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authorAlessandro Puccetti <alessandro@kinvolk.io>2016-06-10 13:09:06 +0200
committerLennart Poettering <lennart@poettering.net>2016-06-10 13:09:06 +0200
commit9c1e04d0fa80c73ef0dd4647c103cdb7edb7f580 (patch)
tree26b3aad4edcbcb923a19e5904b928d3e559ce23d /src/nspawn/nspawn-gperf.gperf
parent1edce01965b4da12dbf4363e77b62471ac664fa1 (diff)
nspawn: introduce --notify-ready=[no|yes] (#3474)
This the patch implements a notificaiton mechanism from the init process in the container to systemd-nspawn. The switch --notify-ready=yes configures systemd-nspawn to wait the "READY=1" message from the init process in the container to send its own to systemd. --notify-ready=no is equivalent to the previous behavior before this patch, systemd-nspawn notifies systemd with a "READY=1" message when the container is created. This notificaiton mechanism uses socket file with path relative to the contanier "/run/systemd/nspawn/notify". The default values it --notify-ready=no. It is also possible to configure this mechanism from the .nspawn files using NotifyReady. This parameter takes the same options of the command line switch. Before this patch, systemd-nspawn notifies "ready" after the inner child was created, regardless the status of the service running inside it. Now, with --notify-ready=yes, systemd-nspawn notifies when the service is ready. This is really useful when there are dependencies between different contaniers. Fixes https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/1369 Based on the work from https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/3022 Testing: Boot a OS inside a container with systemd-nspawn. Note: modify the commands accordingly with your filesystem. 1. Create a filesystem where you can boot an OS. 2. sudo systemd-nspawn -D ${HOME}/distros/fedora-23/ sh 2.1. Create the unit file /etc/systemd/system/sleep.service inside the container (You can use the example below) 2.2. systemdctl enable sleep 2.3 exit 3. sudo systemd-run --service-type=notify --unit=notify-test ${HOME}/systemd/systemd-nspawn --notify-ready=yes -D ${HOME}/distros/fedora-23/ -b 4. In a different shell run "systemctl status notify-test" When using --notify-ready=yes the service status is "activating" for 20 seconds before being set to "active (running)". Instead, using --notify-ready=no the service status is marked "active (running)" quickly, without waiting for the 20 seconds. This patch was also test with --private-users=yes, you can test it just adding it at the end of the command at point 3. ------ sleep.service ------ [Unit] Description=sleep After=network.target [Service] Type=oneshot ExecStart=/bin/sleep 20 [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target ------------ end ------------
Diffstat (limited to 'src/nspawn/nspawn-gperf.gperf')
-rw-r--r--src/nspawn/nspawn-gperf.gperf1
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/nspawn/nspawn-gperf.gperf b/src/nspawn/nspawn-gperf.gperf
index 2b5d452662..3231a48d5a 100644
--- a/src/nspawn/nspawn-gperf.gperf
+++ b/src/nspawn/nspawn-gperf.gperf
@@ -27,6 +27,7 @@ Exec.Personality, config_parse_personality, 0, offsetof(Settings,
Exec.MachineID, config_parse_id128, 0, offsetof(Settings, machine_id)
Exec.WorkingDirectory, config_parse_path, 0, offsetof(Settings, working_directory)
Exec.PrivateUsers, config_parse_private_users, 0, 0
+Exec.NotifyReady, config_parse_bool, 0, offsetof(Settings, notify_ready)
Files.ReadOnly, config_parse_tristate, 0, offsetof(Settings, read_only)
Files.Volatile, config_parse_volatile_mode, 0, offsetof(Settings, volatile_mode)
Files.Bind, config_parse_bind, 0, 0