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Difference between revisions of "LXD/LXD Installation"
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== Installing LXD in Funtoo == | == PART II - LXD Installation == | ||
=== Kernel pre-requisities === | {{#layout:doc}} | ||
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=== Installing LXD in Funtoo === | |||
==== Kernel pre-requisities ==== | |||
These options should be '''disabled''' in your kernel to use all of the functions of LXD: | These options should be '''disabled''' in your kernel to use all of the functions of LXD: | ||
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=== Installing LXD === | ==== Installing LXD ==== | ||
Installing LXD is pretty straight forward as the ebuild exists in our portage tree. I would recommend putting /var on btrfs or zfs (or at least /var/lib/lxd) as LXD can take advantage of these COW filesytems. LXD doesn’t need any configuration to use btrfs, you just need to make sure that /var/lib/lxd is stored on a btrfs filesystem and LXD will automatically make use of it for you. You can use any other filesystem, but be advised LXD can take great advantage of btrfs or ZFS, be it for snapshots, clones, quotas and more. If you want to test it on your current filesystem consider creating a loop device that you format with btrfs and use that as your /var/lib/lxd device. | Installing LXD is pretty straight forward as the ebuild exists in our portage tree. I would recommend putting /var on btrfs or zfs (or at least /var/lib/lxd) as LXD can take advantage of these COW filesytems. LXD doesn’t need any configuration to use btrfs, you just need to make sure that /var/lib/lxd is stored on a btrfs filesystem and LXD will automatically make use of it for you. You can use any other filesystem, but be advised LXD can take great advantage of btrfs or ZFS, be it for snapshots, clones, quotas and more. If you want to test it on your current filesystem consider creating a loop device that you format with btrfs and use that as your /var/lib/lxd device. | ||
Latest revision as of 09:53, February 12, 2018
PART II - LXD Installation
{{#layout:doc}}
Installing LXD in Funtoo
Kernel pre-requisities
These options should be disabled in your kernel to use all of the functions of LXD:
GRKERNSEC_CHROOT_CAPS
GRKERNSEC_CHROOT_CHMOD
GRKERNSEC_CHROOT_DOUBLE
GRKERNSEC_CHROOT_MOUNT
GRKERNSEC_CHROOT_PIVOT
GRKERNSEC_PROC
GRKERNSEC_SYSFS_RESTRICT
NETPRIO_CGROUP
These options should be enabled in your kernel to use all of the functions of LXD:
BRIDGE
CGROUP_CPUACCT
CGROUP_DEVICE
CGROUP_FREEZER
CGROUP_SCHED
CGROUPS
CHECKPOINT_RESTORE
CPUSETS
DUMMY
EPOLL
EVENTFD
FHANDLE
IA32_EMULATION
INET_DIAG
INET_TCP_DIAG
INET_UDP_DIAG
INOTIFY_USER
IP_NF_NAT
IP_NF_TARGET_MASQUERADE
IP6_NF_NAT
IP6_NF_TARGET_MASQUERADE
IPC_NS
IPV6
MACVLAN
NAMESPACES
NET_IPGRE
NET_IPGRE_DEMUX
NET_IPIP
NET_NS
NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_COMMENT
NETLINK_DIAG
NF_NAT_MASQUERADE_IPV4
NF_NAT_MASQUERADE_IPV6
PACKET_DIAG
PID_NS
POSIX_MQUEUE
UNIX_DIAG
USER_NS
UTS_NS
VETH
VXLAN
The Funtoo's default kernel (sys-kernel/debian-sources – v. 4.11.11 at the time of writing) has all these options enabled.
On older kernels DEVPTS_MULTIPLE_INSTANCES
is needed too (as of kernel version 4.11.11 - the option doesn't exist any more)
LXC package comes with an utility to check all needed config options.
root # CONFIG=/path/to/config /usr/bin/lxc-checkconfig
You can also use this code to compare your config settings with the ones needed. Put the required config options in a kernel-req.txt file and run the script.
kerncheck.py
(python source code) - check kernel optionsimport gzip
REQF = "kernel-req.txt" # copy kernel options requirements into this file
REQS = set()
CFGS = set()
with open(REQF) as f:
for line in f:
REQS.add("CONFIG_%s" % line.strip())
with gzip.open("/proc/config.gz") as f:
for line in f:
line = line.decode().strip()
if not line or line.startswith("#"):
continue
try:
[opt, val] = line.split("=")
if val =="n":
continue
CFGS.add(opt)
except:
pass
print("Enabled config options:")
print(CFGS & REQS)
print("Missing config options:")
print(REQS - CFGS)
Installing LXD
Installing LXD is pretty straight forward as the ebuild exists in our portage tree. I would recommend putting /var on btrfs or zfs (or at least /var/lib/lxd) as LXD can take advantage of these COW filesytems. LXD doesn’t need any configuration to use btrfs, you just need to make sure that /var/lib/lxd is stored on a btrfs filesystem and LXD will automatically make use of it for you. You can use any other filesystem, but be advised LXD can take great advantage of btrfs or ZFS, be it for snapshots, clones, quotas and more. If you want to test it on your current filesystem consider creating a loop device that you format with btrfs and use that as your /var/lib/lxd device.
There are couple of major versions of LXD/LXC.
- LXC
- LXC 1.0 (LXC upstream strongly recommends 1.0 users to upgrade to the 2.0 LTS release. Not supported by Funtoo.)
- LXC 2.0.x LTS (supported until June 2021) - latest version 2.0.9
- LXC 2.x (supported for a year from release announcement on 5th of September 2017 - so until September 2018) - latest version 2.1.1
- LXD
- LXD 2.0.x LTS (supported until June 2021) - latest 2.0.11
- LXD 2.x - latest 2.21
- LXCFS
- LXCFS 2.0.x LTS (supported until June 2021) - latest 2.0.8
LXD downgrade from "current" to "LTS" is not supported, but can still be done with lots of manual work.
Install LXD by:
root # emerge -av lxd
You probably want to install also lxcfs, apparmor, ebtables as these are used by lxd and are not dependencies in the ebuild, yet.