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Aleksa Sarai 972c176ae4
tests: fix all the things
This fixes all of the tests that were broken as part of the console
rewrite. This includes fixing the integration tests that used TTY
handling inside libcontainer, as well as the bats integration tests that
needed to be rewritten to use recvtty (as they rely on detached
containers that are running).

This patch is part of the console rewrite patchset.

Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
2016-12-01 15:49:37 +11:00
Godeps godeps: update go-systemd to v14 2016-11-21 20:20:14 +01:00
contrib contrib: add recvtty proof-of-concept 2016-12-01 15:49:36 +11:00
libcontainer tests: fix all the things 2016-12-01 15:49:37 +11:00
man Add --all flag to kill 2016-11-08 09:35:02 -08:00
script Add shfmt to the validate make target 2016-11-17 13:55:59 +00:00
tests/integration tests: fix all the things 2016-12-01 15:49:37 +11:00
.gitignore contrib: add recvtty proof-of-concept 2016-12-01 15:49:36 +11:00
.pullapprove.yml Disallow self-LGTMs 2016-06-01 09:31:21 +08:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Move libcontainer documenation to root of repo 2015-06-26 11:50:46 -07:00
Dockerfile *: update busybox test rootfs 2016-12-01 15:49:36 +11:00
LICENSE Initial commit of runc binary 2015-06-21 19:34:13 -07:00
MAINTAINERS MAINTAINERS: add Aleksa Sarai to maintainers 2016-03-15 15:09:53 +11:00
MAINTAINERS_GUIDE.md Update maintainers guide 2015-07-21 10:59:56 -07:00
Makefile tests: fix all the things 2016-12-01 15:49:37 +11:00
NOTICE Move libcontainer documenation to root of repo 2015-06-26 11:50:46 -07:00
PRINCIPLES.md Move libcontainer documenation to root of repo 2015-06-26 11:50:46 -07:00
README.md Move ambient capabilties behind build tag 2016-11-02 10:59:59 -07:00
VERSION Bump spec and version to rc2 2016-09-28 09:53:43 -07:00
checkpoint.go checkpoint: fix gofmt 2016-10-19 05:37:24 +11:00
create.go runc: implement --console-socket 2016-12-01 15:49:36 +11:00
delete.go Add --all flag to kill 2016-11-08 09:35:02 -08:00
events.go Removing fatal error from events in stopped state 2016-09-12 21:06:32 +05:30
exec.go runc: implement --console-socket 2016-12-01 15:49:36 +11:00
kill.go Add --all flag to kill 2016-11-08 09:35:02 -08:00
list.go Use same state object for state and list 2016-09-19 09:18:24 -07:00
main.go Ensure we log into logrus on command error 2016-10-03 08:01:09 -07:00
main_solaris.go Replace github.com/codegangsta/cli by github.com/urfave/cli 2016-06-06 11:47:20 -07:00
main_unix.go Add error return to action function signature 2016-06-07 14:42:54 -07:00
main_unsupported.go Replace github.com/codegangsta/cli by github.com/urfave/cli 2016-06-06 11:47:20 -07:00
pause.go fix nits in stderr log 2016-10-23 22:43:53 +08:00
ps.go ps error logging improvement 2016-10-17 20:50:33 +05:30
restore.go *: console rewrite 2016-12-01 15:49:36 +11:00
rlimit_linux.go Fixing rlimit sigpending value 2016-04-03 22:25:41 +05:30
run.go runc: implement --console-socket 2016-12-01 15:49:36 +11:00
signals.go *: console rewrite 2016-12-01 15:49:36 +11:00
spec.go Valide platform on loading config.json 2016-10-14 02:53:37 -04:00
start.go fix nits in stderr log 2016-10-23 22:43:53 +08:00
state.go Use same state object for state and list 2016-09-19 09:18:24 -07:00
tty.go runc: implement --console-socket 2016-12-01 15:49:36 +11:00
update.go Allow update rt_period_us and rt_runtime_us 2016-11-04 18:57:22 +08:00
utils.go Fix the pid-file option for runc run/exec/create command 2016-11-02 14:08:32 +08:00
utils_linux.go runc: implement --console-socket 2016-12-01 15:49:36 +11:00

README.md

[![Build Status](https://jenkins.dockerproject.org/buildStatus/icon?job=runc Master)](https://jenkins.dockerproject.org/job/runc Master)

runc

runc is a CLI tool for spawning and running containers according to the OCI specification.

Releases

runc depends on and tracks the runtime-spec repository. We will try to make sure that runc and the OCI specification major versions stay in lockstep. This means that runc 1.0.0 should implement the 1.0 version of the specification.

You can find official releases of runc on the release page.

Building

runc currently supports the Linux platform with various architecture support. It must be built with Go version 1.6 or higher in order for some features to function properly.

In order to enable seccomp support you will need to install libseccomp on your platform.

e.g. libseccomp-devel for CentOS, or libseccomp-dev for Ubuntu

Otherwise, if you do not want to build runc with seccomp support you can add BUILDTAGS="" when running make.

# create a 'github.com/opencontainers' in your GOPATH/src
cd github.com/opencontainers
git clone https://github.com/opencontainers/runc
cd runc

make
sudo make install

runc will be installed to /usr/local/sbin/runc on your system.

Build Tags

runc supports optional build tags for compiling support of various features. To add build tags to the make option the BUILDTAGS variable must be set.

make BUILDTAGS='seccomp apparmor'
Build Tag Feature Dependency
seccomp Syscall filtering libseccomp
selinux selinux process and mount labeling
apparmor apparmor profile support libapparmor
ambient ambient capability support kernel 4.3

Running the test suite

runc currently supports running its test suite via Docker. To run the suite just type make test.

make test

There are additional make targets for running the tests outside of a container but this is not recommended as the tests are written with the expectation that they can write and remove anywhere.

You can run a specific test case by setting the TESTFLAGS variable.

# make test TESTFLAGS="-run=SomeTestFunction"

Using runc

Creating an OCI Bundle

In order to use runc you must have your container in the format of an OCI bundle. If you have Docker installed you can use its export method to acquire a root filesystem from an existing Docker container.

# create the top most bundle directory
mkdir /mycontainer
cd /mycontainer

# create the rootfs directory
mkdir rootfs

# export busybox via Docker into the rootfs directory
docker export $(docker create busybox) | tar -C rootfs -xvf -

After a root filesystem is populated you just generate a spec in the format of a config.json file inside your bundle. runc provides a spec command to generate a base template spec that you are then able to edit. To find features and documentation for fields in the spec please refer to the specs repository.

runc spec

Running Containers

Assuming you have an OCI bundle from the previous step you can execute the container in two different ways.

The first way is to use the convenience command run that will handle creating, starting, and deleting the container after it exits.

cd /mycontainer

runc run mycontainerid

If you used the unmodified runc spec template this should give you a sh session inside the container.

The second way to start a container is using the specs lifecycle operations. This gives you more power over how the container is created and managed while it is running. This will also launch the container in the background so you will have to edit the config.json to remove the terminal setting for the simple examples here. Your process field in the config.json should look like this below with "terminal": false and "args": ["sleep", "5"].

        "process": {
                "terminal": false,
                "user": {
                        "uid": 0,
                        "gid": 0
                },
                "args": [
                        "sleep", "5"
                ],
                "env": [
                        "PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin",
                        "TERM=xterm"
                ],
                "cwd": "/",
                "capabilities": [
                        "CAP_AUDIT_WRITE",
                        "CAP_KILL",
                        "CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE"
                ],
                "rlimits": [
                        {
                                "type": "RLIMIT_NOFILE",
                                "hard": 1024,
                                "soft": 1024
                        }
                ],
                "noNewPrivileges": true
        },

Now we can go though the lifecycle operations in your shell.

cd /mycontainer

runc create mycontainerid

# view the container is created and in the "created" state
runc list

# start the process inside the container
runc start mycontainerid

# after 5 seconds view that the container has exited and is now in the stopped state
runc list

# now delete the container
runc delete mycontainerid

This adds more complexity but allows higher level systems to manage runc and provides points in the containers creation to setup various settings after the container has created and/or before it is deleted. This is commonly used to setup the container's network stack after create but before start where the user's defined process will be running.

Supervisors

runc can be used with process supervisors and init systems to ensure that containers are restarted when they exit. An example systemd unit file looks something like this.

[Unit]
Description=Start My Container

[Service]
Type=forking
ExecStart=/usr/local/sbin/runc run -d --pid-file /run/mycontainerid.pid mycontainerid
ExecStopPost=/usr/local/sbin/runc delete mycontainerid
WorkingDirectory=/mycontainer
PIDFile=/run/mycontainerid.pid

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target