8b4dc01d8b
Signed-off-by: Mikhail Gordeev <obirvalger@altlinux.org> |
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distrobuilder | ||
doc/examples | ||
generators | ||
image | ||
managers | ||
shared | ||
sources | ||
testdata | ||
.travis.yml | ||
AUTHORS | ||
COPYING | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md |
distrobuilder
System container image builder for LXC and LXD
Status
Type | Service | Status |
---|---|---|
CI | Jenkins | |
Project status | CII Best Practices |
Command line options
The following are the command line options of distrobuilder
. You can use distrobuilder
to create container images for both LXC and LXD.
$ distrobuilder
System container image builder for LXC and LXD
Usage:
distrobuilder [command]
Available Commands:
build-dir Build plain rootfs
build-lxc Build LXC image from scratch
build-lxd Build LXD image from scratch
help Help about any command
pack-lxc Create LXC image from existing rootfs
pack-lxd Create LXD image from existing rootfs
Flags:
--cache-dir Cache directory
--cleanup Clean up cache directory (default true)
-h, --help help for distrobuilder
-o, --options Override options (list of key=value)
Use "distrobuilder [command] --help" for more information about a command.
How to use
In the following, we see how to create a container image for LXD.
Installation
Currently, there are no binary packages of distrobuilder
. Therefore, you will need to compile it from source.
To do so, first install the Go programming language, and some other dependencies.
sudo apt update
sudo apt install -y golang-go debootstrap rsync gpg squashfs-tools
Second, download the source code of the distrobuilder
repository (this repository). The source will be placed in $HOME/go/src/github.com/lxc/distrobuilder/
go get -d -v github.com/lxc/distrobuilder
Third, enter the directory with the source code of distrobuilder
and run make
to compile the source code. This will generate the executable program distrobuilder
, and it will be located at $HOME/go/bin/distrobuilder
.
cd $HOME/go/src/github.com/lxc/distrobuilder
make
cd
Creating a container image
To create a container image, first create a directory where you will be placing the container images, and enter that directory.
mkdir -p $HOME/ContainerImages/ubuntu/
cd $HOME/ContainerImages/ubuntu/
Then, copy one of the example yaml configuration files for container images into this directory. In this example, we are creating an Ubuntu container image.
cp $HOME/go/src/github.com/lxc/distrobuilder/doc/examples/ubuntu ubuntu.yaml
Finally, run distrobuilder
to create the container image. We are using the build-lxd
option to create a container image for LXD.
sudo $HOME/go/bin/distrobuilder build-lxd ubuntu.yaml
If the command is successful, you will get an output similar to the following. The lxd.tar.xz
file is the description of the container image. The rootfs.squasfs
file is the root filesystem (rootfs) of the container image. The set of these two files is the container image.
multipass@dazzling-termite:~/ContainerImages/ubuntu$ ls -l
total 121032
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 560 Oct 3 13:28 lxd.tar.xz
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 123928576 Oct 3 13:28 rootfs.squashfs
-rw-rw-r-- 1 multipass multipass 3317 Oct 3 13:19 ubuntu.yaml
multipass@dazzling-termite:~/ContainerImages/ubuntu$
Adding the container image to LXD
To add the container image to a LXD installation, use the lxc image import
command as follows.
multipass@dazzling-termite:~/ContainerImages/ubuntu$ lxc image import lxd.tar.xz rootfs.squashfs --alias mycontainerimage
Image imported with fingerprint: ae81c04327b5b115383a4f90b969c97f5ef417e02d4210d40cbb17a038729a27
Let's see the container image in LXD. The ubuntu.yaml
had a setting to create an Ubuntu 17.10 (artful
) image. The size is 118MB.
$ lxc image list mycontainerimage
+------------------+--------------+--------+---------------+--------+----------+------------------------------+
| ALIAS | FINGERPRINT | PUBLIC | DESCRIPTION | ARCH | SIZE | UPLOAD DATE |
+------------------+--------------+--------+---------------+--------+----------+------------------------------+
| mycontainerimage | ae81c04327b5 | no | Ubuntu artful | x86_64 | 118.19MB | Oct 3, 2018 at 12:09pm (UTC) |
+------------------+--------------+--------+---------------+--------+----------+------------------------------+
Launching a container from the container image
To launch a container from the freshly created container image, use lxc launch
as follows. Note that you do not specify a repository of container images (like ubuntu:
or images:
) because the image is located locally.
$ lxc launch mycontainerimage c1
Creating c1
Starting c1