I confirm that the problem exists and that downgrading to kernel
version 3.16.7-ckt11-1+deb8u6 makes (unprivileged) container work
again. I also found this bugreport in Ubuntu which may be related:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1519106
Tomassino
On 2015-12-19 01:29, Ben Hutchings wrote:
What mount options are used for /proc in the host system, and in the
container?
Hi,
The container has in its config:
lxc.mount.entry = proc proc proc
ro,nodev,noexec,nosuid 0 0
I'm not sure why those particular options. I be
Control: tag -1 moreinfo
On Fri, 2015-12-18 at 20:48 -0500, Norbert Veber wrote:
> Package: src:linux
> Version: 3.16.7-ckt20-1+deb8u1
> Severity: important
>
> After some troubleshooting with the help of snapshot.debian.org I found
> that any kernel newer than 3.16.7-ckt11-1+deb8u6 is not able t
Package: src:linux
Version: 3.16.7-ckt20-1+deb8u1
Severity: important
After some troubleshooting with the help of snapshot.debian.org I found
that any kernel newer than 3.16.7-ckt11-1+deb8u6 is not able to start
unprivileged lxc containers (as root). Downgrading to
3.16.7-ckt11-1+deb8u6 or older
4 matches
Mail list logo