Re: [lxc-users] Setting a limit on the disk size that a container can use

2014-06-27 Thread Fajar A. Nugraha
On second thought, DON'T use scst/LIO in loopback configuration. Or any other inititator-target configuration in the same host where both initiator and target are in-kernel (this includes nfs). Using these kind of setup can lead to memory allocation deadlock. It should be fine for

Re: [lxc-users] Setting a limit on the disk size that a container can use

2014-03-17 Thread Bill Anderson
David, One way of setting a hard limit is to use the LVM backing store and use the --fssize option to set the size you want to allow for the container. Cheers, Bill -- Bill Anderson Cloud Sites Engineer Mad Scientist From:

Re: [lxc-users] Setting a limit on the disk size that a container can use

2014-03-16 Thread Tamas Papp
On 03/16/2014 06:01 AM, David Shwatrz wrote: Hello, What is the best way to set a limit on the disk size that a container root filesystem can use ? Either use partition (or zfs/btrfs fisystems and volumes) or run containers as unprivileged users + quota. tamas

[lxc-users] Setting a limit on the disk size that a container can use

2014-03-15 Thread David Shwatrz
Hello, What is the best way to set a limit on the disk size that a container root filesystem can use ? DavidS ___ lxc-users mailing list lxc-users@lists.linuxcontainers.org http://lists.linuxcontainers.org/listinfo/lxc-users