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1ifdef::manvolnum[]
2PVE({manvolnum})
3================
4include::attributes.txt[]
5
6NAME
7----
8
9pct - Tool to manage Linux Containers (LXC) on Proxmox VE
10
11
12SYNOPSYS
13--------
14
15include::pct.1-synopsis.adoc[]
16
17DESCRIPTION
18-----------
19endif::manvolnum[]
20
21ifndef::manvolnum[]
22Proxmox Container Toolkit
23=========================
24include::attributes.txt[]
25endif::manvolnum[]
26
27
28Containers are a lightweight alternative to fully virtualized
29VMs. Instead of emulating a complete Operating System (OS), containers
30simply use the OS of the host they run on. This implies that all
31containers use the same kernel, and that they can access resources
32from the host directly.
33
34This is great because containers do not waste CPU power nor memory due
35to kernel emulation. Container run-time costs are close to zero and
36usually negligible. But there are also some drawbacks you need to
37consider:
38
39* You can only run Linux based OS inside containers, i.e. it is not
40 possible to run FreeBSD or MS Windows inside.
41
42* For security reasons, access to host resources needs to be
43 restricted. This is done with AppArmor, SecComp filters and other
44 kernel features. Be prepared that some syscalls are not allowed
45 inside containers.
46
47{pve} uses https://linuxcontainers.org/[LXC] as underlying container
48technology. We consider LXC as low-level library, which provides
49countless options. It would be too difficult to use those tools
50directly. Instead, we provide a small wrapper called `pct`, the
51"Proxmox Container Toolkit".
52
53The toolkit is tightly coupled with {pve}. That means that it is aware
54of the cluster setup, and it can use the same network and storage
55resources as fully virtualized VMs. You can even use the {pve}
56firewall, or manage containers using the HA framework.
57
58Our primary goal is to offer an environment as one would get from a
59VM, but without the additional overhead. We call this "System
60Containers".
61
62NOTE: If you want to run micro-containers (with docker, rct, ...), it
63is best to run them inside a VM.
64
65
66Security Considerations
67-----------------------
68
69Containers use the same kernel as the host, so there is a big attack
70surface for malicious users. You should consider this fact if you
71provide containers to totally untrusted people. In general, fully
72virtualized VMs provide better isolation.
73
74The good news is that LXC uses many kernel security features like
75AppArmor, CGroups and PID and user namespaces, which makes containers
76usage quite secure. We distinguish two types of containers:
77
78Privileged containers
79~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
80
81Security is done by dropping capabilities, using mandatory access
82control (AppArmor), SecComp filters and namespaces. The LXC team
83considers this kind of container as unsafe, and they will not consider
84new container escape exploits to be security issues worthy of a CVE
85and quick fix. So you should use this kind of containers only inside a
86trusted environment, or when no untrusted task is running as root in
87the container.
88
89Unprivileged containers
90~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
91
92This kind of containers use a new kernel feature called user
93namespaces. The root uid 0 inside the container is mapped to an
94unprivileged user outside the container. This means that most security
95issues (container escape, resource abuse, ...) in those containers
96will affect a random unprivileged user, and so would be a generic
97kernel security bug rather than an LXC issue. The LXC team thinks
98unprivileged containers are safe by design.
99
100
101Configuration
102-------------
103
104The '/etc/pve/lxc/<CTID>.conf' file stores container configuration,
105where '<CTID>' is the numeric ID of the given container. Like all
106other files stored inside '/etc/pve/', they get automatically
107replicated to all other cluster nodes.
108
109NOTE: CTIDs < 100 are reserved for internal purposes, and CTIDs need to be
110unique cluster wide.
111
112.Example Container Configuration
113----
114ostype: debian
115arch: amd64
116hostname: www
117memory: 512
118swap: 512
119net0: bridge=vmbr0,hwaddr=66:64:66:64:64:36,ip=dhcp,name=eth0,type=veth
120rootfs: local:107/vm-107-disk-1.raw,size=7G
121----
122
123Those configuration files are simple text files, and you can edit them
124using a normal text editor ('vi', 'nano', ...). This is sometimes
125useful to do small corrections, but keep in mind that you need to
126restart the container to apply such changes.
127
128For that reason, it is usually better to use the 'pct' command to
129generate and modify those files, or do the whole thing using the GUI.
130Our toolkit is smart enough to instantaneously apply most changes to
131running containers. This feature is called "hot plug", and there is no
132need to restart the container in that case.
133
134File Format
135~~~~~~~~~~~
136
137Container configuration files use a simple colon separated key/value
138format. Each line has the following format:
139
140 # this is a comment
141 OPTION: value
142
143Blank lines in those files are ignored, and lines starting with a '#'
144character are treated as comments and are also ignored.
145
146It is possible to add low-level, LXC style configuration directly, for
147example:
148
149 lxc.init_cmd: /sbin/my_own_init
150
151or
152
153 lxc.init_cmd = /sbin/my_own_init
154
155Those settings are directly passed to the LXC low-level tools.
156
157Snapshots
158~~~~~~~~~
159
160When you create a snapshot, 'pct' stores the configuration at snapshot
161time into a separate snapshot section within the same configuration
162file. For example, after creating a snapshot called 'testsnapshot',
163your configuration file will look like this:
164
165.Container Configuration with Snapshot
166----
167memory: 512
168swap: 512
169parent: testsnaphot
170...
171
172[testsnaphot]
173memory: 512
174swap: 512
175snaptime: 1457170803
176...
177----
178
179There are a few snapshot related properties like 'parent' and
180'snaptime'. The 'parent' property is used to store the parent/child
181relationship between snapshots. 'snaptime' is the snapshot creation
182time stamp (unix epoch).
183
184Guest Operating System Configuration
185~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
186
187We normally try to detect the operating system type inside the
188container, and then modify some files inside the container to make
189them work as expected. Here is a short list of things we do at
190container startup:
191
192set /etc/hostname:: to set the container name
193
194modify /etc/hosts:: to allow lookup of the local hostname
195
196network setup:: pass the complete network setup to the container
197
198configure DNS:: pass information about DNS servers
199
200adapt the init system:: for example, fix the number of spawned getty processes
201
202set the root password:: when creating a new container
203
204rewrite ssh_host_keys:: so that each container has unique keys
205
206randomize crontab:: so that cron does not start at the same time on all containers
207
208Changes made by {PVE} are enclosed by comment markers:
209
210----
211# --- BEGIN PVE ---
212<data>
213# --- END PVE ---
214----
215
216Those markers will be inserted at a reasonable location in the
217file. If such a section already exists, it will be updated in place
218and will not be moved.
219
220Modification of a file can be prevented by adding a `.pve-ignore.`
221file for it. For instance, if the file `/etc/.pve-ignore.hosts`
222exists then the `/etc/hosts` file will not be touched. This can be a
223simple empty file creatd via:
224
225 # touch /etc/.pve-ignore.hosts
226
227Most modifications are OS dependent, so they differ between different
228distributions and versions. You can completely disable modifications
229by manually setting the 'ostype' to 'unmanaged'.
230
231OS type detection is done by testing for certain files inside the
232container:
233
234Ubuntu:: inspect /etc/lsb-release ('DISTRIB_ID=Ubuntu')
235
236Debian:: test /etc/debian_version
237
238Fedora:: test /etc/fedora-release
239
240RedHat or CentOS:: test /etc/redhat-release
241
242ArchLinux:: test /etc/arch-release
243
244Alpine:: test /etc/alpine-release
245
246NOTE: Container start fails if the configured 'ostype' differs from the auto
247detected type.
248
249Options
250~~~~~~~
251
252include::pct.conf.5-opts.adoc[]
253
254
255Container Images
256----------------
257
258Container Images, sometimes also referred to as "templates" or
259"appliances", are 'tar' archives which contain everything to run a
260container. You can think of it as a tidy container backup. Like most
261modern container toolkits, 'pct' uses those images when you create a
262new container, for example:
263
264 pct create 999 local:vztmpl/debian-8.0-standard_8.0-1_amd64.tar.gz
265
266Proxmox itself ships a set of basic templates for most common
267operating systems, and you can download them using the 'pveam' (short
268for {pve} Appliance Manager) command line utility. You can also
269download https://www.turnkeylinux.org/[TurnKey Linux] containers using
270that tool (or the graphical user interface).
271
272Our image repositories contain a list of available images, and there
273is a cron job run each day to download that list. You can trigger that
274update manually with:
275
276 pveam update
277
278After that you can view the list of available images using:
279
280 pveam available
281
282You can restrict this large list by specifying the 'section' you are
283interested in, for example basic 'system' images:
284
285.List available system images
286----
287# pveam available --section system
288system archlinux-base_2015-24-29-1_x86_64.tar.gz
289system centos-7-default_20160205_amd64.tar.xz
290system debian-6.0-standard_6.0-7_amd64.tar.gz
291system debian-7.0-standard_7.0-3_amd64.tar.gz
292system debian-8.0-standard_8.0-1_amd64.tar.gz
293system ubuntu-12.04-standard_12.04-1_amd64.tar.gz
294system ubuntu-14.04-standard_14.04-1_amd64.tar.gz
295system ubuntu-15.04-standard_15.04-1_amd64.tar.gz
296system ubuntu-15.10-standard_15.10-1_amd64.tar.gz
297----
298
299Before you can use such a template, you need to download them into one
300of your storages. You can simply use storage 'local' for that
301purpose. For clustered installations, it is preferred to use a shared
302storage so that all nodes can access those images.
303
304 pveam download local debian-8.0-standard_8.0-1_amd64.tar.gz
305
306You are now ready to create containers using that image, and you can
307list all downloaded images on storage 'local' with:
308
309----
310# pveam list local
311local:vztmpl/debian-8.0-standard_8.0-1_amd64.tar.gz 190.20MB
312----
313
314The above command shows you the full {pve} volume identifiers. They include
315the storage name, and most other {pve} commands can use them. For
316examply you can delete that image later with:
317
318 pveam remove local:vztmpl/debian-8.0-standard_8.0-1_amd64.tar.gz
319
320
321Container Storage
322-----------------
323
324Traditional containers use a very simple storage model, only allowing
325a single mount point, the root file system. This was further
326restricted to specific file system types like 'ext4' and 'nfs'.
327Additional mounts are often done by user provided scripts. This turend
328out to be complex and error prone, so we try to avoid that now.
329
330Our new LXC based container model is more flexible regarding
331storage. First, you can have more than a single mount point. This
332allows you to choose a suitable storage for each application. For
333example, you can use a relatively slow (and thus cheap) storage for
334the container root file system. Then you can use a second mount point
335to mount a very fast, distributed storage for your database
336application.
337
338The second big improvement is that you can use any storage type
339supported by the {pve} storage library. That means that you can store
340your containers on local 'lvmthin' or 'zfs', shared 'iSCSI' storage,
341or even on distributed storage systems like 'ceph'. It also enables us
342to use advanced storage features like snapshots and clones. 'vzdump'
343can also use the snapshot feature to provide consistent container
344backups.
345
346Last but not least, you can also mount local devices directly, or
347mount local directories using bind mounts. That way you can access
348local storage inside containers with zero overhead. Such bind mounts
349also provide an easy way to share data between different containers.
350
351
352Mount Points
353~~~~~~~~~~~~
354
355Beside the root directory the container can also have additional mount points.
356Currently there are basically three types of mount points: storage backed
357mount points, bind mounts and device mounts.
358
359Storage backed mount points are managed by the {pve} storage subsystem and come
360in three different flavors:
361
362- Image based: These are raw images containing a single ext4 formatted file
363 system.
364- ZFS Subvolumes: These are technically bind mounts, but with managed storage,
365 and thus allow resizing and snapshotting.
366- Directories: passing `size=0` triggers a special case where instead of a raw
367 image a directory is created.
368
369Bind mounts are considered to not be managed by the storage subsystem, so you
370cannot make snapshots or deal with quotas from inside the container, and with
371unprivileged containers you might run into permission problems caused by the
372user mapping, and cannot use ACLs from inside an unprivileged container.
373
374Similarly device mounts are not managed by the storage, but for these the
375`quota` and `acl` options will be honored.
376
377WARNING: Because of existing issues in the Linux kernel's freezer
378subsystem the usage of FUSE mounts inside a container is strongly
379advised against, as containers need to be frozen for suspend or
380snapshot mode backups. If FUSE mounts cannot be replaced by other
381mounting mechanisms or storage technologies, it is possible to
382establish the FUSE mount on the Proxmox host and use a bind
383mount point to make it accessible inside the container.
384
385The root mount point is configured with the 'rootfs' property, and you can
386configure up to 10 additional mount points. The corresponding options
387are called 'mp0' to 'mp9', and they can contain the following setting:
388
389include::pct-mountpoint-opts.adoc[]
390
391.Typical Container 'rootfs' configuration
392----
393rootfs: thin1:base-100-disk-1,size=8G
394----
395
396Using quotas inside containers
397~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
398
399Quotas allow to set limits inside a container for the amount of disk
400space that each user can use. This only works on ext4 image based
401storage types and currently does not work with unprivileged
402containers.
403
404Activating the `quota` option causes the following mount options to be
405used for a mount point:
406`usrjquota=aquota.user,grpjquota=aquota.group,jqfmt=vfsv0`
407
408This allows quotas to be used like you would on any other system. You
409can initialize the `/aquota.user` and `/aquota.group` files by running
410
411----
412quotacheck -cmug /
413quotaon /
414----
415
416and edit the quotas via the `edquota` command. Refer to the documentation
417of the distribution running inside the container for details.
418
419NOTE: You need to run the above commands for every mount point by passing
420the mount point's path instead of just `/`.
421
422
423Using ACLs inside containers
424~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
425
426The standard Posix Access Control Lists are also available inside containers.
427ACLs allow you to set more detailed file ownership than the traditional user/
428group/others model.
429
430
431Container Network
432-----------------
433
434You can configure up to 10 network interfaces for a single
435container. The corresponding options are called 'net0' to 'net9', and
436they can contain the following setting:
437
438include::pct-network-opts.adoc[]
439
440
441Managing Containers with 'pct'
442------------------------------
443
444'pct' is the tool to manage Linux Containers on {pve}. You can create
445and destroy containers, and control execution (start, stop, migrate,
446...). You can use pct to set parameters in the associated config file,
447like network configuration or memory limits.
448
449CLI Usage Examples
450~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
451
452Create a container based on a Debian template (provided you have
453already downloaded the template via the webgui)
454
455 pct create 100 /var/lib/vz/template/cache/debian-8.0-standard_8.0-1_amd64.tar.gz
456
457Start container 100
458
459 pct start 100
460
461Start a login session via getty
462
463 pct console 100
464
465Enter the LXC namespace and run a shell as root user
466
467 pct enter 100
468
469Display the configuration
470
471 pct config 100
472
473Add a network interface called eth0, bridged to the host bridge vmbr0,
474set the address and gateway, while it's running
475
476 pct set 100 -net0 name=eth0,bridge=vmbr0,ip=192.168.15.147/24,gw=192.168.15.1
477
478Reduce the memory of the container to 512MB
479
480 pct set 100 -memory 512
481
482
483Files
484------
485
486'/etc/pve/lxc/<CTID>.conf'::
487
488Configuration file for the container '<CTID>'.
489
490
491Container Advantages
492--------------------
493
494- Simple, and fully integrated into {pve}. Setup looks similar to a normal
495 VM setup.
496
497 * Storage (ZFS, LVM, NFS, Ceph, ...)
498
499 * Network
500
501 * Authentification
502
503 * Cluster
504
505- Fast: minimal overhead, as fast as bare metal
506
507- High density (perfect for idle workloads)
508
509- REST API
510
511- Direct hardware access
512
513
514Technology Overview
515-------------------
516
517- Integrated into {pve} graphical user interface (GUI)
518
519- LXC (https://linuxcontainers.org/)
520
521- cgmanager for cgroup management
522
523- lxcfs to provive containerized /proc file system
524
525- apparmor
526
527- CRIU: for live migration (planned)
528
529- We use latest available kernels (4.4.X)
530
531- Image based deployment (templates)
532
533- Container setup from host (Network, DNS, Storage, ...)
534
535
536ifdef::manvolnum[]
537include::pve-copyright.adoc[]
538endif::manvolnum[]
539
540
541
542
543
544
545