpusets
386 ---------------------
387 102: 6 7
388 105: 2 3 4 5
389 108: 0 1
390 ---------------------
391----
392
393Containers use the host kernel directly, so all task inside a
394container are handled by the host CPU scheduler. {pve} uses the Linux
395'CFS' (**C**ompletely **F**air **S**cheduler) scheduler by default,
396which has additional bandwidth control options.
397
398[horizontal]
399
400`cpulimit`: :: You can use this option to further limit assigned CPU
401time. Please note that this is a floating point number, so it is
402perfectly valid to assign two cores to a container, but restrict
403overall CPU consumption to half a core.
404+
405----
406cores: 2
407cpulimit: 0.5
408----
409
410`cpuunits`: :: This is a relative weight passed to the kernel
411scheduler. The larger the number is, the more CPU time this container
412gets. Number is relative to the weights of all the other running
413containers. The default is 1024. You can use this setting to
414prioritize some containers.
415
416
417[[pct_memory]]
418Memory
419~~~~~~
420
421[thumbnail="gui-create-ct-memory.png"]
422
423Container memory is controlled using the cgroup memory controller.
424
425[horizontal]
426
427`memory`: :: Limit overall memory usage. This corresponds
428to the `memory.limit_in_bytes` cgroup setting.
429
430`swap`: :: Allows the container to use additional swap memory from the
431host swap space. This corresponds to the `memory.memsw.limit_in_bytes`
432cgroup setting, which is set to the sum of both value (`memory +
433swap`).
434
435
436[[pct_mount_points]]
437Mount Points
438~~~~~~~~~~~~
439
440[thumbnail="gui-create-ct-root-disk.png"]
441
442The root mount point is configured with the `rootfs` property, and you can
443configure up to 10 additional mount points. The corresponding options
444are called `mp0` to `mp9`, and they can contain the following setting:
445
446include::pct-mountpoint-opts.adoc[]
447
448Currently there are basically three types of mount points: storage backed
449mount points, bind mounts and device mounts.
450
451.Typical container `rootfs` configuration
452----
453rootfs: thin1:base-100-disk-1,size=8G
454----
455
456
457Storage Backed Mount Points
458^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
459
460Storage backed mount points are managed by the {pve} storage subsystem and come
461in three different flavors:
462
463- Image based: these are raw images containing a single ext4 formatted file
464 system.
465- ZFS subvolumes: these are technically bind mounts, but with managed storage,
466 and thus allow resizing and snapshotting.
467- Directories: passing `size=0` triggers a special case where instead of a raw
468 image a directory is created.
469
470
471Bind Mount Points
472^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
473
474Bind mounts allow you to access arbitrary directories from your Proxmox VE host
475inside a container. Some potential use cases are:
476
477- Accessing your home directory in the guest
478- Accessing an USB device directory in the guest
479- Accessing an NFS mount from the host in the guest
480
481Bind mounts are considered to not be managed by the storage subsystem, so you
482cannot make snapshots or deal with quotas from inside the container. With
483unprivileged containers you might run into permission problems caused by the
484user mapping and cannot use ACLs.
485
486NOTE: The contents of bind mount points are not backed up when using `vzdump`.
487
488WARNING: For security reasons, bind mounts should only be established
489using source directories especially reserved for this purpose, e.g., a
490directory hierarchy under `/mnt/bindmounts`. Never bind mount system
491directories like `/`, `/var` or `/etc` into a container - this poses a
492great security risk.
493
494NOTE: The bind mount source path must not contain any symlinks.
495
496For example, to make the directory `/mnt/bindmounts/shared` accessible in the
497container with ID `100` under the path `/shared`, use a configuration line like
498`mp0: /mnt/bindmounts/shared,mp=/shared` in `/etc/pve/lxc/100.conf`.
499Alternatively, use `pct set 100 -mp0 /mnt/bindmounts/shared,mp=/shared` to
500achieve the same result.
501
502
503Device Mount Points
504^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
505
506Device mount points allow to mount block devices of the host directly into the
507container. Similar to bind mounts, device mounts are not managed by {PVE}'s
508storage subsystem, but the `quota` and `acl` options will be honored.
509
510NOTE: Device mount points should only be used under special circumstances. In
511most cases a storage backed mount point offers the same performance and a lot
512more features.
513
514NOTE: The contents of device mount points are not backed up when using `vzdump`.
515
516
517[[pct_container_network]]
518Network
519~~~~~~~
520
521[thumbnail="gui-create-ct-network.png"]
522
523You can configure up to 10 network interfaces for a single
524container. The corresponding options are called `net0` to `net9`, and
525they can contain the following setting:
526
527include::pct-network-opts.adoc[]
528
529
530[[pct_startup_and_shutdown]]
531Automatic Start and Shutdown of Containers
532~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
533
534After creating your containers, you probably want them to start automatically
535when the host system boots. For this you need to select the option 'Start at
536boot' from the 'Options' Tab of your container in the web interface, or set it with
537the following command:
538
539 pct set <ctid> -onboot 1
540
541.Start and Shutdown Order
542// use the screenshot from qemu - its the same
543[thumbnail="gui-qemu-edit-start-order.png"]
544
545If you want to fine tune the boot order of your containers, you can use the following
546parameters :
547
548* *Start/Shutdown order*: Defines the start order priority. E.g. set it to 1 if
549you want the CT to be the first to be started. (We use the reverse startup
550order for shutdown, so a container with a start order of 1 would be the last to
551be shut down)
552* *Startup delay*: Defines the interval between this container start and subsequent
553containers starts . E.g. set it to 240 if you want to wait 240 seconds before starting
554other containers.
555* *Shutdown timeout*: Defines the duration in seconds {pve} should wait
556for the container to be offline after issuing a shutdown command.
557By default this value is set to 60, which means that {pve} will issue a
558shutdown request, wait 60s for the machine to be offline, and if after 60s
559the machine is still online will notify that the shutdown action failed.
560
561Please note that containers without a Start/Shutdown order parameter will always
562start after those where the parameter is set, and this parameter only
563makes sense between the machines running locally on a host, and not
564cluster-wide.
565
566
567Backup and Restore
568------------------
569
570
571Container Backup
572~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
573
574It is possible to use the `vzdump` tool for container backup. Please
575refer to the `vzdump` manual page for details.
576
577
578Restoring Container Backups
579~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
580
581Restoring container backups made with `vzdump` is possible using the
582`pct restore` command. By default, `pct restore` will attempt to restore as much
583of the backed up container configuration as possible. It is possible to override
584the backed up configuration by manually setting container options on the command
585line (see the `pct` manual page for details).
586
587NOTE: `pvesm extractconfig` can be used to view the backed up configuration
588contained in a vzdump archive.
589
590There are two basic restore modes, only differing by their handling of mount
591points:
592
593
594``Simple'' Restore Mode
595^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
596
597If neither the `rootfs` parameter nor any of the optional `mpX` parameters
598are explicitly set, the mount point configuration from the backed up
599configuration file is restored using the following steps:
600
601. Extract mount points and their options from backup
602. Create volumes for storage backed mount points (on storage provided with the
603`storage` parameter, or default local storage if unset)
604. Extract files from backup archive
605. Add bind and device mount points to restored configuration (limited to root user)
606
607NOTE: Since bind and device mount points are never backed up, no files are
608restored in the last step, but only the configuration options. The assumption
609is that such mount points are either backed up with another mechanism (e.g.,
610NFS space that is bind mounted into many containers), or not intended to be
611backed up at all.
612
613This simple mode is also used by the container restore operations in the web
614interface.
615
616
617``Advanced'' Restore Mode
618^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
619
620By setting the `rootfs` parameter (and optionally, any combination of `mpX`
621parameters), the `pct restore` command is automatically switched into an
622advanced mode. This advanced mode completely ignores the `rootfs` and `mpX`
623configuration options contained in the backup archive, and instead only
624uses the options explicitly provided as parameters.
625
626This mode allows flexible configuration of mount point settings at restore time,
627for example:
628
629* Set target storages, volume sizes and other options for each mount point
630individually
631* Redistribute backed up files according to new mount point scheme
632* Restore to device and/or bind mount points (limited to root user)
633
634
635Managing Containers with `pct`
636------------------------------
637
638`pct` is the tool to manage Linux Containers on {pve}. You can create
639and destroy containers, and control execution (start, stop, migrate,
640...). You can use pct to set parameters in the associated config file,
641like network configuration or memory limits.
642
643
644CLI Usage Examples
645~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
646
647Create a container based on a Debian template (provided you have
648already downloaded the template via the web interface)
649
650 pct create 100 /var/lib/vz/template/cache/debian-8.0-standard_8.0-1_amd64.tar.gz
651
652Start container 100
653
654 pct start 100
655
656Start a login session via getty
657
658 pct console 100
659
660Enter the LXC namespace and run a shell as root user
661
662 pct enter 100
663
664Display the configuration
665
666 pct config 100
667
668Add a network interface called `eth0`, bridged to the host bridge `vmbr0`,
669set the address and gateway, while it's running
670
671 pct set 100 -net0 name=eth0,bridge=vmbr0,ip=192.168.15.147/24,gw=192.168.15.1
672
673Reduce the memory of the container to 512MB
674
675 pct set 100 -memory 512
676
677
678Obtaining Debugging Logs
679~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
680
681In case `pct start` is unable to start a specific container, it might be
682helpful to collect debugging output by running `lxc-start` (replace `ID` with
683the container's ID):
684
685 lxc-start -n ID -F -l DEBUG -o /tmp/lxc-ID.log
686
687This command will attempt to start the container in foreground mode, to stop the container run `pct shutdown ID` or `pct stop ID` in a second terminal.
688
689The collected debug log is written to `/tmp/lxc-ID.log`.
690
691NOTE: If you have changed the container's configuration since the last start
692attempt with `pct start`, you need to run `pct start` at least once to also
693update the configuration used by `lxc-start`.
694
695[[pct_migration]]
696Migration
697---------
698
699If you have a cluster, you can migrate your Containers with
700
701 pct migrate <vmid> <target>
702
703This works as long as your Container is offline. If it has local volumes or
704mountpoints defined, the migration will copy the content over the network to
705the target host if there is the same storage defined.
706
707If you want to migrate online Containers, the only way is to use
708restart migration. This can be initiated with the -restart flag and the optional
709-timeout parameter.
710
711A restart migration will shut down the Container and kill it after the specified
712timeout (the default is 180 seconds). Then it will migrate the Container
713like an offline migration and when finished, it starts the Container on the
714target node.
715
716[[pct_configuration]]
717Configuration
718-------------
719
720The `/etc/pve/lxc/<CTID>.conf` file stores container configuration,
721where `<CTID>` is the numeric ID of the given container. Like all
722other files stored inside `/etc/pve/`, they get automatically
723replicated to all other cluster nodes.
724
725NOTE: CTIDs < 100 are reserved for internal purposes, and CTIDs need to be
726unique cluster wide.
727
728.Example Container Configuration
729----
730ostype: debian
731arch: amd64
732hostname: www
733memory: 512
734swap: 512
735net0: bridge=vmbr0,hwaddr=66:64:66:64:64:36,ip=dhcp,name=eth0,type=veth
736rootfs: local:107/vm-107-disk-1.raw,size=7G
737----
738
739Those configuration files are simple text files, and you can edit them
740using a normal text editor (`vi`, `nano`, ...). This is sometimes
741useful to do small corrections, but keep in mind that you need to
742restart the container to apply such changes.
743
744For that reason, it is usually better to use the `pct` command to
745generate and modify those files, or do the whole thing using the GUI.
746Our toolkit is smart enough to instantaneously apply most changes to
747running containers. This feature is called "hot plug", and there is no
748need to restart the container in that case.
749
750
751File Format
752~~~~~~~~~~~
753
754Container configuration files use a simple colon separated key/value
755format. Each line has the following format:
756
757-----
758# this is a comment
759OPTION: value
760-----
761
762Blank lines in those files are ignored, and lines starting with a `#`
763character are treated as comments and are also ignored.
764
765It is possible to add low-level, LXC style configuration directly, for
766example:
767
768 lxc.init_cmd: /sbin/my_own_init
769
770or
771
772 lxc.init_cmd = /sbin/my_own_init
773
774Those settings are directly passed to the LXC low-level tools.
775
776
777[[pct_snapshots]]
778Snapshots
779~~~~~~~~~
780
781When you create a snapshot, `pct` stores the configuration at snapshot
782time into a separate snapshot section within the same configuration
783file. For example, after creating a snapshot called ``testsnapshot'',
784your configuration file will look like this:
785
786.Container configuration with snapshot
787----
788memory: 512
789swap: 512
790parent: testsnaphot
791...
792
793[testsnaphot]
794memory: 512
795swap: 512
796snaptime: 1457170803
797...
798----
799
800There are a few snapshot related properties like `parent` and
801`snaptime`. The `parent` property is used to store the parent/child
802relationship between snapshots. `snaptime` is the snapshot creation
803time stamp (Unix epoch).
804
805
806[[pct_options]]
807Options
808~~~~~~~
809
810include::pct.conf.5-opts.adoc[]
811
812
813Locks
814-----
815
816Container migrations, snapshots and backups (`vzdump`) set a lock to
817prevent incompatible concurrent actions on the affected container. Sometimes
818you need to remove such a lock manually (e.g., after a power failure).
819
820 pct unlock <CTID>
821
822CAUTION: Only do that if you are sure the action which set the lock is
823no longer running.
824
825
826ifdef::manvolnum[]
827
828Files
829------
830
831`/etc/pve/lxc/<CTID>.conf`::
832
833Configuration file for the container '<CTID>'.
834
835
836include::pve-copyright.adoc[]
837endif::manvolnum[]
838
839
840
841
842
843
844