[RFD] reboot / shutdown of a container

From: Daniel Lezcano
Date: Thu Jan 13 2011 - 11:34:51 EST



Hi all,

in the container implementation, we are facing the problem of a process calling the sys_reboot syscall which of course makes the host to poweroff/reboot.

If we drop the cap_sys_reboot capability, sys_reboot fails and the container reach a shutdown state but the init process stay there, hence the container becomes stuck waiting indefinitely the process '1' to exit.

The current implementation to make the shutdown / reboot of the container to work is we watch, from a process outside of the container, the <rootfs>/var/run/utmp file and check the runlevel each time the file changes. When the 'reboot' or 'shutdown' level is detected, we wait for a single remaining in the container and then we kill it.

That works but this is not efficient in case of a large number of containers as we will have to watch a lot of utmp files. In addition, the /var/run directory must *not* mounted as tmpfs in the distro. Unfortunately, it is the default setup on most of the distros and tends to generalize. That implies, the rootfs init's scripts must be modified for the container when we put in place its rootfs and as /var/run is supposed to be a tmpfs, most of the applications do not cleanup the directory, so we need to add extra services to wipeout the files.

More problems arise when we do an upgrade of the distro inside the container, because all the setup we made at creation time will be lost. The upgrade overwrite the scripts, the fstab and so on.

We did what was possible to solve the problem from userspace but we reach always a limit because there are different implementations of the 'init' process and the init's scripts differ from a distro to another and the same with the versions.

We think this problem can only be solved from the kernel.

The idea was to send a signal SIGPWR to the parent of the pid '1' of the pid namespace when the sys_reboot is called. Of course that won't occur for the init pid namespace.

Does it make sense ?

Any idea is very welcome :)

-- Daniel




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