Dan Walsh May 2017
NAME
storage.conf - Syntax of Container Storage configuration file
DESCRIPTION
The STORAGE configuration file specifies all of the available container storage options for tools using shared container storage, but in a TOML format that can be more easily modified and versioned.
FORMAT
The [TOML format][toml] is used as the encoding of the configuration file. Every option and subtable listed here is nested under a global "storage" table. No bare options are used. The format of TOML can be simplified to:
[table]
option = value
[table.subtable1]
option = value
[table.subtable2]
option = value
STORAGE TABLE
The storage table supports the following options:
driver=""
Copy On Write (COW) container storage driver. Valid drivers
are "overlay", "vfs",
"devmapper", "aufs", "btrfs",
and "zfs". Some drivers (for example,
"zfs", "btrfs", and "aufs")
may not work if your kernel lacks support for the
filesystem. This field is required to guarantee proper
operation. Valid rootless drivers are "btrfs",
"overlay", and "vfs". Rootless users
default to the driver defined in the system configuration
when possible. When the system configuration uses an
unsupported rootless driver, rootless users default to
"overlay" if available, otherwise
"vfs".
graphroot=""
container storage graph dir (default:
"/var/lib/containers/storage") Default directory
to store all writable content created by container storage
programs. The rootless graphroot path supports environment
variable substitutions (ie.
$HOME/containers/storage). When changing the
graphroot location on an SELINUX system, ensure the labeling
matches the default locations labels with the following
commands:
# semanage
fcontext -a -e /var/lib/containers/storage /NEWSTORAGEPATH
# restorecon -R -v /NEWSTORAGEPATH
In rootless mode you would set
# semanage
fcontext -a -e $HOME/.local/share/containers NEWSTORAGEPATH
$ restorecon -R -v /NEWSTORAGEPATH
rootless_storage_path="$HOME/.local/share/containers/storage"
Storage path for rootless users. By default the graphroot
for rootless users is set to
$XDG_DATA_HOME/containers/storage, if XDG_DATA_HOME
is set. Otherwise
$HOME/.local/share/containers/storage is used. This
field can be used if administrators need to change the
storage location for all users. The rootless storage path
supports environment variable substitutions (ie.
$HOME/containers/storage)
A common use case for this field is to provide a local storage directory when user home directories are NFS-mounted (podman does not support container storage over NFS).
imagestore=""
The image storage path (the default is assumed to be the
same as graphroot). Path of the imagestore, which is
different from graphroot. By default, images in the
storage library are stored in the graphroot. If
imagestore is provided, newly pulled images will be
stored in the imagestore location. All other storage
continues to be stored in the graphroot. When using
the overlay driver, images previously stored in the
graphroot remain accessible. Internally, the storage
library mounts graphroot as an
additionalImageStore to allow this behavior.
A common use case for the imagestore field is users who need to split filesystems in different partitions. The imagestore partition stores images and the graphroot partition stores container content created from the images.
Imagestore, if set, must be different from graphroot.
runroot=""
container storage run dir (default:
"/run/containers/storage") Default directory to
store all temporary writable content created by container
storage programs. The rootless runroot path supports
environment variable substitutions (ie.
$HOME/containers/storage)
driver_priority=[]
Priority list for the storage drivers that will be tested
one after the other to pick the storage driver if it is not
defined. The first storage driver in this list that can be
used, will be picked as the new one and all subsequent ones
will not be tried. If all drivers in this list are not
viable, then all known drivers will be tried and the
first working one will be picked. By default, the storage
driver is set via the driver option. If it is not
defined, then the best driver will be picked according to
the current platform. This option allows you to override
this internal priority list with a custom one to prefer
certain drivers. Setting this option only has an effect if
the local storage has not been initialized yet and the
driver name is not set.
transient_store = "false" | "true"
Transient store mode makes all container metadata be saved in temporary storage (i.e. runroot above). This is faster, but doesn’t persist across reboots. Additional garbage collection must also be performed at boot-time, so this option should remain disabled in most configurations. (default: false)
STORAGE
OPTIONS TABLE
The storage.options table supports the following
options:
additionalimagestores=[]
Paths to additional container image stores. Usually these
are read/only and stored on remote network shares.
pull_options = {enable_partial_images = "true", use_hard_links = "false", ostree_repos=""}
Allows specification of how storage is populated when pulling images. This option can speed the pulling process of images compressed with format zstd:chunked. Containers/storage looks for files within images that are being pulled from a container registry that were previously pulled to the host. It can copy or create a hard link to the existing file when it finds them, eliminating the need to pull them from the container registry. These options can deduplicate pulling of content, disk storage of content and can allow the kernel to use less memory when running containers.
containers/storage
supports four keys
* enable_partial_images="true" | "false"
Tells containers/storage to look for files previously pulled
in storage
rather then always pulling them from the container registry.
* use_hard_links = "false" | "true"
Tells containers/storage to use hard links rather then
create new files in
the image, if an identical file already existed in storage.
* ostree_repos = ""
Tells containers/storage where an ostree repository exists
that might have
previously pulled content which can be used when attempting
to avoid
pulling content from the container registry
* convert_images = "false" | "true"
If set to true, containers/storage will convert images to a
format compatible with
partial pulls in order to take advantage of local
deduplication and hardlinking. It is an
expensive operation so it is not enabled by default.
remap-uids=""
remap-gids=""
Remap-UIDs/GIDs is the mapping from UIDs/GIDs as they should
appear inside of a container, to the UIDs/GIDs outside of
the container, and the length of the range of UIDs/GIDs.
Additional mapped sets can be listed and will be heeded by
libraries, but there are limits to the number of mappings
which the kernel will allow when you later attempt to run a
container.
Example
remap-uids = "0:1668442479:65536"
remap-gids = "0:1668442479:65536"
These mappings tell the container engines to map UID 0 inside of the container to UID 1668442479 outside. UID 1 will be mapped to 1668442480. UID 2 will be mapped to 1668442481, etc, for the next 65533 UIDs in succession.
remap-user=""
remap-group=""
Remap-User/Group is a user name which can be used to look up
one or more UID/GID ranges in the /etc/subuid or /etc/subgid
file. Mappings are set up starting with an in-container ID
of 0 and then a host-level ID taken from the lowest range
that matches the specified name, and using the length of
that range. Additional ranges are then assigned, using the
ranges which specify the lowest host-level IDs first, to the
lowest not-yet-mapped in-container ID, until all of the
entries have been used for maps. This setting overrides the
Remap-UIDs/GIDs setting.
Example
remap-user = "containers"
remap-group = "containers"
root-auto-userns-user=""
Root-auto-userns-user is a user name which can be used to
look up one or more UID/GID ranges in the /etc/subuid and
/etc/subgid file. These ranges will be partitioned to
containers configured to create automatically a user
namespace. Containers configured to automatically create a
user namespace can still overlap with containers having an
explicit mapping set. This setting is ignored when running
as rootless.
auto-userns-min-size=1024
Auto-userns-min-size is the minimum size for a user
namespace created automatically.
auto-userns-max-size=65536
Auto-userns-max-size is the maximum size for a user
namespace created automatically.
disable-volatile=true
If disable-volatile is set, then the "volatile"
mount optimization is disabled for all the containers.
STORAGE
OPTIONS FOR AUFS TABLE
The storage.options.aufs table supports the following
options:
mountopt=""
Comma separated list of default options to be used to mount
container images. Suggested value "nodev". Mount
options are documented in the mount(8) man page.
STORAGE
OPTIONS FOR BTRFS TABLE
The storage.options.btrfs table supports the
following options:
min_space=""
Specifies the min space in a btrfs volume.
size=""
Maximum size of a container image. This flag can be used to
set quota on the size of container images. (format: [],
where unit = b (bytes), k (kilobytes), m (megabytes), or g
(gigabytes))
STORAGE
OPTIONS FOR THINPOOL (devicemapper) TABLE
The storage.options.thinpool table supports the
following options for the devicemapper driver:
autoextend_percent=""
Tells the thinpool driver the amount by which the thinpool
needs to be grown. This is specified in terms of % of pool
size. So a value of 20 means that when threshold is hit,
pool will be grown by 20% of existing pool size. (default:
20%)
autoextend_threshold=""
Tells the driver the thinpool extension threshold in terms
of percentage of pool size. For example, if threshold is 60,
that means when pool is 60% full, threshold has been hit.
(default: 80%)
basesize=""
Specifies the size to use when creating the base device,
which limits the size of images and containers. (default:
10g)
blocksize=""
Specifies a custom blocksize to use for the thin pool.
(default: 64k)
directlvm_device=""
Specifies a custom block storage device to use for the thin
pool. Required for using graphdriver
devicemapper.
directlvm_device_force=""
Tells driver to wipe device (directlvm_device) even if
device already has a filesystem. (default: false)
fs="xfs"
Specifies the filesystem type to use for the base device.
(default: xfs)
log_level=""
Sets the log level of devicemapper.
0:
LogLevelSuppress 0 (default)
2: LogLevelFatal
3: LogLevelErr
4: LogLevelWarn
5: LogLevelNotice
6: LogLevelInfo
7: LogLevelDebug
metadata_size=""
metadata_size is used to set the pvcreate
--metadatasize options when creating thin devices.
(Default 128k)
min_free_space=""
Specifies the min free space percent in a thin pool required
for new device creation to succeed. Valid values are from 0%
- 99%. Value 0% disables. (default: 10%)
mkfsarg=""
Specifies extra mkfs arguments to be used when creating the
base device.
mountopt=""
Comma separated list of default options to be used to mount
container images. Suggested value "nodev". Mount
options are documented in the mount(8) man page.
size=""
Maximum size of a container image. This flag can be used to
set quota on the size of container images. (format: [],
where unit = b (bytes), k (kilobytes), m (megabytes), or g
(gigabytes))
use_deferred_deletion=""
Marks thinpool device for deferred deletion. If the thinpool
is in use when the driver attempts to delete it, the driver
will attempt to delete device every 30 seconds until
successful, or when it restarts. Deferred deletion
permanently deletes the device and all data stored in the
device will be lost. (default: true).
use_deferred_removal=""
Marks devicemapper block device for deferred removal. If the
device is in use when its driver attempts to remove it, the
driver tells the kernel to remove the device as soon as
possible. Note this does not free up the disk space, use
deferred deletion to fully remove the thinpool. (default:
true).
xfs_nospace_max_retries=""
Specifies the maximum number of retries XFS should attempt
to complete IO when ENOSPC (no space) error is returned by
underlying storage device. (default: 0, which means to try
continuously.)
STORAGE
OPTIONS FOR OVERLAY TABLE
The storage.options.overlay table supports the
following options:
ignore_chown_errors
= "false"
ignore_chown_errors can be set to allow a non privileged
user running with a single UID within a user namespace to
run containers. The user can pull and use any image even
those with multiple uids. Note multiple UIDs will be
squashed down to the default uid in the container. These
images will have no separation between the users in the
container. (default: false)
inodes=""
Maximum inodes in a read/write layer. This flag can be used
to set a quota on the inodes allocated for a read/write
layer of a container.
force_mask
= "0000|shared|private"
ForceMask specifies the permissions mask that is used for
new files and directories. The values "shared" and
"private" are accepted. (default: "").
Octal permission masks are also accepted.
• |
’’: Not set All files/directories, get set with the permissions identified within the image. | ||
• |
private: it is equivalent to 0700. All files/directories get set with 0700 permissions. The owner has rwx access to the files. No other users on the system can access the files. This setting could be used with networked based home directories. | ||
• |
shared: it is equivalent to 0755. The owner has rwx access to the files and everyone else can read, access and execute them. This setting is useful for sharing containers storage with other users. For instance, a storage owned by root could be shared to rootless users as an additional store. NOTE: All files within the image are made readable and executable by any user on the system. Even /etc/shadow within your image is now readable by any user. |
OCTAL: Users can experiment with other OCTAL Permissions.
Note: The force_mask Flag is an experimental feature, it could change in the future. When "force_mask" is set the original permission mask is stored in the "user.containers.override_stat" xattr and the "mount_program" option must be specified. Mount programs like "/usr/bin/fuse-overlayfs" present the extended attribute permissions to processes within containers rather than the "force_mask" permissions.
mount_program=""
Specifies the path to a custom program to use instead of
using kernel defaults for mounting the file system. In
rootless mode, without the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability, many
kernels prevent mounting of overlay file systems, requiring
you to specify a mount_program. The mount_program option is
also required on systems where the underlying storage is
btrfs, aufs, zfs, overlay, or ecryptfs based file systems.
mount_program = "/usr/bin/fuse-overlayfs"
mountopt=""
Comma separated list of default options to be used to mount
container images. Suggested value "nodev". Mount
options are documented in the mount(8) man page.
skip_mount_home=""
Tell storage drivers to not create a PRIVATE bind mount on
their home directory.
size=""
Maximum size of a read/write layer. This flag can be used to
set quota on the size of a read/write layer of a container.
(format: [], where unit = b (bytes), k (kilobytes), m
(megabytes), or g (gigabytes))
use_composefs
= "false"
Use ComposeFS to mount the data layers image. ComposeFS
support is experimental and not recommended for production
use. (default: false)
STORAGE
OPTIONS FOR VFS TABLE
The storage.options.vfs table supports the following
options:
ignore_chown_errors
= "false"
ignore_chown_errors can be set to allow a non privileged
user running with a single UID within a user namespace to
run containers. The user can pull and use any image even
those with multiple uids. Note multiple UIDs will be
squashed down to the default uid in the container. These
images will have no separation between the users in the
container. (default: false)
STORAGE
OPTIONS FOR ZFS TABLE
The storage.options.zfs table supports the following
options:
fsname=""
File System name for the zfs driver
mountopt=""
Comma separated list of default options to be used to mount
container images. Suggested value "nodev". Mount
options are documented in the mount(8) man page.
size=""
Maximum size of a container image. This flag can be used to
set quota on the size of container images. (format: [],
where unit = b (bytes), k (kilobytes), m (megabytes), or g
(gigabytes))
SELINUX LABELING
When running on an SELinux system, if you move the containers storage graphroot directory, you must make sure the labeling is correct.
Tell SELinux about the new containers storage by setting up an equivalence record. This tells SELinux to label content under the new path, as if it was stored under /var/lib/containers/storage.
semanage
fcontext -a -e /var/lib/containers NEWSTORAGEPATH
restorecon -R -v NEWSTORAGEPATH
In rootless mode, you would set
semanage
fcontext -a -e $HOME/.local/share/containers NEWSTORAGEPATH
restorecon -R -v NEWSTORAGEPATH
The semanage command above tells SELinux to setup the default labeling of NEWSTORAGEPATH to match /var/lib/containers. The restorecon command tells SELinux to apply the labels to the actual content.
Now all new content created in these directories will automatically be created with the correct label.
QUOTAS
Container storage implements XFS project quota controls for overlay storage containers and volumes. The directory used to store the containers must be an XFS file system and be mounted with the pquota option.
Example /etc/fstab entry:
/dev/podman/podman-var /var xfs defaults,x-systemd.device-timeout=0,pquota 1 2
Container storage generates project ids for each container and builtin volume, but these project ids need to be unique for the XFS file system.
The xfs_quota tool can be used to assign a project id to the storage driver directory, e.g.:
echo
100000:/var/lib/containers/storage/overlay >>
/etc/projects
echo 200000:/var/lib/containers/storage/volumes >>
/etc/projects
echo storage:100000 >> /etc/projid
echo volumes:200000 >> /etc/projid
xfs_quota -x -c ’project -s storage volumes’
/<xfs mount point>
In the example above, the storage directory project id will be used as a "start offset" and all containers will be assigned larger project ids (e.g. >= 100000). Then the volumes directory project id will be used as a "start offset" and all volumes will be assigned larger project ids (e.g. >= 200000). This is a way to prevent xfs_quota management from conflicting with containers/storage.
FILES
Distributions often provide a /usr/share/containers/storage.conf file to define default storage configuration. Administrators can override this file by creating /etc/containers/storage.conf to specify their own configuration. Likewise rootless users can create a storage.conf file to override the system storage.conf files. Files should be stored in the $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/containers/storage.conf file. If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is not set then the file $HOME/.config/containers/storage.conf is used.
Note: The storage.conf file overrides all other storage.conf files. Container engines run by users with a storage.conf file in their home directory do not use options in the system storage.conf files.
/etc/projects - XFS persistent project root definition /etc/projid - XFS project name mapping file
SEE ALSO
semanage(8), restorecon(8), mount(8), fuse-overlayfs(1), xfs_quota(8), projects(5), projid(5)
HISTORY
May 2017, Originally compiled by Dan Walsh dwalsh [AT] redhat.com 〈 mailto:dwalsh [AT] redhat.com〉 Format copied from crio.conf man page created by Aleksa Sarai asarai [AT] suse.de 〈 mailto:asarai [AT] suse.de〉