🟢 Stable | LXC provider for Vagrant (up-to-date & maintained)
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Ray Ruvinskiy dc55c914e4 Work around WaitForCommunicator lock race condition
The LXC provider issues the "fetch_ip" action to look up the IP address
of the container as part of its "ssh_info" action.
Vagrant::LXC::Action.action_fetch_ip checks the machine state using
Builtin::IsState, which calls Vagrant::Machine.state, which also updates
the state in the machine index and acquires a machine index entry lock to do that.
A race condition ensues in WaitForCommunicator.call, where ready_thr tries
to acquire the machine index lock while running ssh_info, and states_thr tries
to acquire the same lock doing its own state look up (env[:machine].state.id).
If they both try to acquire the lock at the same time, one will fail, and
an exception will be raised.

Work around this issue by checking for the desired machine state (:running) in
Vagrant::LXC::Provider.ssh_info, which can get the state from
Vagrant::LXC::Provider.state, which in turn does not write out the state into
the index file and does not acquire the index entry lock.
2014-09-29 16:47:29 -04:00
lib Work around WaitForCommunicator lock race condition 2014-09-29 16:47:29 -04:00
locales synced_folder: Warn in case :group or :owner are specified [GH-196] 2014-03-13 23:48:46 -03:00
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vagrant-lxc

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LXC provider for Vagrant 1.1+

This is a Vagrant plugin that allows it to control and provision Linux Containers as an alternative to the built in VirtualBox provider for Linux hosts. Check out this blog post to see it in action.

NOTICE: The master branch is targetting an initial beta for 1.0.0, for the latest stable version of the plugin, please check the 0.8-stable branch.

Features

  • Provides the same workflow as the Vagrant VirtualBox provider
  • Port forwarding via redir

As of now, it does not support public / private networks, but private networks will be coming along with the final 1.0.0 release.

Requirements

The plugin is known to work better and pretty much out of the box on Ubuntu 14.04+ hosts and installing the dependencies on it basically means a apt-get install lxc lxc-templates cgroup-lite redir and a apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade to upgrade the kernel. For Debian hosts you'll need to follow the instructions described on the Wiki and old lxc versions (like 0.7.5 shipped with Ubuntu 12.04 by default) might require additional configurations to work.

If you are on a Mac or Windows machine, you might want to have a look at this blog post for some ideas on how to set things up or check out this other repo for a set of Vagrant VirtualBox machines ready for vagrant-lxc usage.

NOTE: Some users have been experiencing networking issues and right now you might need to disable checksum offloading as described on this comment

Installation

vagrant plugin install vagrant-lxc

Quick start

vagrant init fgrehm/precise64-lxc
vagrant up --provider=lxc

Set the VAGRANT_DEFAULT_PROVIDER environmental variable to lxc in order to avoid typing --provider=lxc all the time.

Base boxes

Base boxes can be found on VagrantCloud and some scripts to build your own are available at fgrehm/vagrant-lxc-base-boxes.

If you want to build your own boxes, please have a look at BOXES.md for more information.

Advanced configuration

If you want, you can modify container configurations from within your Vagrantfile using the provider block:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.box = "quantal64"
  config.vm.provider :lxc do |lxc|
    # Same effect as 'customize ["modifyvm", :id, "--memory", "1024"]' for VirtualBox
    lxc.customize 'cgroup.memory.limit_in_bytes', '1024M'
  end
end

vagrant-lxc will then write out lxc.cgroup.memory.limit_in_bytes='1024M' to the container config file (usually kept under /var/lib/lxc/<container>/config) prior to starting it.

For other configuration options, please check the lxc.conf manpages.

Container naming

By default vagrant-lxc will attempt to generate a unique container name for you. However, if the container name is important to you, you may use the container_name attribute to set it explicitly from the provider block:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.define "db" do |node|
    node.vm.provider :lxc do |lxc|
      lxc.container_name = :machine # Sets the container name to 'db'
      lxc.container_name = 'mysql'  # Sets the container name to 'mysql'
    end
  end
end

Backingstore options

Support for setting lxc-create's backingstore option (-B and related) can be specified from the provider block and it defaults to best, to change it:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.provider :lxc do |lxc|
    lxc.backingstore = 'lvm' # or 'btrfs',...
    # lvm specific options
    lxc.backingstore_option '--vgname', 'schroots'
    lxc.backingstore_option '--fssize', '5G'
    lxc.backingstore_option '--fstype', 'xfs'
  end
end

For old versions of lxc (like 0.7.5 shipped with Ubuntu 12.04 by default) that does not support best for the backingstore option, changing it to none is required and a default for all Vagrant environments can be set from your ~/.vagrant.d/Vagrantfile using the same provider block:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.provider :lxc do |lxc|
    lxc.backingstore = 'none'
  end
end

Avoiding sudo passwords

This plugin requires a lot of sudoing since user namespaces are not supported on mainstream kernels. To work around that, you can use the vagrant lxc sudoers command which will create a file under /etc/sudoers.d/vagrant-lxc-<VERSION> whitelisting all commands required by vagrant-lxc to run.

If you are interested on what will be generated by that command, please check this code.

vagrant-lxc < 1.0.0 users, please check this Wiki page

More information

Please refer the wiki.

Problems / ideas?

Please review the Troubleshooting wiki page + known bugs list if you have a problem and feel free to use the issue tracker propose new functionality and / or report bugs.

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request