containerd is meant to be a simple daemon to run on any system. It provides a minimal config with knobs to configure the daemon and what plugins are used when necessary.
NAME:
containerd -
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high performance container runtime
USAGE:
containerd [global options] command [command options] [arguments...]
VERSION:
v1.0.0-alpha3-36-ge9b86af
COMMANDS:
config information on the containerd config
help, h Shows a list of commands or help for one command
GLOBAL OPTIONS:
--config value, -c value path to the configuration file (default: "/etc/containerd/config.toml")
--log-level value, -l value set the logging level [debug, info, warn, error, fatal, panic]
--address value, -a value address for containerd's GRPC server
--root value containerd root directory
--help, -h show help
--version, -v print the version
While a few daemon level options can be set from CLI flags the majority of containerd's configuration is kept in the configuration file.
The default path for the config file is located at /etc/containerd/config.toml
.
You can change this path via the --config,-c
flags when booting the daemon.
If you are using systemd as your init system, which most modern linux OSs are, the service file requires a few modifications.
[Unit]
Description=containerd container runtime
Documentation=https://containerd.io
After=network.target
[Service]
ExecStartPre=-/sbin/modprobe overlay
ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/containerd
Delegate=yes
KillMode=process
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Delegate=yes
and KillMode=process
are the two most important changes you need to make in the [Service]
section.
Delegate
allows containerd and its runtimes to manage the cgroups of the containers that it creates.
Without setting this option, systemd will try to move the processes into its own cgroups, causing problems for containerd and its runtimes to properly account for resource usage with the containers.
KillMode
handles when containerd is being shut down.
By default, systemd will look in its named cgroup and kill every process that it knows about for the service.
This is not what we want.
As ops, we want to be able to upgrade containerd and allow existing containers to keep running without interruption.
Setting KillMode
to process
ensures that systemd only kills the containerd daemon and not any child processes such as the shims and containers.
The following systemd-run
command starts containerd in a similar way:
sudo systemd-run -p Delegate=yes -p KillMode=process /usr/local/bin/containerd
In the containerd config file you will find settings for persistent and runtime storage locations as well as grpc, debug, and metrics addresses for the various APIs.
There are a few settings that are important for ops.
The first setting is the oom_score
. Because containerd will be managing multiple containers, we need to ensure that containers are killed before the containerd daemon gets into an out of memory condition.
We also do not want to make containerd unkillable, but we want to lower its score to the level of other system daemons.
containerd also exports its own metrics as well as container level metrics via the Prometheus metrics format under /v1/metrics
.
Currently, Prometheus only supports TCP endpoints, therefore, the metrics address should be a TCP address that your Prometheus infrastructure can scrape metrics from.
containerd also has two different storage locations on a host system. One is for persistent data and the other is for runtime state.
root
will be used to store any type of persistent data for containerd.
Snapshots, content, metadata for containers and image, as well as any plugin data will be kept in this location.
The root is also namespaced for plugins that containerd loads.
Each plugin will have its own directory where it stores data.
containerd itself does not actually have any persistent data that it needs to store, its functionality comes from the plugins that are loaded.
/var/lib/containerd/
├── io.containerd.content.v1.content
│ ├── blobs
│ └── ingest
├── io.containerd.metadata.v1.bolt
│ └── meta.db
├── io.containerd.runtime.v1.linux
│ ├── default
│ └── example
├── io.containerd.snapshotter.v1.btrfs
└── io.containerd.snapshotter.v1.overlayfs
├── metadata.db
└── snapshots
state
will be used to store any type of ephemeral data.
Sockets, pids, runtime state, mount points, and other plugin data that must not persist between reboots are stored in this location.
/run/containerd
├── containerd.sock
├── debug.sock
├── io.containerd.runtime.v1.linux
│ └── default
│ └── redis
│ ├── config.json
│ ├── init.pid
│ ├── log.json
│ └── rootfs
│ ├── bin
│ ├── data
│ ├── dev
│ ├── etc
│ ├── home
│ ├── lib
│ ├── media
│ ├── mnt
│ ├── proc
│ ├── root
│ ├── run
│ ├── sbin
│ ├── srv
│ ├── sys
│ ├── tmp
│ ├── usr
│ └── var
└── runc
└── default
└── redis
└── state.json
Both the root
and state
directories are namespaced for plugins.
Both directories are an implementation detail of containerd and its plugins.
They should not be tampered with as corruption and bugs can and will happen.
External apps reading or watching changes in these directories have been known to cause EBUSY
and stale file handles when containerd and/or its plugins try to cleanup resources.
# persistent data location
root = "/var/lib/containerd"
# runtime state information
state = "/run/containerd"
# set containerd's OOM score
oom_score = -999
# grpc configuration
[grpc]
address = "/run/containerd/containerd.sock"
# socket uid
uid = 0
# socket gid
gid = 0
# debug configuration
[debug]
address = "/run/containerd/debug.sock"
# socket uid
uid = 0
# socket gid
gid = 0
# debug level
level = "info"
# metrics configuration
[metrics]
# tcp address!
address = "127.0.0.1:1234"
At the end of the day, containerd's core is very small. The real functionality comes from plugins. Everything from snapshotters, runtimes, and content are all plugins that are registered at runtime. Because these various plugins are so different we need a way to provide type safe configuration to the plugins. The only way we can do this is via the config file and not CLI flags.
In the config file you can specify plugin level options for the set of plugins that you use via the [plugins.<name>]
sections.
You will have to read the plugin specific docs to find the options that your plugin accepts.
See containerd's Plugin documentation
The linux runtime allows a few options to be set to configure the shim and the runtime that you are using.
[plugins.linux]
# shim binary name/path
shim = ""
# runtime binary name/path
runtime = "runc"
# do not use a shim when starting containers, saves on memory but
# live restore is not supported
no_shim = false
# display shim logs in the containerd daemon's log output
shim_debug = true
The bolt metadata plugin allows configuration of the content sharing policy between namespaces.
The default mode "shared" will make blobs available in all namespaces once it is pulled into any namespace. The blob will be pulled into the namespace if a writer is opened with the "Expected" digest that is already present in the backend.
The alternative mode, "isolated" requires that clients prove they have access to the content by providing all of the content to the ingest before the blob is added to the namespace.
Both modes share backing data, while "shared" will reduce total bandwidth across namespaces, at the cost of allowing access to any blob just by knowing its digest.
The default is "shared". While this is largely the most desired policy, one can change to "isolated" mode with the following configuration:
[plugins.bolt]
content_sharing_policy = "isolated"
In "isolated" mode, it is also possible to share only the contents of a specific namespace by adding the label containerd.io/namespace.shareable=true
to that namespace.
This will make its blobs available in all other namespaces even if the content sharing policy is set to "isolated".
If the label value is set to anything other than true
, the namespace content will not be shared.