On 01/07/16 10:58, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
Quoting rob e (redger...@yahoo.com.au):
thanks Serge,
I tried that. Same result. Additionally, even when I comment out the
CPU controls, leaving only Memory limits, it still fails.
To confirm, I have 3 uses for cgroups -
1) Resource control on CPU, Me
Hi everyone,
I got the following error when I tried to install a package(via apt) which
requires to install/update its certificates on a lxd container which it has
a host directory bind mounted.
$lxc config device add $container data disk
source=/path/to/external_usb_disk path=/tmp/
---
On 01/07/16 10:58, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
Quoting rob e (redger...@yahoo.com.au):
thanks Serge,
I tried that. Same result. Additionally, even when I comment out the
CPU controls, leaving only Memory limits, it still fails.
To confirm, I have 3 uses for cgroups -
1) Resource control on CPU, Me
Quoting rob e (redger...@yahoo.com.au):
> On 30/06/16 11:35, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
> >On Thu, Jun 30, 2016 at 11:24:25AM +1000, Rob wrote:
> >>On 30/06/2016 10:36 AM, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
> >>>Quoting Rob Edgerton (redger...@yahoo.com.au):
> >Oh, ok. I'm sorry, this should have been obvious to
On 30/06/16 11:35, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
On Thu, Jun 30, 2016 at 11:24:25AM +1000, Rob wrote:
On 30/06/2016 10:36 AM, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
Quoting Rob Edgerton (redger...@yahoo.com.au):
Oh, ok. I'm sorry, this should have been obvious to me from the start.
You need to edit /etc/pam.d/comm
Hmm, iptables magic tends to work for me. Here's what I did to forward SSL
traffic to one of my containers.
sudo iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 443 -j DNAT --to
10.0.3.115:443
Craig
On Thu, Jun 30, 2016 at 10:33 AM, Kim C. Callis
wrote:
> When I did lxc containers, I tend
When I did lxc containers, I tended to just put a container directly on the
LAN and call it a day. With my lxd container i would like to access via
lxdbr0 and just access ports as needed.
I thought that my forwarding and iptables magic, I would be good to go... I
was wrong! So what is the magic of
Thanks for the information but it dosen't work for me with btrfs
It correctly set the value on btrfs limit but no changes inside the container
lxc config device set benltsp root size 10GB
btrfs qg show -r -e /var/lib/lxd/containers/ -p -c|grep 443
0/443 9.01GiB 8.74GiB 10.00GiB 10.00GiB ---
From https://www.stgraber.org/2016/03/26/lxd-2-0-resource-control-412/
lxc config device set my-container root size 20GB
Works with ZFS and BTFS
From: lxc-users [mailto:lxc-users-boun...@lists.linuxcontainers.org] On Behalf
Of Benoit GEORGELIN - Association Web4all
Sent: 30 June 2016 15:20
To:
Yes, I have to idea in mind.
1- Using ZFS
I have to try how it looks with LXD/LXC. I wanted to give a try to btrfs .
With ZFS , are you using quotas ? Can you tell me what "df -h" looks into your
container ?
With btrfs , the container see the disk size of the host, so you don't know how
much
On 30/06/2016 15:50, Benoit GEORGELIN - Association Web4all wrote:
Yesterday I tried the kernel:v4.6.3-yakkety
The command "lxc stop container" totaly crash the system . Hard reboot
mandatory
With v4.5.7-yakkety so far, everything looks fine, including the
quota.
But after what I read about b
Yesterday I tried the kernel:v4.6.3-yakkety
The command "lxc stop container" totaly crash the system . Hard reboot
mandatory
With v4.5.7-yakkety so far, everything looks fine, including the quota.
But after what I read about btrfs, I'll find another FS for production system
ready because I n
Thank you Serge
Il 30/06/2016 15:34, Serge E. Hallyn ha scritto:
On Thu, Jun 30, 2016 at 01:06:17PM +0200, Michele Giacomoli wrote:
Hi,
I'd like to setup auditd inside an unprivileged container running
Ubuntu 14.04. Tried installing auditd package but nothing being
logged. Trying /etc/init.d/a
On Thu, Jun 30, 2016 at 01:06:17PM +0200, Michele Giacomoli wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'd like to setup auditd inside an unprivileged container running
> Ubuntu 14.04. Tried installing auditd package but nothing being
> logged. Trying /etc/init.d/auditd start I get:
>
> * Starting audit daemon auditd
>
On 30/06/2016 12:03, Tomasz Chmielewski wrote:
"out of space" when doing snapshot affects kernels older than 4.6, no
matter if you use RAID-1, RAID-5/6, or no RAID.
It's especially annoying especially when snapshotting running
containers with postgres, mysql, mongo etc. - as this causes datab
Hi,
I'd like to setup auditd inside an unprivileged container running Ubuntu
14.04. Tried installing auditd package but nothing being logged. Trying
/etc/init.d/auditd start I get:
* Starting audit daemon auditd
...fail!
auditd package is installed also in lxc host (Ubuntu 14.04 too) and
On 2016-06-30 18:55, Sjoerd wrote:
On 30/06/2016 11:17, Tomasz Chmielewski wrote:
Please note that btrfs is not a stable filesystem, at least not in the
latest Ubuntu (16.04).
You may have "out of space" errors with them, especially when doing
snapshots.
kernels 4.6.x[1] behave stable for m
On 30/06/2016 11:17, Tomasz Chmielewski wrote:
Please note that btrfs is not a stable filesystem, at least not in the
latest Ubuntu (16.04).
You may have "out of space" errors with them, especially when doing
snapshots.
kernels 4.6.x[1] behave stable for me.
I am not using RAID5/6 with b
On 2016-06-30 17:38, Sjoerd wrote:
On 29/06/2016 20:02, Benoit GEORGELIN - Association Web4all wrote:
Hi, (without hijacking another thread)
I'm sharing with you some information about BTRFS and Ubuntu 15.10,
Kernel 4.2.0-30-generic regarding a quota disk error on my LXC
containers
If you plan
On 29/06/2016 20:02, Benoit GEORGELIN - Association Web4all wrote:
Hi, (without hijacking another thread)
I'm sharing with you some information about BTRFS and Ubuntu 15.10,
Kernel 4.2.0-30-generic regarding a quota disk error on my LXC
containers
If you plan tu use quota, this will be intere
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