88de2aee5a
Seemed a little out of date Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com> |
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Godeps | ||
libcontainer | ||
script | ||
.gitignore | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
MAINTAINERS | ||
MAINTAINERS_GUIDE.md | ||
Makefile | ||
NOTICE | ||
PRINCIPLES.md | ||
README.md | ||
checkpoint.go | ||
events.go | ||
kill.go | ||
main.go | ||
main_unix.go | ||
main_unsupported.go | ||
restore.go | ||
run.go | ||
signals.go | ||
spec.go | ||
tty.go | ||
utils.go |
README.md
runc
runc
is a CLI tool for spawning and running containers according to the OCF specification.
State of the project
Currently runc
is an implementation of the OCF specification. We are currently sprinting
to have a v1 of the spec out within a quick timeframe of a few weeks, ~July 2015,
so the runc
config format will be constantly changing until
the spec is finalized. However, we encourage you to try out the tool and give feedback.
OCF
How does runc
integrate with the Open Container Format? runc
depends on the types
specified in the specs repository. Whenever
the specification is updated and ready to be versioned runc
will update it's dependency
on the specs repository and support the update spec.
Building:
# create a 'github.com/opencontainers' in your GOPATH/src
cd github.com/opencontainers
git clone https://github.com/opencontainers/runc
cd runc
make
sudo make install
Using:
To run a container that you received just execute runc
with the JSON format as the argument or have a
config.json
file in the current working directory.
runc
/ $ ps
PID USER COMMAND
1 daemon sh
5 daemon sh
/ $
OCF Container JSON Format:
Below is a sample config.json
configuration file. It assumes that
the file-system is found in a directory called rootfs
and there is a
user with uid and gid of 0
defined within that file-system.
{
"version": "pre-draft",
"platform": {
"os": "linux",
"arch": "amd64"
},
"process": {
"terminal": true,
"user": {
"uid": 0,
"gid": 0,
"additionalGids": null
},
"args": [
"sh"
],
"env": [
"PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin",
"TERM=xterm"
],
"cwd": ""
},
"root": {
"path": "rootfs",
"readonly": true
},
"hostname": "shell",
"mounts": [
{
"type": "proc",
"source": "proc",
"destination": "/proc",
"options": ""
},
{
"type": "tmpfs",
"source": "tmpfs",
"destination": "/dev",
"options": "nosuid,strictatime,mode=755,size=65536k"
},
{
"type": "devpts",
"source": "devpts",
"destination": "/dev/pts",
"options": "nosuid,noexec,newinstance,ptmxmode=0666,mode=0620,gid=5"
},
{
"type": "tmpfs",
"source": "shm",
"destination": "/dev/shm",
"options": "nosuid,noexec,nodev,mode=1777,size=65536k"
},
{
"type": "mqueue",
"source": "mqueue",
"destination": "/dev/mqueue",
"options": "nosuid,noexec,nodev"
},
{
"type": "sysfs",
"source": "sysfs",
"destination": "/sys",
"options": "nosuid,noexec,nodev"
},
{
"type": "cgroup",
"source": "cgroup",
"destination": "/sys/fs/cgroup",
"options": "nosuid,noexec,nodev,relatime,ro"
}
],
"linux": {
"uidMapping": null,
"gidMapping": null,
"rlimits": null,
"systemProperties": null,
"resources": {
"disableOOMKiller": false,
"memory": {
"limit": 0,
"reservation": 0,
"swap": 0,
"kernel": 0,
"swappiness": -1
},
"cpu": {
"shares": 0,
"quota": 0,
"period": 0,
"realtimeRuntime": 0,
"realtimePeriod": 0,
"cpus": "",
"mems": ""
},
"blockIO": {
"blkioWeight": 0,
"blkioWeightDevice": "",
"blkioThrottleReadBpsDevice": "",
"blkioThrottleWriteBpsDevice": "",
"blkioThrottleReadIopsDevice": "",
"blkioThrottleWriteIopsDevice": ""
},
"hugepageLimits": null,
"network": {
"classId": "",
"priorities": null
}
},
"namespaces": [
{
"type": "pid",
"path": ""
},
{
"type": "network",
"path": ""
},
{
"type": "ipc",
"path": ""
},
{
"type": "uts",
"path": ""
},
{
"type": "mount",
"path": ""
}
],
"capabilities": [
"AUDIT_WRITE",
"KILL",
"NET_BIND_SERVICE"
],
"devices": [
"null",
"random",
"full",
"tty",
"zero",
"urandom"
]
}
}
Examples:
Using a Docker image (requires version 1.3 or later)
To test using Docker's busybox
image follow these steps:
- Install
docker
and download thebusybox
image:docker pull busybox
- Create a container from that image and export its contents to a tar file:
docker export $(docker create busybox) > busybox.tar
- Untar the contents to create your filesystem directory:
mkdir rootfs
tar -C rootfs -xf busybox.tar
- Create a file called
config.json
using the example from above. You can also generate a spec usingrunc spec
, redirecting the output intoconfig.json
- Execute
runc
and you should be placed into a shell where you can runps
:
$ runc
/ # ps
PID USER COMMAND
1 root sh
9 root ps
Using runc with systemd
[Unit]
Description=Minecraft Build Server
Documentation=http://minecraft.net
After=network.target
[Service]
CPUQuota=200%
MemoryLimit=1536M
ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/runc
Restart=on-failure
WorkingDirectory=/containers/minecraftbuild
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target