linuxkit / linuxkit
- среда, 19 апреля 2017 г. в 03:11:36
C
A toolkit for building secure, portable and lean operating systems for containers
LinuxKit, a toolkit for building custom minimal, immutable Linux distributions.
moby toolSimple build instructions: use make to build. This will build the customisation tool in bin/. Add this
to your PATH or copy it to somewhere in your PATH eg sudo cp bin/moby /usr/local/bin/. Or you can use sudo make install.
If you already have go installed you can use go get -u github.com/docker/moby/src/cmd/moby to install
the moby tool, and then use moby build linuxkit.yml to build the example configuration. You
can use go get -u github.com/docker/moby/src/cmd/infrakit-instance-hyperkit to get the
hyperkit infrakit tool.
Once you have built the tool, use moby build linuxkit.yml to build the example configuration,
and bin/moby run linuxkit to run locally. Use halt to terminate on the console.
Build requirements:
maketar (not busybox tar)You can use moby run <name> to execute the image you created with moby build <name>.yml.
This will use a suitable backend for your platform or you can choose one, for example VMWare.
See moby run --help.
Some platforms do not yet have moby run support, so you can use ./scripts/qemu.sh moby-initrd.img moby-bzImage moby-cmdline
or ./scripts/qemu.sh mobylinux-bios.iso which runs qemu in a Docker container.
make test or make test-hyperkit will run the test suite
There are also docs for booting on Google Cloud; ./bin/moby run --gcp <name>.yml should
work if you specified a GCP image to be built in the config.
More detailed docs will be available shortly, for running both single hosts and clusters.
To customise, copy or modify the linuxkit.yml to your own file.yml or use one of the examples and then run moby build file.yml to
generate its specified output. You can run the output with moby run file.
The yaml file specifies a kernel and base init system, a set of containers that are built into the generated image and started at boot time. It also specifies what formats to output, such as bootable ISOs and images for various platforms.
The yaml format specifies the image to be built:
kernel specifies a kernel Docker image, containing a kernel and a filesystem tarball, eg containing modules. The example kernels are built from kernel/init is the base init process Docker image, which is unpacked as the base system, containing init, containerd, runc and a few tools. Built from pkg/init/onboot are the system containers, executed sequentially in order. They should terminate quickly when done.services is the system services, which normally run for the whole time the system is upfiles are additional files to add to the imageoutputs are descriptions of what to build, such as ISOs.For a more detailed overview of the options see yaml documentation.
There is an overview of the architecture covering how the system works.
There is an overview of the security considerations and direction covering the security design of the system.
This project was extensively reworked from the code we are shipping in Docker Editions, and the result is not yet production quality. The plan is to return to production quality during Q2 2017, and rebase the Docker Editions on this open source project.
This is an open project without fixed judgements, open to the community to set the direction. The guiding principles are:
There are weekly development reports summarizing work carried out in the week.
See FAQ.
Released under the Apache 2.0 license.