Thanks. I love Ubuntu as a host for LXC. I just got addicted to systemctl and writing *.service files. It is much more sophisticated than the older way of starting and stopping applications.
On Fri, Feb 6, 2015 at 8:40 AM, Fajar A. Nugraha <l...@fajar.net> wrote: > On Fri, Feb 6, 2015 at 8:15 PM, CDR <vene...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Thanks for the response. > > I disable selinux and a apparmor routinely. My containers are just a way > to > > separate applications, there are no users accessing them, nothing bad can > > happen. > > So basically you are saying that there is no way to run Centos 7 under an > > Ubuntu host. > > No. What I'm saying is when you use c7 container (and possible most > newer-systemd-based distros) under ubuntu host: > - you can't use lxc-console > - root on your container can mess up the host > > It shouldn't really matter for your use case, since "lxc-attach" works > just fine (you DO know about lxc-attach?), and you don't really care > about user access anyway. > > This should improve in the future as debian/ubuntu is also moving > towards systemd (lxcfs is supposed to help), however currently the > required level of support/integration is just not there yet. > > Since your main use case is "separate applications", docker might be a > better candidate. And when you use c7-based docker container under c7 > host, you might even get better protection since they integrate > selinux. > > -- > Fajar > _______________________________________________ > lxc-users mailing list > lxc-users@lists.linuxcontainers.org > http://lists.linuxcontainers.org/listinfo/lxc-users >
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