#!/bin/bash # First, make sure that cgroups are mounted correctly. CGROUP=/sys/fs/cgroup [ -d $CGROUP ] || mkdir $CGROUP mountpoint -q $CGROUP || mount -n -t tmpfs -o uid=0,gid=0,mode=0755 cgroup $CGROUP || { echo "Could not make a tmpfs mount. Did you use -privileged?" exit 1 } if [ -d /sys/kernel/security ] && ! mountpoint -q /sys/kernel/security then mount -t securityfs none /sys/kernel/security || { echo "Could not mount /sys/kernel/security." echo "AppArmor detection and -privileged mode might break." } fi # Mount the cgroup hierarchies exactly as they are in the parent system. for SUBSYS in $(cut -d: -f2 /proc/1/cgroup) do [ -d $CGROUP/$SUBSYS ] || mkdir $CGROUP/$SUBSYS mountpoint -q $CGROUP/$SUBSYS || mount -n -t cgroup -o $SUBSYS cgroup $CGROUP/$SUBSYS # The two following sections address a bug which manifests itself # by a cryptic "lxc-start: no ns_cgroup option specified" when # trying to start containers withina container. # The bug seems to appear when the cgroup hierarchies are not # mounted on the exact same directories in the host, and in the # container. # Named, control-less cgroups are mounted with "-o name=foo" # (and appear as such under /proc//cgroup) but are usually # mounted on a directory named "foo" (without the "name=" prefix). # Systemd and OpenRC (and possibly others) both create such a # cgroup. To avoid the aforementioned bug, we symlink "foo" to # "name=foo". This shouldn't have any adverse effect. echo $SUBSYS | grep -q ^name= && { NAME=$(echo $SUBSYS | sed s/^name=//) ln -s $SUBSYS $CGROUP/$NAME } # Likewise, on at least one system, it has been reported that # systemd would mount the CPU and CPU accounting controllers # (respectively "cpu" and "cpuacct") with "-o cpuacct,cpu" # but on a directory called "cpu,cpuacct" (note the inversion # in the order of the groups). This tries to work around it. [ $SUBSYS = cpuacct,cpu ] && ln -s $SUBSYS $CGROUP/cpu,cpuacct done # Note: as I write those lines, the LXC userland tools cannot setup # a "sub-container" properly if the "devices" cgroup is not in its # own hierarchy. Let's detect this and issue a warning. grep -q :devices: /proc/1/cgroup || echo "WARNING: the 'devices' cgroup should be in its own hierarchy." grep -qw devices /proc/1/cgroup || echo "WARNING: it looks like the 'devices' cgroup is not mounted." # Now, close extraneous file descriptors. pushd /proc/self/fd >/dev/null for FD in * do case "$FD" in # Keep stdin/stdout/stderr [012]) ;; # Nuke everything else *) eval exec "$FD>&-" ;; esac done popd >/dev/null # If a pidfile is still around (for example after a container restart), # delete it so that docker can start. rm -rf /var/run/docker.pid chmod 777 /var/lib/lxc chmod 777 /var/lib/docker # If we were given a PORT environment variable, start as a simple daemon; # otherwise, spawn a shell as well if [ "$PORT" ] then exec docker -d -H 0.0.0.0:$PORT else docker -d -D -e lxc fi