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Containerization with LXC

You're reading from   Containerization with LXC Build, manage, and configure Linux containers

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785888946
Length 352 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Konstantin Ivanov Konstantin Ivanov
Author Profile Icon Konstantin Ivanov
Konstantin Ivanov
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Linux Containers FREE CHAPTER 2. Installing and Running LXC on Linux Systems 3. Command-Line Operations Using Native and Libvirt Tools 4. LXC Code Integration with Python 5. Networking in LXC with the Linux Bridge and Open vSwitch 6. Clustering and Horizontal Scaling with LXC 7. Monitoring and Backups in a Containerized World 8. Using LXC with OpenStack A. LXC Alternatives to Docker and OpenVZ

Autostarting LXC containers


By default, LXC containers do not start after a server reboot. To change that, we can use the lxc-autostart tool and the containers configuration file:

  1. To demonstrate this, let's create a new container first:

          root@ubuntu:~# lxc-create --name autostart_container --template 
          ubuntu
    
          root@ubuntu:~# lxc-ls -f
    
          NAME STATE AUTOSTART GROUPS IPV4 IPV6
    
          autostart_container STOPPED 0 - - -
    
          root@ubuntu:~#
    
  2. Next, add the lxc.start.auto stanza to its config file:

          root@ubuntu:~# echo "lxc.start.auto = 1" >> 
          /var/lib/lxc/autostart_container/config
    
          root@ubuntu:~#
    
  3. List all containers that are configured to start automatically:

          root@ubuntu:~# lxc-autostart --list
    
          autostart_container
    
          root@ubuntu:~#
    
  4. Now we can use the lxc-autostart command again to start all containers configured to autostart, in this case just one:

          root@ubuntu:~# lxc-autostart --all
         ...
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