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4.3 KiB
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LXD: Containers for Human Beings | Docker's great and all, but I prefer the workflow of interacting with VMs | 2023-08-11T16:30:00-04:00 |
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This is a blog post version of a talk I presented at both Ubuntu Summit 2022 and SouthEast LinuxFest 2023. The first was not recorded, but the second was and is on SELF's PeerTube instance. I apologise for the terrible, but there's unfortunately nothing I can do about that.
{{< adm type="warn" >}}
Note: Canonical has decided to pull LXD out from under the Linux Containers entity and instead continue development under the Canonical brand. The majority of the LXD creators and developers have congregated around Incus. I'll be keeping a close eye on the project and intend to migrate as soon as there's an installable release.
{{< /adm >}}
The benefits of VMs and containers
- Isolation: we don't want an attacker to get into our webserver and be able to gain access to our email server
- Flexibility: VMs and containers only use the resources they've been given
- Portability: once set up and configured, VMs and containers can mostly be treated as black boxes; as long as the surrounding environment is similar to the previous in terms of communication, they can just be picked up and dropped on bare metal servers as necessary.
- Density:
- Cleanliness:
Virtual machines
.---------------------------------.
| .-------. .-------. .-------. |
| | Guest | | Guest | | Guest | |
| | OS | | OS | | OS | |
| .---+---' .---+---' .---+---' |
| .--+----. .--+----. .--+----. |
| | Guest | | Guest | | Guest | |
| | Kernel | | Kernel | | Kernel | |
| .---+---' .---+---' .---+---' |
| .--+----------+----------+----. |
| | Hypervisor | |
| .--------------+--------------' |
| .-------------+---------------. |
| | Host Kernel | |
| .-----------------------------' |
.---------------------------------'
Containers
Application containers System containers
.---------------------------------. .------------------------------.
| .-------. .-------. .-------. | | .------. .------. .------. |
| | App 01 | | App 02 | | App 03 | | | | Guest | | Guest | | Guest | |
| '---+---' '---+---' '---+---' | | | OS | | OS | | OS | |
| .--+----------+----------+----. | | '---+--' '---+--' '---+--' |
| | Hypervisor | | | .--+---------+---------+---. |
| '--------------+--------------' | | | Host Kernel | |
| .-------------+---------------. | | '--------------------------' |
| | Host Kernel | | '------------------------------'
| '-----------------------------' |
'---------------------------------'
When to use which
Virtual machines
- Virtualising esoteric hardware
- Virtualising non-Linux operating systems (Windows, macOS)
- Completely isolating processes from one another with a decades-old, battle-tested technique
{{< adm type="note" >}} See Drew DeVault's blog post In praise of qemu for a great use of VMs {{< /adm >}}
Application containers
- Microservices
- Extremely reproducible builds
- (NixOS.org would likely be a better fit though)
- Dead-set on using cloud platforms with extreme scaling capabilities (AWS, GCP, etc.)
- When the app you want to run is only distributed as a Docker container and
the maintainers adamantly refuse to support any other deployment method
- (Docker does run in LXD 😉)
System containers
- Anything not listed above 👍
Crash course to LXD
- Install snap following Canonical's tutorial
- LXD is natively packaged for Arch and Alpine, but configuration can be a massive headache.
sudo snap install lxd
lxd init
lxc image copy images:debian/11 local: --alias deb-11
lxc launch deb-11 container-name
lxc shell container-name