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LXC 2.1 has been released

This article is more than 7 years old.


This article originally appeared at linuxcontainers.org

The LXC team is proud to announce the release of LXC 2.1. This release contains a lot of new features introduced since the release of LXC 2.0.

Note that this isn’t a LTS release and we’ll therefore only be supporting LXC 2.1 for a year. Production environments that require longer term support should remain on LXC 2.0 which is supported until June 2021.

New features

Resource limit support

Similar to requesting specific cgroup limits users can specify any limits for any resource the underlying kernel is ware of by prefixing the name of the limit with “lxc.prlimit.” in the container’s configuration file. For example, to request a limit on the number of processes and a specific nice value the configuration file for the container should contain the entries:

  lxc.prlimit.nproc = unlimited
  lxc.prlimit.nice = 4

Support for unprivileged openvswitch networks

It is now possible to define openvswitch networks as an unprivileged user:

  lxc.net.0.type = veth
  lxc.net.0.link = ovsbr0
  lxc.net.0.flags = up
  lxc.net.0.name = eth0

LXC 2.1. will take care to properly delete the host-side veth device from the openvswitch database on shutdown.

New lxc.cgroup.dir key

The lxc.cgroup.dir key lets users specify the name of the parent cgroup under which the container’s cgroup will be created. Setting lxc.cgroup.dir will override the system-wide setting for lxc.cgroup.pattern. For example, setting lxc.cgroup.dir = mycontainers for a container with lxc.uts.name = c1 will cause LXC to create the cgroups mycontainers/c1 for all controllers in the cgroup hierarchy.

Support for hybrid cgroup layout

Since the advent of cgroup v2 some init systems have decided to allow for a hybrid mode in which cgroup v1 per-controller hierarchies can be used simultaneously with an empty cgroup v2 hierarchy. Systems that use this hybrid mode usually have a cgroup layout similar to this one:

  /sys/fs/cgroup/blkio
  /sys/fs/cgroup/devices
  /sys/fs/cgroup/memory
  /sys/fs/cgroup/unified

Where the mountpoint /sys/fs/cgroup/unified usually indicates the presence of a cgroup v2 hierarchy. This can be confirmed by testing whether findmnt | grep cgroup2 returns a matching line. LXC 2.1 supports this hybrid mode.

Limiting the number of ptys a container can allocate

Setting lxc.pty.max will cause LXC to mount the container’s devpts with the requested limit on the number of useable ptys. For example, setting lxc.pty.max = 10 will only allow the container to allocate 10 ptys. The default setting is 1024.

bool lxc_config_item_is_supported(const char *key) API extension

This function let’s users query the liblxc whether a specific configuration item is supported for this library. This is particularly useful for embedded users that running versions of liblxc that come with significantly less configuration options than the standard liblxc library or liblxc’s that have backported new configuration items.

New log API extension

struct lxc_log {
	const char *name;
	const char *lxcpath;
	const char *file;
	const char *level;
	const char *prefix;
	bool quiet;
};

/*!
 *\brief Initialize the log
 *
 *\param log lxc log configuration.
 */
int lxc_log_init(struct lxc_log *log);

/*!
 * \brief Close log file.
 */
void lxc_log_close(void);

These types and functions let users initialize LXC logging. This is useful for users who use the liblxc API directly.

Deprecation of lxc-monitord

Starting with LXC 2.1 the lxc-monitord binary is marked as deprecated. It is not required anymore to start daemonized containers. Instead, LXC 2.1 switches to an implementation using an abstract unix domain socketpair. This has the advantage of spawning one less processes on container startup which is important for highly threaded users such as LXD. Also, testing the new implementation on heavy workloads has shown this solution to be more robust and reliable in every way.

lxc-copy create snapshots on tmpfs

Place an ephemeral container started with -e flag on a tmpfs. Restrictions are that you cannot request the data to be kept while placing the container on a tmpfs, that either overlay or aufs backing storage must be used, and that the storage backend of the original container must be a directory.

For ephemeral snapshots backed by overlay or aufs filesystems, a fresh tmpfs is mounted over the containers directory if the user requests it. This should be the easiest options. Anything else would require us to change the current mount-layout of overlay and aufs snapshots. (A standard overlay or aufs snapshot clone currently has the layout:

        /var/lib/lxc/CLONE_SNAPSHOT/delta0      <-- upperdir
        /var/lib/lxc/CLONE_SNAPSHOT/rootfs
        /var/lib/lxc/CLONE_SNAPSHOT/olwork
        /var/lib/lxc/CLONE_SNAPSHOT/olwork/work <-- workdir

with the lowerdir being

        /var/lib/lxc/CLONE_PARENT/rootfs

The fact that upperdir and workdir are not placed in a common subfolder under the container directory has the consequence that we cannot simply mount a fresh tmpfs under upperdir and workdir because overlay expects them to be on the same filesystem.)

Because we mount a fresh tmpfs over the directory of the container the updated /etc/hostname file created during the clone residing in the upperdir (currently named “delta0” by default) will be hidden. Hence, if the user requests that the old name is not to be kept for the clone, we recreate this file on the tmpfs. This should be all that is required to restore the exact behaviour we would get with a normal clone.
NOTE: If the container is rebooted all changes made to it are lost. This is not easy to prevent since each reboot remounts the rootfs again.

Configuration changes

A lot of configuration keys have been renamed to make the experience of configuring a container much more consistent. LXC 2.1 ensures that all keys that have subkeys are properly namespaces via the “.” syntax.

Network configuration

The network configuration keys have all been given a new prefix. Some of them have also been renamed. From LXC 2.1. onwards network configuration keys using the “lxc.network” prefix are considered deprecated. They are replaced by network configuration keys using the new “lxc.net” prefix. Furthermore, defining network without indices is marked deprecated. Consider the following legacy network configuration:

lxc.network.type = veth
lxc.network.flags = up
lxc.network.link = lxcbr0
lxc.network.name = wlp2s0

lxc.network.type = veth
lxc.network.flags = up
lxc.network.link = lxcbr0
lxc.network.name = eno1

would define two distinct networks. Starting with LXC 2.1 this should be replaced with:

lxc.net.0.type = veth
lxc.net.0.flags = up
lxc.net.0.link = lxcbr0
lxc.net.0.name = wlp2s0

lxc.net.1.type = veth
lxc.net.1.flags = up
lxc.net.1.link = lxcbr0
lxc.net.1.name = eno1

Defining networks only in this manner has the advantage of being consistent and order independent. This means an equivalent configuration for the two networks would be:

lxc.net.1.link = lxcbr0
lxc.net.0.name = wlp2s0
lxc.net.0.type = veth

lxc.net.1.type = veth
lxc.net.1.flags = up
lxc.net.0.flags = up
lxc.net.0.link = lxcbr0
lxc.net.1.name = eno1

Note that when using multiple definitions of the same key with the same index only the last one will be considered by LXC. This is in line with prior LXC version. For example:

lxc.net.2.link = lxcbr0
lxc.net.2.link = lxdbr0
lxc.net.2.link = br0
lxc.net.2.link = virbr0

would lead to LXC associating the network with virbr0 since it is the last key in the configuration.

Table of changed configuration keys

The following table lists the legacy configuration keys on the left side and their corresponding new keys on the right side. Keys that have been entirely removed will have “-” as entry in the “New Key” column and a comment saying “removed” in the “Comments” table.

Legacy Key                           | New Key                       | Comments
-------------------------------------|-------------------------------|---------
lxc.aa_profile                       | lxc.apparmor.profile          |
lxc.aa_allow_incomplete              | lxc.apparmor.allow_incomplete |
lxc.console                          | lxc.console.path              |
lxc.devttydir                        | lxc.tty.dir                   |
lxc.haltsignal                       | lxc.signal.halt               |
lxc.id_map                           | lxc.idmap                     |
lxc.init_cmd                         | lxc.init.cmd                  |
lxc.init_gid                         | lxc.init.gid                  |
lxc.init_uid                         | lxc.init.uid                  |
lxc.kmsg                             | -                             | removed
lxc.limit                            | lxc.prlimit                   |
lxc.logfile                          | lxc.log.file                  |
lxc.loglevel                         | lxc.log.level                 |
lxc.mount                            | lxc.mount.fstab               |
lxc.network                          | lxc.net                       |
lxc.network.                         | lxc.net.[i].                  |
lxc.network.flags                    | lxc.net.[i].flags             |
lxc.network.hwaddr                   | lxc.net.[i].hwaddr            |
lxc.network.ipv4                     | lxc.net.[i].ipv4.address      |
lxc.network.ipv4.gateway             | lxc.net.[i].ipv4.gateway      |
lxc.network.ipv6                     | lxc.net.[i].ipv6.address      |
lxc.network.ipv6.gateway             | lxc.net.[i].ipv6.gateway      |
lxc.network.link                     | lxc.net.[i].link              |
lxc.network.macvlan.mode             | lxc.net.[i].macvlan.mode      |
lxc.network.mtu                      | lxc.net.[i].mtu               |
lxc.network.name                     | lxc.net.[i].name              |
lxc.network.script.down              | lxc.net.[i].script.down       |
lxc.network.script.up                | lxc.net.[i].script.up         |
lxc.network.type                     | lxc.net.[i].type              |
lxc.network.veth.pair                | lxc.net.[i].veth.pair         |
lxc.network.vlan.id                  | lxc.net.[i].vlan.id           |
lxc.pivotdir                         | -                             | removed
lxc.pts                              | lxc.pty.max                   |
lxc.rebootsignal                     | lxc.signal.reboot             |
lxc.rootfs                           | lxc.rootfs.path               |
lxc.se_context                       | lxc.selinux.context           |
lxc.seccomp                          | lxc.seccomp.profile           |
lxc.stopsignal                       | lxc.signal.stop               |
lxc.syslog                           | lxc.log.syslog                |
lxc.tty                              | lxc.tty.max                   |
lxc.utsname                          | lxc.uts.name                  |

lxc-update-config script

LXC 2.1 comes with a new script lxc-update-config which can be used to upgrade existing legacy LXC configurations to valid LXC 2.1 configurations by simply passing

lxc-update-config -c /path/to/config

The script will create a backup of the legacy configuration file first. The name of the backup config file will by <original-config-file-name>.backup. The backup is made in case the upgrade does not yield a useable LXC 2.1 config file. After creating the backup the script will replace all legacy configuration keys with their new counterparts.

Deprecation warnings

LXC 2.1 intends to be fully backward compatible with respect to pre-2.1 configuration files. This specifically means that the presence of any deprecated keys should not prevent the container from being useable. However, LXC 2.1 will warn about the presence of any deprecated configuration keys. On container startup LXC 2.1 will warn once with the message:

The configuration file contains legacy configuration keys. Please update your configuration file. All users are advised to use the aforementioned lxc-update-config script to update their configuration files. If the container has logging enabled the log will contain warnings for each detected legacy configuration key. This is mostly useful for users who prefer to update their configuration files manually.

Changelog

  • Core:
    • af unix: allow for maximum socket name
    • af_unix: abstract lxc_abstract_unix_{send,recv}_fd
    • android: add prlimit implementation for 32bit
    • API: expose function lxc_log_init
    • API: add lxc_config_item_is_supported()
    • caps: add lxc_{proc,file}capis_set()
    • cgroups: handle hybrid cgroup layouts
    • commands: handle EINTR
    • commands: add lxc_cmd_state_server()
    • commands: switch api to new callback system
    • conf: implement resource limits
    • conf: check for {filecaps,setuid} on new{g,u}idmap
    • conf: use bind-mount for /dev/ptmx
    • conf: add MS_LAZYTIME to mount options
    • conf: don’t send ttys when none are configured
    • conf: send ttys in batches of 2
    • conf: log lxc-user-nic output
    • conf: refactor network deletion
    • conf: rework core functions
    • conf: improve lxc_map_ids()
    • conf: use minimal {g,u}id map
    • conf: allow writing uid mappings with euid != 0
    • conf: unstack all mounts atop /dev/console
    • conf{,ile}: warn user once about legacy config
    • confile: add lxc_get_idmaps()
    • confile: rework + extend callback system
    • confile: performance tweaks
    • confile: add “lxc.cgroup.dir”
    • confile: list namespaced keys
    • confile: lxc_getconfig() -> lxc_get_config()
    • confile: improve get_network_config_ops()
    • confile: move lxc_list_net()
    • confile: lxc_listconfigs -> lxc_list_config_items
    • confile: rework lxc_list_net()
    • confile: lxc.seccomp –> lxc.seccomp.profile
    • confile: lxc.pts –> lxc.pty.max
    • confile: lxc.tty –> lxc.tty.max
    • confile: lxc.net.ipv6 –> lxc.net.ipv6.address
    • confile: lxc.net.ipv4 –> lxc.net.ipv4.address
    • confile: lxc.mount –> lxc.mount.fstab
    • confile: lxc.console –> lxc.console.path
    • confile: lxc.rootfs –> lxc.rootfs.path
    • confile: deprecate lxc.rootfs.backend
    • confile: rename lxc.utsname to lxc.uts.name
    • confile: rename lxc.devttydir to lxc.tty.dir
    • confile: namespace lxc.signal keys
    • confile: namespace lxc.log keys
    • confile: namespace lxc.init keys
    • confile: rename lxc.limit to lxc.prlimit
    • confile: remove lxc.pivotdir
    • confile: remove lxc.kmsg
    • confile: properly namespace security keys
    • doc: adapt to new configuration keys
    • devpts: use max= option on mount
    • lsm/AppArmor: Allow containers to start in AppArmor namespaces
    • lxccontainer: clear whole indexed networks
    • lxccontainer: switch api to new callback system
    • lxc-init: report exec*() failure
    • lxc-user-nic: keep lines from other {users,links}
    • lxc-user-nic: fix adding database entries
    • lxc-user-nic: check db before trying to delete
    • lxc-user-nic: test privilege over netns on delete
    • lxc-user-nic: rework renaming net devices
    • lxc-user-nic: add new {create,delete} subcommands
    • monitor: simplify abstract socket logic
    • network: don’t delete net devs we didn’t create
    • network: remove allocation from lxc_mkifname()
    • network: remove netpipe
    • network: use correct network device name
    • network: stop recording saved physical net devices
    • network: retrieve correct names and ifindices
    • network: use static memory for net device names
    • network: retrieve the host’s veth device ifindex
    • network: rework network creation
    • network: delete ovs for unprivileged networks
    • network: log ifindex
    • network: send ifindex for unpriv networks
    • network: return negative idx for legacy networks
    • network: test new network configuration parser
    • network: add new network parser
    • network: preserve backwards compatibility
    • network: add test-suite for configuration items
    • openvswitch: delete ports intelligently
    • README: add CII Best Practices badge to README
    • seccomp: set SCMP_FLTATR_ATL_TSKIP if available
    • start: generalize lxc_check_inherited()
    • start: use separate socket on daemonized start
    • start: switch from SOCK_DGRAM to SOCK_STREAM
    • start: don’t let data_sock users close the fd
    • start: ensure cgroups are cleaned up
    • start: remove utmp watch
    • start: lxc_setup() after unshare(CLONE_NEWCGROUP)
    • start: dup std{in,out,err} to pty slave
    • start: add lxc_init_handler()
    • start: add lxc_free_handler()
    • start: pin rootfs when privileged
    • storage: add lxc_storage_get_path()
    • storage: add storage_utils.{c.h}
    • storage: add overlay as valid backend
    • storage: rename files “bdev” -> “storage”
    • storage/aufs: mark deprecated
    • storage/btrfs: rework btrfs storage driver
    • storage/loop: rework loop storage driver
    • storage/lvm: rework lvm backend
    • storage/overlay: rework overlay storage driver
    • storage/overlay: correctly restore from snapshot
    • storage/overlay: correctly handle dependency tracking
    • storage/rbd: rework rbd storage driver
    • storage/zfs: rework zfs storage driver
    • tests: add tests for lxc.cgroup.dir
    • test: add test to get subkeys
    • tests: add unit tests for idmap parser
    • tests: enforce all methods for config items
    • tree-wide: struct bdev -> struct lxc_storage
    • utils: add lxc_nic_exists()
    • utils: switch to has_fs_type()
    • utils: add has_fs_type() + is_fs_type()
    • utils: rework lxc_deslashify()
    • utils: lxc_make_abstract_socket_name()
    • utils: add lxc_safe_ulong()
    • utils: add lxc_unstack_mountpoint()
  • Template:
    • templates/Alpine: Add support for ppc64le
    • templates/Alpine: use dl-cdn.a.o as default mirror instead of random one
    • templates/Alpine: add community repository to default repositories
    • templates/CentOS: use altarch mirror for CentOS on arches other than i386 and x86_64
    • templates/CentOS: default to CentOS 7
    • templates/debian: Use deb.debian.org as the default Debian mirror
    • templates/debian: jessie and stretch keyring support
    • templates/debian: Add buster as a valid release
    • templates/opensuse: support leap 42.3
    • templates/opensuse: fix tumbleweed software selection
    • templates/opensuse: add Tumbleweed as supported release
    • templates/ubuntu: support netplan in newer releases by default
    • templates/ubuntu: conditionally move upstart ssh job, as it is now optional.
    • userns.conf: remove obsolete bind-mounts
  • Tools:
    • lxc-execute: print error message when failed
    • lxc-update-config: handle legacy networks
    • tools: add additional cgroup checks
    • tools: add lxc-update-config.in
    • tools/lxc-attach: allow for situations without /dev/tty
    • tools/lxc-checkconfig: Add CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_COMMENT
    • tools/lxc-checkconfig: verify new[ug]idmap are setuid-root
    • tools/lxc-ls: return all containers by default, new filter – list only defined containers.

Downloads

The release tarballs may be found on our download page2 and we expect most distributions
will very soon ship a packaged version of LXC 2.1.

Should you be interested in individual changes or just looking at the detailed development history,
our stable branch is on Github2.

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