26 KiB
Linux Container Configuration
This document describes the schema for the Linux-specific section of the container configuration. The Linux container specification uses various kernel features like namespaces, cgroups, capabilities, LSM, and filesystem jails to fulfill the spec.
Default Filesystems
The Linux ABI includes both syscalls and several special file paths. Applications expecting a Linux environment will very likely expect these file paths to be setup correctly.
The following filesystems SHOULD be made available in each container's filesystem:
Path | Type |
---|---|
/proc | procfs |
/sys | sysfs |
/dev/pts | devpts |
/dev/shm | tmpfs |
Namespaces
A namespace wraps a global system resource in an abstraction that makes it appear to the processes within the namespace that they have their own isolated instance of the global resource. Changes to the global resource are visible to other processes that are members of the namespace, but are invisible to other processes. For more information, see the namespaces(7) man page.
Namespaces are specified as an array of entries inside the namespaces
root field.
The following parameters can be specified to setup namespaces:
-
type
(string, REQUIRED) - namespace type. The following namespace types are supported:pid
processes inside the container will only be able to see other processes inside the same container.network
the container will have its own network stack.mount
the container will have an isolated mount table.ipc
processes inside the container will only be able to communicate to other processes inside the same container via system level IPC.uts
the container will be able to have its own hostname and domain name.user
the container will be able to remap user and group IDs from the host to local users and groups within the container.cgroup
the container will have an isolated view of the cgroup hierarchy.
-
path
(string, OPTIONAL) - an absolute path to namespace file in the runtime mount namespace. The runtime MUST place the container process in the namespace associated with thatpath
. The runtime MUST generate an error ifpath
is not associated with a namespace of typetype
.If
path
is not specified, the runtime MUST create a new container namespace of typetype
.
If a namespace type is not specified in the namespaces
array, the container MUST inherit the runtime namespace of that type.
If a namespaces
field contains duplicated namespaces with same type
, the runtime MUST generate an error.
Example
"namespaces": [
{
"type": "pid",
"path": "/proc/1234/ns/pid"
},
{
"type": "network",
"path": "/var/run/netns/neta"
},
{
"type": "mount"
},
{
"type": "ipc"
},
{
"type": "uts"
},
{
"type": "user"
},
{
"type": "cgroup"
}
]
User namespace mappings
uidMappings
(array of objects, OPTIONAL) describes the user namespace uid mappings from the host to the container.
gidMappings
(array of objects, OPTIONAL) describes the user namespace gid mappings from the host to the container.
Each entry has the following structure:
hostID
(uint32, REQUIRED) - is the starting uid/gid on the host to be mapped to containerID.containerID
(uint32, REQUIRED) - is the starting uid/gid in the container.size
(uint32, REQUIRED) - is the number of ids to be mapped.
The runtime SHOULD NOT modify the ownership of referenced filesystems to realize the mapping. Note that the number of mapping entries MAY be limited by the kernel.
Example
"uidMappings": [
{
"hostID": 1000,
"containerID": 0,
"size": 32000
}
],
"gidMappings": [
{
"hostID": 1000,
"containerID": 0,
"size": 32000
}
]
Devices
devices
(array of objects, OPTIONAL) lists devices that MUST be available in the container.
The runtime may supply them however it likes (with mknod, by bind mounting from the runtime mount namespace, etc.).
Each entry has the following structure:
type
(string, REQUIRED) - type of device:c
,b
,u
orp
. More info in mknod(1).path
(string, REQUIRED) - full path to device inside container. If a file already exists atpath
that does not match the requested device, the runtime MUST generate an error.major, minor
(int64, REQUIRED unlesstype
isp
) - major, minor numbers for the device.fileMode
(uint32, OPTIONAL) - file mode for the device. You can also control access to devices with cgroups.uid
(uint32, OPTIONAL) - id of device owner.gid
(uint32, OPTIONAL) - id of device group.
The same type
, major
and minor
SHOULD NOT be used for multiple devices.
Example
"devices": [
{
"path": "/dev/fuse",
"type": "c",
"major": 10,
"minor": 229,
"fileMode": 438,
"uid": 0,
"gid": 0
},
{
"path": "/dev/sda",
"type": "b",
"major": 8,
"minor": 0,
"fileMode": 432,
"uid": 0,
"gid": 0
}
]
Default Devices
In addition to any devices configured with this setting, the runtime MUST also supply:
/dev/null
/dev/zero
/dev/full
/dev/random
/dev/urandom
/dev/tty
/dev/console
is setup if terminal is enabled in the config by bind mounting the pseudoterminal slave to /dev/console./dev/ptmx
. A bind-mount or symlink of the container's/dev/pts/ptmx
.
Control groups
Also known as cgroups, they are used to restrict resource usage for a container and handle device access. cgroups provide controls (through controllers) to restrict cpu, memory, IO, pids and network for the container. For more information, see the kernel cgroups documentation.
The path to the cgroups can be specified in the Spec via cgroupsPath
.
cgroupsPath
can be used to either control the cgroup hierarchy for containers or to run a new process in an existing container.
If cgroupsPath
is:
- ... an absolute path (starting with
/
), the runtime MUST take the path to be relative to the cgroup mount point. - ... a relative path (not starting with
/
), the runtime MAY interpret the path relative to a runtime-determined location in the cgroup hierarchy. - ... not specified, the runtime MAY define the default cgroup path.
Runtimes MAY consider certain
cgroupsPath
values to be invalid, and MUST generate an error if this is the case. If acgroupsPath
value is specified, the runtime MUST consistently attach to the same place in the cgroup hierarchy given the same value ofcgroupsPath
.
Implementations of the Spec can choose to name cgroups in any manner. The Spec does not include naming schema for cgroups. The Spec does not support per-controller paths for the reasons discussed in the cgroupv2 documentation. The cgroups will be created if they don't exist.
You can configure a container's cgroups via the resources
field of the Linux configuration.
Do not specify resources
unless limits have to be updated.
For example, to run a new process in an existing container without updating limits, resources
need not be specified.
Runtimes MAY attach the container process to additional cgroup controllers beyond those necessary to fulfill the resources
settings.
Example
"cgroupsPath": "/myRuntime/myContainer",
"resources": {
"memory": {
"limit": 100000,
"reservation": 200000
},
"devices": [
{
"allow": false,
"access": "rwm"
}
]
}
Device whitelist
devices
(array of objects, OPTIONAL) configures the device whitelist.
The runtime MUST apply entries in the listed order.
Each entry has the following structure:
allow
(boolean, REQUIRED) - whether the entry is allowed or denied.type
(string, OPTIONAL) - type of device:a
(all),c
(char), orb
(block). Unset values mean "all", mapping toa
.major, minor
(int64, OPTIONAL) - major, minor numbers for the device. Unset values mean "all", mapping to*
in the filesystem API.access
(string, OPTIONAL) - cgroup permissions for device. A composition ofr
(read),w
(write), andm
(mknod).
Example
"devices": [
{
"allow": false,
"access": "rwm"
},
{
"allow": true,
"type": "c",
"major": 10,
"minor": 229,
"access": "rw"
},
{
"allow": true,
"type": "b",
"major": 8,
"minor": 0,
"access": "r"
}
]
Disable out-of-memory killer
disableOOMKiller
contains a boolean (true
or false
) that enables or disables the Out of Memory killer for a cgroup.
If enabled (false
), tasks that attempt to consume more memory than they are allowed are immediately killed by the OOM killer.
The OOM killer is enabled by default in every cgroup using the memory
subsystem.
To disable it, specify a value of true
.
For more information, see the memory cgroup man page.
disableOOMKiller
(bool, OPTIONAL) - enables or disables the OOM killer
Example
"disableOOMKiller": false
Memory
memory
(object, OPTIONAL) represents the cgroup subsystem memory
and it's used to set limits on the container's memory usage.
For more information, see the memory cgroup man page.
The following parameters can be specified to setup the controller:
-
limit
(uint64, OPTIONAL) - sets limit of memory usage in bytes -
reservation
(uint64, OPTIONAL) - sets soft limit of memory usage in bytes -
swap
(uint64, OPTIONAL) - sets limit of memory+Swap usage -
kernel
(uint64, OPTIONAL) - sets hard limit for kernel memory -
kernelTCP
(uint64, OPTIONAL) - sets hard limit in bytes for kernel TCP buffer memory -
swappiness
(uint64, OPTIONAL) - sets swappiness parameter of vmscan (See sysctl's vm.swappiness)
Example
"memory": {
"limit": 536870912,
"reservation": 536870912,
"swap": 536870912,
"kernel": 0,
"kernelTCP": 0,
"swappiness": 0
}
CPU
cpu
(object, OPTIONAL) represents the cgroup subsystems cpu
and cpusets
.
For more information, see the cpusets cgroup man page.
The following parameters can be specified to setup the controller:
-
shares
(uint64, OPTIONAL) - specifies a relative share of CPU time available to the tasks in a cgroup -
quota
(int64, OPTIONAL) - specifies the total amount of time in microseconds for which all tasks in a cgroup can run during one period (as defined byperiod
below) -
period
(uint64, OPTIONAL) - specifies a period of time in microseconds for how regularly a cgroup's access to CPU resources should be reallocated (CFS scheduler only) -
realtimeRuntime
(int64, OPTIONAL) - specifies a period of time in microseconds for the longest continuous period in which the tasks in a cgroup have access to CPU resources -
realtimePeriod
(uint64, OPTIONAL) - same asperiod
but applies to realtime scheduler only -
cpus
(string, OPTIONAL) - list of CPUs the container will run in -
mems
(string, OPTIONAL) - list of Memory Nodes the container will run in
Example
"cpu": {
"shares": 1024,
"quota": 1000000,
"period": 500000,
"realtimeRuntime": 950000,
"realtimePeriod": 1000000,
"cpus": "2-3",
"mems": "0-7"
}
Block IO
blockIO
(object, OPTIONAL) represents the cgroup subsystem blkio
which implements the block IO controller.
For more information, see the kernel cgroups documentation about blkio.
The following parameters can be specified to setup the controller:
-
blkioWeight
(uint16, OPTIONAL) - specifies per-cgroup weight. This is default weight of the group on all devices until and unless overridden by per-device rules. -
blkioLeafWeight
(uint16, OPTIONAL) - equivalents ofblkioWeight
for the purpose of deciding how much weight tasks in the given cgroup has while competing with the cgroup's child cgroups. -
blkioWeightDevice
(array of objects, OPTIONAL) - specifies the list of devices which will be bandwidth rate limited. The following parameters can be specified per-device:major, minor
(int64, REQUIRED) - major, minor numbers for device. More info inman mknod
.weight
(uint16, OPTIONAL) - bandwidth rate for the device.leafWeight
(uint16, OPTIONAL) - bandwidth rate for the device while competing with the cgroup's child cgroups, CFQ scheduler only
You MUST specify at least one of
weight
orleafWeight
in a given entry, and MAY specify both. -
blkioThrottleReadBpsDevice
,blkioThrottleWriteBpsDevice
,blkioThrottleReadIOPSDevice
,blkioThrottleWriteIOPSDevice
(array of objects, OPTIONAL) - specify the list of devices which will be IO rate limited. The following parameters can be specified per-device:major, minor
(int64, REQUIRED) - major, minor numbers for device. More info inman mknod
.rate
(uint64, REQUIRED) - IO rate limit for the device
Example
"blockIO": {
"blkioWeight": 10,
"blkioLeafWeight": 10,
"blkioWeightDevice": [
{
"major": 8,
"minor": 0,
"weight": 500,
"leafWeight": 300
},
{
"major": 8,
"minor": 16,
"weight": 500
}
],
"blkioThrottleReadBpsDevice": [
{
"major": 8,
"minor": 0,
"rate": 600
}
],
"blkioThrottleWriteIOPSDevice": [
{
"major": 8,
"minor": 16,
"rate": 300
}
]
}
Huge page limits
hugepageLimits
(array of objects, OPTIONAL) represents the hugetlb
controller which allows to limit the
HugeTLB usage per control group and enforces the controller limit during page fault.
For more information, see the kernel cgroups documentation about HugeTLB.
Each entry has the following structure:
-
pageSize
(string, REQUIRED) - hugepage size -
limit
(uint64, REQUIRED) - limit in bytes of hugepagesize HugeTLB usage
Example
"hugepageLimits": [
{
"pageSize": "2MB",
"limit": 209715200
}
]
Network
network
(object, OPTIONAL) represents the cgroup subsystems net_cls
and net_prio
.
For more information, see the net_cls cgroup man page and the net_prio cgroup man page.
The following parameters can be specified to setup the controller:
-
classID
(uint32, OPTIONAL) - is the network class identifier the cgroup's network packets will be tagged with -
priorities
(array of objects, OPTIONAL) - specifies a list of objects of the priorities assigned to traffic originating from processes in the group and egressing the system on various interfaces. The following parameters can be specified per-priority:name
(string, REQUIRED) - interface name in runtime network namespacepriority
(uint32, REQUIRED) - priority applied to the interface
Example
"network": {
"classID": 1048577,
"priorities": [
{
"name": "eth0",
"priority": 500
},
{
"name": "eth1",
"priority": 1000
}
]
}
PIDs
pids
(object, OPTIONAL) represents the cgroup subsystem pids
.
For more information, see the pids cgroup man page.
The following parameters can be specified to setup the controller:
limit
(int64, REQUIRED) - specifies the maximum number of tasks in the cgroup
Example
"pids": {
"limit": 32771
}
IntelRdt
intelRdt
(object, OPTIONAL) represents the Intel Resource Director Technology.
If intelRdt
is set, the runtime MUST write the container process ID to the <container-id>/tasks
file in a mounted resctrl
pseudo-filesystem, using the container ID from start
and creating the <container-id>
directory if necessary.
If no mounted resctrl
pseudo-filesystem is available in the runtime mount namespace, the runtime MUST generate an error.
If `intelRdt` is not set, the runtime MUST NOT manipulate any `resctrl` psuedo-filesystems.
The following parameters can be specified for the container:
-
l3CacheSchema
(string, OPTIONAL) - specifies the schema for L3 cache id and capacity bitmask (CBM). Ifl3CacheSchema
is set, runtimes MUST write the value to theschemata
file in the<container-id>
directory discussed inintelRdt
.If
l3CacheSchema
is not set, runtimes MUST NOT write toschemata
files in anyresctrl
psuedo-filesystems.
Example
Consider a two-socket machine with two L3 caches where the default CBM is 0xfffff and the max CBM length is 20 bits. Tasks inside the container only have access to the "upper" 80% of L3 cache id 0 and the "lower" 50% L3 cache id 1:
"linux": {
"intelRdt": {
"l3CacheSchema": "L3:0=ffff0;1=3ff"
}
}
Sysctl
sysctl
(object, OPTIONAL) allows kernel parameters to be modified at runtime for the container.
For more information, see the sysctl(8) man page.
Example
"sysctl": {
"net.ipv4.ip_forward": "1",
"net.core.somaxconn": "256"
}
Seccomp
Seccomp provides application sandboxing mechanism in the Linux kernel. Seccomp configuration allows one to configure actions to take for matched syscalls and furthermore also allows matching on values passed as arguments to syscalls. For more information about Seccomp, see Seccomp kernel documentation. The actions, architectures, and operators are strings that match the definitions in seccomp.h from libseccomp and are translated to corresponding values.
seccomp
(object, OPTIONAL)
The following parameters can be specified to setup seccomp:
-
defaultAction
(string, REQUIRED) - the default action for seccomp. Allowed values are the same assyscalls[].action
. -
architectures
(array of strings, OPTIONAL) - the architecture used for system calls. A valid list of constants as of libseccomp v2.3.2 is shown below.SCMP_ARCH_X86
SCMP_ARCH_X86_64
SCMP_ARCH_X32
SCMP_ARCH_ARM
SCMP_ARCH_AARCH64
SCMP_ARCH_MIPS
SCMP_ARCH_MIPS64
SCMP_ARCH_MIPS64N32
SCMP_ARCH_MIPSEL
SCMP_ARCH_MIPSEL64
SCMP_ARCH_MIPSEL64N32
SCMP_ARCH_PPC
SCMP_ARCH_PPC64
SCMP_ARCH_PPC64LE
SCMP_ARCH_S390
SCMP_ARCH_S390X
SCMP_ARCH_PARISC
SCMP_ARCH_PARISC64
-
syscalls
(array of objects, OPTIONAL) - match a syscall in seccomp.While this property is OPTIONAL, some values of
defaultAction
are not useful withoutsyscalls
entries. For example, ifdefaultAction
isSCMP_ACT_KILL
andsyscalls
is empty or unset, the kernel will kill the container process on its first syscall.Each entry has the following structure:
-
names
(array of strings, REQUIRED) - the names of the syscalls.names
MUST contain at least one entry. -
action
(string, REQUIRED) - the action for seccomp rules. A valid list of constants as of libseccomp v2.3.2 is shown below.SCMP_ACT_KILL
SCMP_ACT_TRAP
SCMP_ACT_ERRNO
SCMP_ACT_TRACE
SCMP_ACT_ALLOW
-
args
(array of objects, OPTIONAL) - the specific syscall in seccomp.Each entry has the following structure:
-
index
(uint, REQUIRED) - the index for syscall arguments in seccomp. -
value
(uint64, REQUIRED) - the value for syscall arguments in seccomp. -
valueTwo
(uint64, REQUIRED) - the value for syscall arguments in seccomp. -
op
(string, REQUIRED) - the operator for syscall arguments in seccomp. A valid list of constants as of libseccomp v2.3.2 is shown below.SCMP_CMP_NE
SCMP_CMP_LT
SCMP_CMP_LE
SCMP_CMP_EQ
SCMP_CMP_GE
SCMP_CMP_GT
SCMP_CMP_MASKED_EQ
-
-
Example
"seccomp": {
"defaultAction": "SCMP_ACT_ALLOW",
"architectures": [
"SCMP_ARCH_X86",
"SCMP_ARCH_X32"
],
"syscalls": [
{
"names": [
"getcwd",
"chmod"
],
"action": "SCMP_ACT_ERRNO"
}
]
}
Rootfs Mount Propagation
rootfsPropagation
(string, OPTIONAL) sets the rootfs's mount propagation.
Its value is either slave, private, shared or unbindable.
The Shared Subtrees article in the kernel documentation has more information about mount propagation.
Example
"rootfsPropagation": "slave",
Masked Paths
maskedPaths
(array of strings, OPTIONAL) will mask over the provided paths inside the container so that they cannot be read.
The values MUST be absolute paths in the container namespace.
Example
"maskedPaths": [
"/proc/kcore"
]
Readonly Paths
readonlyPaths
(array of strings, OPTIONAL) will set the provided paths as readonly inside the container.
The values MUST be absolute paths in the container namespace.
Example
"readonlyPaths": [
"/proc/sys"
]
Mount Label
mountLabel
(string, OPTIONAL) will set the Selinux context for the mounts in the container.
Example
"mountLabel": "system_u:object_r:svirt_sandbox_file_t:s0:c715,c811"