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Creates, manages and mirrors a simplestreams lxd image server on top of nginx.

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Lxd-image-server

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Creates and manages a simplestreams lxd image server on top of nginx. If installed as a debian package, a new service is created and it monitors if there are any changes in the image directory and updates json files.

Requirements

  • Python: Version 3.5.2 or higher.

  • Nginx

  • OpenSSL

Building the debian package

Building the package

To build lxd-image-server, first, install the build dependecies:

# debhelper >= 9
# dh-virtualenv >= 9
apt-get install debhelper dh-exec python3 python-dev dh-virtualenv

Then build the package:

dpkg-buildpackage -us -uc -b

Building the package in a Docker container

To build lxd-image-server itself in a Docker container, call docker build:

docker build --tag lxd-image-server-builder .

This will build the DEB package for Ubuntu Bionic by default. Add e.g. --build-arg distro=ubuntu:xenial to build for Ubuntu Xenial.

The resulting files must be copied out of the build container, using these commands:

mkdir -p dist && docker run --rm lxd-image-server-builder tar -C /dpkg -c . | tar -C dist -xv

Installation

From debian package (recommended)

The debian package will automatically copy the source files, create the user lxdadm to upload the files and setup the nginx server with its configuration (included a self signed ssl certificate).

  • Install from repository:
apt-get install lxd-image-server
  • Install using dpkg:
dpkg -i lxd-image-server_0.0.1~xenial_all.deb

After the installation of the package, a rsa key has to be generated at /home/lxdadm/.ssh to control the upload of images:

ssh-keygen
Generating public/private rsa key pair.
Enter file in which to save the key (/root/.ssh/id_rsa): # use /home/lxdadm/.ssh/id_rsa
...

The generated id_rsa key will be used to upload files to the server.

From source code

Clone the repository and run:

python setup.py install

The subcommand init generates all the default directories, ssl keys and links nginx configuration (when using default configuration it is recommended to use debian installation)

Usage

Lxd-image-server is not just a new remote for your lxd, it also allows you to distribute your images to different mirrors. Clients will update new images to the master server and the master will mirror the image on the mirrors defined on the configuration file.

The following picture describes, the master server which replicates images to other two servers. Clients can get images from any of them but they can only upload new images to the master.

usage

The configuration file would be:

[mirrors]
  [mirror1]
  user = "lxdadm"
  remote = "mirror1.xxxxxxx.com"
  key_path = "/etc/lxd-image-server/lxdhub.key"
  [mirror2]
  user = "lxdadm"
  remote = "mirror2.xxxxxxx.com"
  key_path = "/etc/lxd-image-server/lxdhub.key"

The installed service on the master will automatically monitor the image directory and update all the required metadata. No further commands are needed.

This is the structure the simplestreams server needs to have.

- /var/www                                         # document root
        `- simplestreams
           |- images                               # images folder
           |  `- iats                              # environment
           |     `- xenial                         # release
           |        `- amd64                       # architecture
           |           `- default                  # box type
           |              `- 20180716_12:00        # version 1
           |                 |- lxd.tar.xz         # index and templates
           |                 `- rootfs.squashfs    # rootfs of container
           `- streams
              `- v1
                 |- index.json                     # index of products
                 `- images.json                    # info with versions of products

The command lxd-image-server can be used to manage the server manually:

Usage: lxd-image-server [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...

Options:
  --verbose        Sets log level to debug
  --help           Show this message and exit.

Commands:
  init
  update
  watch

Default paths:
    - Index files: /var/www/simplestreams/streams/v1
    - Image dirs: /var/www/simplestreams/images

Logging configuration

The logging via configuration. The default configuration is defined here.

Subcommands

init

Init creates default configuration needed for the server. See Installation section for more info.

Update

Update recreates all the metadata from scratch, and recalculate the sha256 info for all the images. This option is only intended as a safeguard or in case the service is not running.

Watch

Watch will start the monitoring of the directory. It is intended to be used only if the service is not running.

How to use my new server?

How to add server as lxd remote

Once your own image server is running, you can add it as new remote on lxc:

lxc remote add <name> <url> --protocol=simplestreams

Remember add the certificate:

openssl s_client -showcerts -connect <url>:443 </dev/null 2>/dev/null | openssl x509 -outform PEM > my-lxd-image-server.cert
cp my-lxc-image-server.cert /user/local/share/ca-certificates
update-ca-certificates
systemctl restart lxd

Also, you can use https://letsencrypt.org/ and makes easier use your server.

Publish a new image

Now, any client can create a image container and publish it on the master server. [Here]9https://ubuntu.com/blog/publishing-lxd-images):

lxc launch lxc:ubuntu/bionic/amd64 n1
lxc exec n1 -- apt-get -y install vim
lxc stop n1
lxc publish --public n1 --alias=bionic-vim
lxc image copy bionic-vim <url>

Now, you can use your image in a new container

lxc launch bionic-vim ntest
lxc exec ntest -- vim -c "smile"

For more information Here.