templates: remove extra line continuation Signed-off-by: Adphi <philippe.adrien.nousse@gmail.com>
7.9 KiB
d2vm (Docker to Virtual Machine)
Build virtual machine image from Docker images
The project is heavily inspired by the article and the work done by iximiuz on docker-to-linux.
Many thanks to him.
Status: alpha
Supported Environments:
Only Linux is supported.
If you want to run it on OSX or Windows (the last one is totally untested) you can do it using Docker:
alias d2vm='docker run --rm -i -t --privileged -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -v $PWD:/build -w /build linkacloud/d2vm'
Starting from v0.1.0, d2vm automatically run build and convert commands inside Docker when not running on linux.
Supported VM Linux distributions:
Working and tested:
- Ubuntu (18.04+)
- Debian (stretch+)
- Alpine
- CentOS (8+)
Unsupported:
- RHEL
The program uses the /etc/os-release
file to discover the Linux distribution and install the Kernel,
if the file is missing, the build cannot succeed.
Obviously, Distroless images are not supported.
Getting started
Clone the git repository:
git clone https://github.com/linka-cloud/d2vm && cd d2vm
Install using the Go tool chain:
go install ./cmd/d2vm
which d2vm
# Should be install in the $GOBIN directory
/go/bin/d2vm
Or use an alias to the docker image:
alias d2vm='docker run --rm -i -t --privileged -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -v $PWD:/build -w /build linkacloud/d2vm'
which d2vm
d2vm: aliased to docker run --rm -i -t --privileged -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -v $PWD:/build -w /build linkacloud/d2vm
Converting an existing Docker Image to VM image:
d2vm convert --help
Convert Docker image to vm image
Usage:
d2vm convert [docker image] [flags]
Flags:
-d, --debug Enable Debug output
-f, --force Override output qcow2 image
-h, --help help for convert
-o, --output string The output image, the extension determine the image format. Supported formats: qcow2 qed raw vdi vhd vmdk (default "disk0.qcow2")
-p, --password string The Root user password (default "root")
--pull Always pull docker image
-s, --size string The output image size (default "10G")
Create an image based on the ubuntu official image:
sudo d2vm convert ubuntu -o ubuntu.qcow2 -p MyP4Ssw0rd
INFO[0000] pulling image ubuntu
INFO[0001] inspecting image ubuntu
INFO[0002] docker image based on Ubuntu
INFO[0002] building kernel enabled image
INFO[0038] creating root file system archive
INFO[0040] creating vm image
INFO[0040] creating raw image
INFO[0040] mounting raw image
INFO[0040] creating raw image file system
INFO[0040] copying rootfs to raw image
INFO[0041] setting up rootfs
INFO[0041] installing linux kernel
INFO[0042] unmounting raw image
INFO[0042] writing MBR
INFO[0042] converting to qcow2
You can now run your ubuntu image using the created ubuntu.qcow2
image with qemu:
./qemu.sh ununtu.qcow2
SeaBIOS (version 1.13.0-1ubuntu1.1)
iPXE (http://ipxe.org) 00:03.0 CA00 PCI2.10 PnP PMM+BFF8C920+BFECC920 CA00
Booting from Hard Disk...
SYSLINUX 6.04 EDD 20191223 Copyright (C) 1994-2015 H. Peter Anvin et al
Now booting the kernel from SYSLINUX...
Loading /boot/vmlinuz... ok
Loading /boot/initrd.img...ok
[ 0.000000] Linux version 5.4.0-109-generic (buildd@ubuntu) (gcc version 9)
[ 0.000000] Command line: BOOT_IMAGE=/boot/vmlinuz ro root=UUID=b117d206-b8
[ 0.000000] KERNEL supported cpus:
[ 0.000000] Intel GenuineIntel
[ 0.000000] AMD AuthenticAMD
[ 0.000000] Hygon HygonGenuine
[ 0.000000] Centaur CentaurHauls
[ 0.000000] zhaoxin Shanghai
...
Welcome to Ubuntu 20.04.4 LTS!
[ 3.610631] systemd[1]: Set hostname to <localhost>.
[ 3.838984] systemd[1]: Created slice system-getty.slice.
[ OK ] Created slice system-getty.slice.
[ 3.845038] systemd[1]: Created slice system-modprobe.slice.
[ OK ] Created slice system-modprobe.slice.
[ 3.852054] systemd[1]: Created slice system-serial\x2dgetty.slice.
[ OK ] Created slice system-serial\x2dgetty.slice.
...
Ubuntu 20.04.4 LTS localhost ttyS0
localhost login:
Log in using the root user and the password configured at build time.
localhost login: root
Password:
Welcome to Ubuntu 20.04.4 LTS (GNU/Linux 5.4.0-109-generic x86_64)
* Documentation: https://help.ubuntu.com
* Management: https://landscape.canonical.com
* Support: https://ubuntu.com/advantage
This system has been minimized by removing packages and content that are
not required on a system that users do not log into.
To restore this content, you can run the 'unminimize' command.
The programs included with the Ubuntu system are free software;
the exact distribution terms for each program are described in the
individual files in /usr/share/doc/*/copyright.
Ubuntu comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by
applicable law.
root@localhost:~#
Type poweroff
to shut down the vm.
Building a VM Image from a Dockerfile
The example directory contains very minimalistic examples:
cd examples
ubuntu.Dockerfile :
FROM ubuntu
RUN apt update && apt install -y openssh-server && \
echo "PermitRootLogin yes" >> /etc/ssh/sshd_config \
When building the vm image, d2vm will create a root password, so there is no need to configure it now.
Build the vm image:
The build command take most of its flags and arguments from the docker build command.
d2vm build --help
Build a vm image from Dockerfile
Usage:
d2vm build [context directory] [flags]
Flags:
--build-arg stringArray Set build-time variables
-d, --debug Enable Debug output
-f, --file string Name of the Dockerfile
--force Override output image
-h, --help help for build
-o, --output string The output image, the extension determine the image format. Supported formats: qcow2 qed raw vdi vhd vmdk (default "disk0.qcow2")
-p, --password string Root user password (default "root")
-s, --size string The output image size (default "10G")
sudo d2vm build -p MyP4Ssw0rd -f ubuntu.Dockerfile -o ubuntu.qcow2 .
Or if you want to create a VirtualBox image:
sudo d2vm build -p MyP4Ssw0rd -f ubuntu.Dockerfile -o ubuntu.vdi .
Complete example
A complete example setting up a ZSH workstation is available in the examples/full directory.
Internal Dockerfile templates
You can find the Dockerfiles used to install the Kernel in the templates directory.
TODO / Questions:
- Create service from
ENTRYPOINT
CMD
WORKDIR
andENV
instructions ? - Inject Image
ENV
variables into.bashrc
or other service environment file ? - Use image layers to create rootfs instead of container ?
Acknowledgments
The run commands are adapted from linuxkit.