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From: Pavel Emelyanov <xemul@parallels.com>
To: Serge Hallyn <serge.hallyn@ubuntu.com>
Cc: Marian Marinov <mm@1h.com>,
	Linux Containers <containers@lists.linux-foundation.org>,
	"Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>,
	LXC development mailing-list 
	<lxc-devel@lists.linuxcontainers.org>,
	"linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org" <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [RFC] Per-user namespace process accounting
Date: Tue, 3 Jun 2014 21:01:38 +0400	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <538DFF72.7000209@parallels.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20140529153232.GB9714@ubuntumail>

On 05/29/2014 07:32 PM, Serge Hallyn wrote:
> Quoting Marian Marinov (mm@1h.com):
>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>> Hash: SHA1
>>
>> On 05/29/2014 01:06 PM, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
>>> Marian Marinov <mm@1h.com> writes:
>>>
>>>> Hello,
>>>>
>>>> I have the following proposition.
>>>>
>>>> Number of currently running processes is accounted at the root user namespace. The problem I'm facing is that
>>>> multiple containers in different user namespaces share the process counters.
>>>
>>> That is deliberate.
>>
>> And I understand that very well ;)
>>
>>>
>>>> So if containerX runs 100 with UID 99, containerY should have NPROC limit of above 100 in order to execute any 
>>>> processes with ist own UID 99.
>>>>
>>>> I know that some of you will tell me that I should not provision all of my containers with the same UID/GID maps,
>>>> but this brings another problem.
>>>>
>>>> We are provisioning the containers from a template. The template has a lot of files 500k and more. And chowning
>>>> these causes a lot of I/O and also slows down provisioning considerably.
>>>>
>>>> The other problem is that when we migrate one container from one host machine to another the IDs may be already
>>>> in use on the new machine and we need to chown all the files again.
>>>
>>> You should have the same uid allocations for all machines in your fleet as much as possible.   That has been true
>>> ever since NFS was invented and is not new here.  You can avoid the cost of chowning if you untar your files inside
>>> of your user namespace.  You can have different maps per machine if you are crazy enough to do that.  You can even
>>> have shared uids that you use to share files between containers as long as none of those files is setuid.  And map
>>> those shared files to some kind of nobody user in your user namespace.
>>
>> We are not using NFS. We are using a shared block storage that offers us snapshots. So provisioning new containers is
>> extremely cheep and fast. Comparing that with untar is comparing a race car with Smart. Yes it can be done and no, I
>> do not believe we should go backwards.
>>
>> We do not share filesystems between containers, we offer them block devices.
> 
> Yes, this is a real nuisance for openstack style deployments.
> 
> One nice solution to this imo would be a very thin stackable filesystem
> which does uid shifting, or, better yet, a non-stackable way of shifting
> uids at mount.

I vote for non-stackable way too. Maybe on generic VFS level so that filesystems 
don't bother with it. From what I've seen, even simple stacking is quite a challenge.

Thanks,
Pavel

  reply	other threads:[~2014-06-03 17:02 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 16+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2014-05-29  6:37 [RFC] Per-user namespace process accounting Marian Marinov
2014-05-29 10:06 ` Eric W. Biederman
2014-05-29 10:40   ` Marian Marinov
2014-05-29 15:32     ` Serge Hallyn
2014-06-03 17:01       ` Pavel Emelyanov [this message]
2014-06-03 17:26         ` Serge Hallyn
2014-06-03 17:39           ` Pavel Emelyanov
2014-06-03 17:47             ` Serge Hallyn
2014-06-03 18:18             ` Eric W. Biederman
2014-06-03 17:54           ` Eric W. Biederman
2014-06-03 21:39             ` Marian Marinov
2014-06-23  4:07               ` Serge E. Hallyn
2014-06-07 21:39             ` James Bottomley
2014-06-08  3:25               ` Eric W. Biederman
2014-06-12 14:37 ` Alin Dobre
2014-06-12 15:08   ` [lxc-devel] " Serge Hallyn

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