This is a set of scripts to build a LXC container and prepare it to be provisioned by chef-solo
.
This is meant to work with Debain and Ubuntu containers to be bootstraped with Chef. It also comes with a list of cookbooks to be used by the container in order to bootstrap an Rails project by any of the Aentos developers.
To install the scripts you need to have installed in a Ubuntu/Debian box with the following dependencies:
lxc
make
Now you need to run:
$ sudo make
It will install the scripts to /usr/local/bin/
.
NOTE: It's important to run the make
with sudo
or as a root user.
You also can especify the DESTDIR
and the prefix
variables to the make
command:
$ make DESTDIR=~ prefix=
It will install the scripts to /home/$USER/bin
.
First you need to run the sudo rake
. Then you can create a LXC container with lxc-build-project
:
$ sudo lxc-build-project -n <container-name> [-u|--distro <username>] [-D|--distro <distro>] [-- <template params>]
Obviously, the <container-name>
you choose will be the one use to refer to the container. This parameter must be provider.
The <username>
is the name of the user you want to be created inside the container to manage it. It's optional but highly recommended to be provided.
If you are going to use the boostrap cookbook, it's very important that the user you choose be the same in both cases (the container and the cookbook). See the cookbook's attributes for more info.
The <distro>
could be either debian
or ubuntu
. The default option is debian
.
To create a LXC project it's enough to run (being superproject
the name of the new project):
$ sudo lxc-build-project -n superproject
You can also pass some parameters to the lxc-create
after --
, like the IP the container should have:
$ sudo lxc-build-project -n superproject -- -i 10.0.3.51 -B lvm
After you create the container you need to provision it by doing:
$ sudo lxc-provision -n superproject -b /mnt/disk1/code/Berksfile
You will need a Berksfile
file with the cookbooks for the project you want to bootstrap. A example is provider in this repo.
To know more about the Berksfile
's format please visit the Berkshelf's site.
You also can use lxc-console
or normal ssh connection to work inside the container. To connect via ssh with the container without password you can use a private key copied to /var/cache/lxc/id_project_[container-name]
for this purpose.
There is also a handy command lxc-ssh
which do the job. Here is how you can use it:
$ lxc-ssh -n superproject
In case you need it, the password for the ubuntu
user is ubuntu
.
Author:: Juanje Ojeda ([email protected])
Copyright:: 2012, Aentos
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.