- 16 Jul, 2017 40 commits
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Long Wang authored
we shoud test whether the file exists and grants execute permissions. Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Long Wang authored
Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Long Wang authored
Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Christian Brauner authored
Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
This adds a little more flexibility to the state server. The idea is to have a command socket function "lxc_cmd_add_state_client()" whose only task is to add a new state client to the container's in-memory handler. This function returns either the state of the container if it is already in the requested state or it will return the newly registered client's fd in one of its arguments to the caller. We then provide a separate helper function "lxc_cmd_sock_rcv_state()" which can be passed the returned client fd and listens on the fd for the requested state. This is useful when we want to first register a client, then send a signal to the container and wait for a state. This ensure that the client fd is registered before the signal can have any effect and can e.g. be used to catch something like the "STOPPING" state that is very ephemeral. Additionally we provide a convenience function "lxc_cmd_sock_get_state()" which combines both tasks and is used in e.g. "lxc_wait()". Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
The new wait commands API is not yet stable so this change is ok. Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
Add a test to see if we can start daemonized containers that have a very short-lived init process. The point of this is to see whether we can correctly retrieve the state. Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
Since we killed lxc-monitord we rely on the container's command socket to wait for the container. This doesn't work nicely on daemonized startup since a container's init process might be something that is so short-lived that we won't even be able to add a state client before the mainloop closes. But the container might still have been RUNNING and executed the init binary correctly. In this case we would erroneously report that the container failed to start when it actually started just fine. This commit ensures that we really all cases where the container successfully ran by switching to a short-lived per-container anonymous unix socket pair that uses credentials to pass container states around. It is immediately closed once the container has started successfully. This should also make daemonized container start way more robust since we don't rely on the command socket handler to be running. For the experienced developer: Yes, I did think about utilizing the command socket directly for this. The problem is that when the mainloop starts it may end up end accept()ing the connection that we want do_wait_on_daemonized_start() to accept() so this won't work and might cause us to hang indefinitely. The same problem arises when the container fails to start before the mainloop is created. In this case we would hang indefinitely as well. Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Long Wang authored
Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Long Wang authored
commit bdb3f441 says that we may undo the change in august 2014. I think that it is time to do that. Signed-off-by:
Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Long Wang authored
Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Long Wang authored
It is not necessary to unlink the abstract socket pathname when we have finished using the socket. The abstract name is automatically removed when the socket is closed. Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Frédéric Dalleau authored
This patch allows users to start containers in AppArmor namespaces. Users can define their own profiles for their containers, but lxc-start must be allowed to change to a namespace. A container configuration file can wrap a container in an AppArmor profile using lxc.aa_profile. A process in an AppArmor namespace is restricted to view or manage only the profiles belonging to this namespace, as if no other profiles existed. A namespace can be created as follow: sudo mkdir /sys/kernel/security/apparmor/policy/namespaces/$NAMESPACE AppArmor can stack profiles so that the contained process is bound by the intersection of all profiles of the stack. This is achieved using the '//&' operator as follow: lxc.aa_profile = $PROFILE//&:$NAMESPACE://unconfined In this case, even the guest process appears unconfined in the namespace, it is still confined by $PROFILE. A guest allowed to access "/sys/kernel/security/apparmor/** rwklix," will be able to manage its own profile set, while still being enclosed in the topmost profile $PROFILE: Different guests can be assigned the same namespace or different namespaces. In the first case, they will share their profiles. In the second case, they will have distinct sets of profiles. This is validated on privileged containers. Signed-off-by:Frédéric Dalleau <frederic.dalleau@collabora.com>
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Long Wang authored
Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Long Wang authored
Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Long Wang authored
Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Long Wang authored
* Use `#include <lxc/lxccontaienr.h>` style for exported haeders. * remove used header `caps.h` Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Long Wang authored
This patch mainly update the message format to: * upper the first letter * end without a dot all changes are relate to `lxc-init` Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Long Wang authored
Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Long Wang authored
Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Christian Brauner authored
Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Christian Brauner authored
Signed-off-by:Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
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Long Wang authored
This patch mainly updates comments based on the current code. Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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Long Wang authored
Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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0x0916 authored
Signed-off-by:Long Wang <w@laoqinren.net>
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0x0916 authored
This pr https://github.com/lxc/lxc/pull/1618 kill lxc-monitord, for backwards compatibility, we also send state to legacy lxc-monitord state server in function `lxc_set_state`. we should also send state if there is no state clients registered, otherwise `lxc-monitor` client will not get state change event if container changed state to `STARTING` or `RUNNING`. Signed-off-by:
0x0916 <w@laoqinren.net>
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0x0916 authored
lxc-monitor has an option to tell lxc-monitord to quit. ``` ~/lxc (master) # lxc-monitor --help lxc-monitor monitors the state of the NAME container Options : -n, --name=NAME NAME of the container NAME may be a regular expression -Q, --quit tell lxc-monitord to quit ``` But it does not work. This patch fix that. Signed-off-by:0x0916 <w@laoqinren.net>
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0x0916 authored
Our logging function will always spew out the function name. Signed-off-by:0x0916 <w@laoqinren.net>
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0x0916 authored
Fix issue: https://github.com/lxc/lxc/issues/505Signed-off-by:
0x0916 <w@laoqinren.net>
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Evgeni Golov authored
CentOS only has i386 and x86_64 listed in mirrorlist.centos.org, use http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/ for all other arches instead See: https://bugs.centos.org/view.php?id=11250Signed-off-by:
Evgeni Golov <evgeni@debian.org>
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Evgeni Golov authored
uname -m reports aarch64, but Debian calls the arch arm64 Signed-off-by:Evgeni Golov <evgeni@debian.org>
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0x0916 authored
Signed-off-by:0x0916 <w@laoqinren.net>
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