| .. _containerCreation: |
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| .. toctree:: |
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| Creating Containers |
| ___________________ |
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| Make sure you have gone through :ref:`installingVPP` on the system you want to create containers on. |
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| After VPP is installed, get root privileges with: |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| $ sudo bash |
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| Then install packages for containers such as lxc: |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| # apt-get install bridge-utils lxc |
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| As quoted from the `lxc.conf manpage <https://linuxcontainers.org/it/lxc/manpages/man5/lxc.conf.5.html>`_, "container configuration is held in the config stored in the container's directory. |
| A basic configuration is generated at container creation time with the default's recommended for the chosen template as well as extra default keys coming from the default.conf file." |
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| "That *default.conf* file is either located at /etc/lxc/default.conf or for unprivileged containers at ~/.config/lxc/default.conf." |
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| Since we want to ping between two containers, we'll need to **add to this file**. |
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| Look at the contents of *default.conf*, which should initially look like this: |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| # cat /etc/lxc/default.conf |
| lxc.network.type = veth |
| lxc.network.link = lxcbr0 |
| lxc.network.flags = up |
| lxc.network.hwaddr = 00:16:3e:xx:xx:xx |
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| As you can see, by default there is one veth interface. |
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| Now you will *append to this file* so that each container you create will have an interface for a Linux bridge and an unconsumed second interface. |
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| You can do this by piping *echo* output into *tee*, where each line is separated with a newline character *\\n* as shown below. Alternatively, you can manually add to this file with a text editor such as **vi**, but make sure you have root privileges. |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| # echo -e "lxc.network.name = veth0\nlxc.network.type = veth\nlxc.network.name = veth_link1" | sudo tee -a /etc/lxc/default.conf |
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| Inspect the contents again to verify the file was indeed modified: |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| # cat /etc/lxc/default.conf |
| lxc.network.type = veth |
| lxc.network.link = lxcbr0 |
| lxc.network.flags = up |
| lxc.network.hwaddr = 00:16:3e:xx:xx:xx |
| lxc.network.name = veth0 |
| lxc.network.type = veth |
| lxc.network.name = veth_link1 |
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| After this, we're ready to create the containers. |
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| Creates an Ubuntu Xenial container named "cone". |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| # lxc-create -t download -n cone -- --dist ubuntu --release xenial --arch amd64 --keyserver hkp://p80.pool.sks-keyservers.net:80 |
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| If successful, you'll get an output similar to this: |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| You just created an Ubuntu xenial amd64 (20180625_07:42) container. |
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| To enable SSH, run: apt install openssh-server |
| No default root or user password are set by LXC. |
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| Make another container "ctwo". |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| # lxc-create -t download -n ctwo -- --dist ubuntu --release xenial --arch amd64 --keyserver hkp://p80.pool.sks-keyservers.net:80 |
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| List your containers to verify they exist: |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| # lxc-ls |
| cone ctwo |
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| Start the first container: |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| # lxc-start --name cone |
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| And verify its running: |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| # lxc-ls --fancy |
| NAME STATE AUTOSTART GROUPS IPV4 IPV6 |
| cone RUNNING 0 - - - |
| ctwo STOPPED 0 - - - |
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| .. note:: |
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| Here are some `lxc container commands <https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/serverguide/lxc.html.en-GB#lxc-basic-usage>`_ you may find useful: |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| $ sudo lxc-ls --fancy |
| $ sudo lxc-start --name u1 --daemon |
| $ sudo lxc-info --name u1 |
| $ sudo lxc-stop --name u1 |
| $ sudo lxc-destroy --name u1 |