Instance options

Instance options are configuration options that are directly related to the instance.

See Configure instance options for instructions on how to set the instance options.

The key/value configuration is namespaced. The following options are available:

Note that while a type is defined for each option, all values are stored as strings and should be exported over the REST API as strings (which makes it possible to support any extra values without breaking backward compatibility).

Miscellaneous options

In addition to the configuration options listed in the following sections, these instance options are supported:

agent.nic_config

Whether to use the name and MTU of the default network interfaces

Key: agent.nic_config
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

For containers, the name and MTU of the default network interfaces is used for the instance devices. For virtual machines, set this option to true to set the name and MTU of the default network interfaces to be the same as the instance devices.

cluster.evacuate

What to do when evacuating the instance

Key: cluster.evacuate
Type:

string

Default:

auto

Live update:

no

The cluster.evacuate provides control over how instances are handled when a cluster member is being evacuated.

Available Modes:

  • auto (default): The system will automatically decide the best evacuation method based on the instance’s type and configured devices:

    • If any device is not suitable for migration, the instance will not be migrated (only stopped).

    • Live migration will be used only for virtual machines with the migration.stateful setting enabled and for which all its devices can be migrated as well.

  • live-migrate: Instances are live-migrated to another node. This means the instance remains running and operational during the migration process, ensuring minimal disruption.

  • migrate: In this mode, instances are migrated to another node in the cluster. The migration process will not be live, meaning there will be a brief downtime for the instance during the migration.

  • stop: Instances are not migrated. Instead, they are stopped on the current node.

See Evacuate and restore cluster members for more information.

linux.kernel_modules

Kernel modules to load or allow loading

Key: linux.kernel_modules
Type:

string

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

Specify the kernel modules as a comma-separated list.

The modules are loaded before the instance starts, or they can be loaded by a privileged user if linux.kernel_modules.load is set to ondemand.

linux.kernel_modules.load

How to load kernel modules

Key: linux.kernel_modules.load
Type:

string

Default:

boot

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

This option specifies how to load the kernel modules that are specified in linux.kernel_modules. Possible values are boot (load the modules when booting the container) and ondemand (intercept the finit_modules() syscall and allow a privileged user in the container’s user namespace to load the modules).

linux.sysctl.*

Override for the corresponding sysctl setting in the container

Key: linux.sysctl.*
Type:

string

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

user.*

Free-form user key/value storage

Key: user.*
Type:

string

Live update:

no

User keys can be used in search.

environment.*

Environment variables for the instance

Key: environment.*
Type:

string

Live update:

yes (exec)

You can export key/value environment variables to the instance. These are then set for lxc exec.

cloud-init configuration

The following instance options control the cloud-init configuration of the instance:

cloud-init.network-config

Network configuration for cloud-init

Key: cloud-init.network-config
Type:

string

Default:

DHCP on eth0

Live update:

no

Condition:

If supported by image

The content is used as seed value for cloud-init.

cloud-init.user-data

User data for cloud-init

Key: cloud-init.user-data
Type:

string

Default:

#cloud-config

Live update:

no

Condition:

If supported by image

The content is used as seed value for cloud-init.

cloud-init.vendor-data

Vendor data for cloud-init

Key: cloud-init.vendor-data
Type:

string

Default:

#cloud-config

Live update:

no

Condition:

If supported by image

The content is used as seed value for cloud-init.

user.network-config

Legacy version of cloud-init.network-config

Key: user.network-config
Type:

string

Default:

DHCP on eth0

Live update:

no

Condition:

If supported by image

user.user-data

Legacy version of cloud-init.user-data

Key: user.user-data
Type:

string

Default:

#cloud-config

Live update:

no

Condition:

If supported by image

user.vendor-data

Legacy version of cloud-init.vendor-data

Key: user.vendor-data
Type:

string

Default:

#cloud-config

Live update:

no

Condition:

If supported by image

Support for these options depends on the image that is used and is not guaranteed.

If you specify both cloud-init.user-data and cloud-init.vendor-data, the content of both options is merged. Therefore, make sure that the cloud-init configuration you specify in those options does not contain the same keys.

Resource limits

The following instance options specify resource limits for the instance:

limits.cpu

Which CPUs to expose to the instance

Key: limits.cpu
Type:

string

Default:

1 (VMs)

Live update:

yes

A number or a specific range of CPUs to expose to the instance.

See CPU pinning for more information.

limits.cpu.allowance

How much of the CPU can be used

Key: limits.cpu.allowance
Type:

string

Default:

100%

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

To control how much of the CPU can be used, specify either a percentage (50%) for a soft limit or a chunk of time (25ms/100ms) for a hard limit.

See Allowance and priority (container only) for more information.

limits.cpu.nodes

Which NUMA nodes to place the instance CPUs on

Key: limits.cpu.nodes
Type:

string

Live update:

yes

A comma-separated list of NUMA node IDs or ranges to place the instance CPUs on.

See Allowance and priority (container only) for more information.

limits.cpu.pin_strategy

VM CPU auto pinning strategy

Key: limits.cpu.pin_strategy
Type:

string

Default:

none

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

Specify the strategy for VM CPU auto pinning. Possible values: none (disables CPU auto pinning) and auto (enables CPU auto pinning).

See CPU limits for virtual machines for more information.

limits.cpu.priority

CPU scheduling priority compared to other instances

Key: limits.cpu.priority
Type:

integer

Default:

10 (maximum)

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

When overcommitting resources, specify the CPU scheduling priority compared to other instances that share the same CPUs. Specify an integer between 0 and 10.

See Allowance and priority (container only) for more information.

limits.disk.priority

Priority of the instance’s I/O requests

Key: limits.disk.priority
Type:

integer

Default:

5 (medium)

Live update:

yes

Controls how much priority to give to the instance’s I/O requests when under load.

Specify an integer between 0 and 10.

limits.hugepages.1GB

Limit for the number of 1 GB huge pages

Key: limits.hugepages.1GB
Type:

string

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

Fixed value (in bytes) to limit the number of 1 GB huge pages. Various suffixes are supported (see Units for storage and network limits).

See Huge page limits for more information.

limits.hugepages.1MB

Limit for the number of 1 MB huge pages

Key: limits.hugepages.1MB
Type:

string

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

Fixed value (in bytes) to limit the number of 1 MB huge pages. Various suffixes are supported (see Units for storage and network limits).

See Huge page limits for more information.

limits.hugepages.2MB

Limit for the number of 2 MB huge pages

Key: limits.hugepages.2MB
Type:

string

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

Fixed value (in bytes) to limit the number of 2 MB huge pages. Various suffixes are supported (see Units for storage and network limits).

See Huge page limits for more information.

limits.hugepages.64KB

Limit for the number of 64 KB huge pages

Key: limits.hugepages.64KB
Type:

string

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

Fixed value (in bytes) to limit the number of 64 KB huge pages. Various suffixes are supported (see Units for storage and network limits).

See Huge page limits for more information.

limits.memory

Usage limit for the host’s memory

Key: limits.memory
Type:

string

Default:

1GiB (VMs)

Live update:

yes

Percentage of the host’s memory or a fixed value in bytes. Various suffixes are supported.

See Units for storage and network limits for details.

limits.memory.enforce

Whether the memory limit is hard or soft

Key: limits.memory.enforce
Type:

string

Default:

hard

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

If the instance’s memory limit is hard, the instance cannot exceed its limit. If it is soft, the instance can exceed its memory limit when extra host memory is available.

limits.memory.hugepages

Whether to back the instance using huge pages

Key: limits.memory.hugepages
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

If this option is set to false, regular system memory is used.

limits.memory.swap

Whether to encourage/discourage swapping less used pages for this instance

Key: limits.memory.swap
Type:

bool

Default:

true

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

limits.memory.swap.priority

Prevents the instance from being swapped to disk

Key: limits.memory.swap.priority
Type:

integer

Default:

10 (maximum)

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

Specify an integer between 0 and 10. The higher the value, the less likely the instance is to be swapped to disk.

limits.processes

Maximum number of processes that can run in the instance

Key: limits.processes
Type:

integer

Default:

empty

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

If left empty, no limit is set.

limits.kernel.*

Kernel resources per instance

Key: limits.kernel.*
Type:

string

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

You can set kernel limits on an instance, for example, you can limit the number of open files. See Kernel resource limits for more information.

CPU limits

You have different options to limit CPU usage:

It is possible to set both options at the same time to restrict both which CPUs are visible to the instance and the allowed usage of those instances. However, if you use limits.cpu.allowance with a time limit, you should avoid using limits.cpu in addition, because that puts a lot of constraints on the scheduler and might lead to less efficient allocations.

The CPU limits are implemented through a mix of the cpuset and cpu cgroup controllers.

CPU pinning

limits.cpu results in CPU pinning through the cpuset controller. You can specify either which CPUs or how many CPUs are visible and available to the instance:

  • To specify which CPUs to use, set limits.cpu to either a set of CPUs (for example, 1,2,3) or a CPU range (for example, 0-3).

    To pin to a single CPU, use the range syntax (for example, 1-1) to differentiate it from a number of CPUs.

  • If you specify a number (for example, 4) of CPUs, LXD will do dynamic load-balancing of all instances that aren’t pinned to specific CPUs, trying to spread the load on the machine. Instances are re-balanced every time an instance starts or stops, as well as whenever a CPU is added to the system.

CPU limits for virtual machines

Note

LXD supports live-updating the limits.cpu option. However, for virtual machines, this only means that the respective CPUs are hotplugged. Depending on the guest operating system, you might need to either restart the instance or complete some manual actions to bring the new CPUs online.

LXD virtual machines default to having just one vCPU allocated, which shows up as matching the host CPU vendor and type, but has a single core and no threads.

When limits.cpu is set to a single integer, LXD allocates multiple vCPUs and exposes them to the guest as full cores. Unless limits.cpu.pin_strategy is set to auto, those vCPUs are not pinned to specific cores on the host. The number of vCPUs can be updated while the VM is running.

When limits.cpu is set to a range or comma-separated list of CPU IDs (as provided by lxc info --resources), the vCPUs are pinned to those cores. In this scenario, LXD checks whether the CPU configuration lines up with a realistic hardware topology and if it does, it replicates that topology in the guest. When doing CPU pinning, it is not possible to change the configuration while the VM is running.

For example, if the pinning configuration includes eight threads, with each pair of thread coming from the same core and an even number of cores spread across two CPUs, the guest will show two CPUs, each with two cores and each core with two threads. The NUMA layout is similarly replicated and in this scenario, the guest would most likely end up with two NUMA nodes, one for each CPU socket.

In such an environment with multiple NUMA nodes, the memory is similarly divided across NUMA nodes and be pinned accordingly on the host and then exposed to the guest.

All this allows for very high performance operations in the guest as the guest scheduler can properly reason about sockets, cores and threads as well as consider NUMA topology when sharing memory or moving processes across NUMA nodes.

Allowance and priority (container only)

limits.cpu.allowance drives either the CFS scheduler quotas when passed a time constraint, or the generic CPU shares mechanism when passed a percentage value:

  • The time constraint (for example, 20ms/50ms) is a hard limit. For example, if you want to allow the container to use a maximum of one CPU, set limits.cpu.allowance to a value like 100ms/100ms. The value is relative to one CPU worth of time, so to restrict to two CPUs worth of time, use something like 100ms/50ms or 200ms/100ms.

  • When using a percentage value, the limit is a soft limit that is applied only when under load. It is used to calculate the scheduler priority for the instance, relative to any other instance that is using the same CPU or CPUs. For example, to limit the CPU usage of the container to one CPU when under load, set limits.cpu.allowance to 100%.

limits.cpu.nodes can be used to restrict the CPUs that the instance can use to a specific set of NUMA nodes. To specify which NUMA nodes to use, set limits.cpu.nodes to either a set of NUMA node IDs (for example, 0,1) or a set of NUMA node ranges (for example, 0-1,2-4).

limits.cpu.priority is another factor that is used to compute the scheduler priority score when a number of instances sharing a set of CPUs have the same percentage of CPU assigned to them.

Huge page limits

LXD allows to limit the number of huge pages available to a container through the limits.hugepage.[size] key (for example, limits.hugepages.1MB).

Architectures often expose multiple huge-page sizes. The available huge-page sizes depend on the architecture.

Setting limits for huge pages is especially useful when LXD is configured to intercept the mount syscall for the hugetlbfs file system in unprivileged containers. When LXD intercepts a hugetlbfs mount syscall, it mounts the hugetlbfs file system for a container with correct uid and gid values as mount options. This makes it possible to use huge pages from unprivileged containers. However, it is recommended to limit the number of huge pages available to the container through limits.hugepages.[size] to stop the container from being able to exhaust the huge pages available to the host.

Limiting huge pages is done through the hugetlb cgroup controller, which means that the host system must expose the hugetlb controller in the legacy or unified cgroup hierarchy for these limits to apply.

Kernel resource limits

For container instances, LXD exposes a generic namespaced key limits.kernel.* that can be used to set resource limits.

It is generic in the sense that LXD does not perform any validation on the resource that is specified following the limits.kernel.* prefix. LXD cannot know about all the possible resources that a given kernel supports. Instead, LXD simply passes down the corresponding resource key after the limits.kernel.* prefix and its value to the kernel. The kernel does the appropriate validation. This allows users to specify any supported limit on their system.

Some common limits are:

Key

Resource

Description

limits.kernel.as

RLIMIT_AS

Maximum size of the process’s virtual memory

limits.kernel.core

RLIMIT_CORE

Maximum size of the process’s core dump file

limits.kernel.cpu

RLIMIT_CPU

Limit in seconds on the amount of CPU time the process can consume

limits.kernel.data

RLIMIT_DATA

Maximum size of the process’s data segment

limits.kernel.fsize

RLIMIT_FSIZE

Maximum size of files the process may create

limits.kernel.locks

RLIMIT_LOCKS

Limit on the number of file locks that this process may establish

limits.kernel.memlock

RLIMIT_MEMLOCK

Limit on the number of bytes of memory that the process may lock in RAM

limits.kernel.nice

RLIMIT_NICE

Maximum value to which the process’s nice value can be raised

limits.kernel.nofile

RLIMIT_NOFILE

Maximum number of open files for the process

limits.kernel.nproc

RLIMIT_NPROC

Maximum number of processes that can be created for the user of the calling process

limits.kernel.rtprio

RLIMIT_RTPRIO

Maximum value on the real-time-priority that may be set for this process

limits.kernel.sigpending

RLIMIT_SIGPENDING

Maximum number of signals that may be queued for the user of the calling process

A full list of all available limits can be found in the manpages for the getrlimit(2)/setrlimit(2) system calls.

To specify a limit within the limits.kernel.* namespace, use the resource name in lowercase without the RLIMIT_ prefix. For example, RLIMIT_NOFILE should be specified as nofile.

A limit is specified as two colon-separated values that are either numeric or the word unlimited (for example, limits.kernel.nofile=1000:2000). A single value can be used as a shortcut to set both soft and hard limit to the same value (for example, limits.kernel.nofile=3000).

A resource with no explicitly configured limit will inherit its limit from the process that starts up the container. Note that this inheritance is not enforced by LXD but by the kernel.

Migration options

The following instance options control the behavior if the instance is moved from one LXD server to another:

migration.incremental.memory

Whether to use incremental memory transfer

Key: migration.incremental.memory
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

Using incremental memory transfer of the instance’s memory can reduce downtime.

migration.incremental.memory.goal

Percentage of memory to have in sync before stopping the instance

Key: migration.incremental.memory.goal
Type:

integer

Default:

70

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

migration.incremental.memory.iterations

Maximum number of transfer operations to go through before stopping the instance

Key: migration.incremental.memory.iterations
Type:

integer

Default:

10

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

migration.stateful

Whether to allow for stateful stop/start and snapshots

Key: migration.stateful
Type:

bool

Default:

false or value from profiles or instances.migration.stateful (if set)

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

Enabling this option prevents the use of some features that are incompatible with it.

NVIDIA and CUDA configuration

The following instance options specify the NVIDIA and CUDA configuration of the instance:

nvidia.driver.capabilities

What driver capabilities the instance needs

Key: nvidia.driver.capabilities
Type:

string

Default:

compute,utility

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

The specified driver capabilities are used to set libnvidia-container NVIDIA_DRIVER_CAPABILITIES.

nvidia.require.cuda

Required CUDA version

Key: nvidia.require.cuda
Type:

string

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

The specified version expression is used to set libnvidia-container NVIDIA_REQUIRE_CUDA.

nvidia.require.driver

Required driver version

Key: nvidia.require.driver
Type:

string

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

The specified version expression is used to set libnvidia-container NVIDIA_REQUIRE_DRIVER.

nvidia.runtime

Whether to pass the host NVIDIA and CUDA runtime libraries into the instance

Key: nvidia.runtime
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

Raw instance configuration overrides

The following instance options allow direct interaction with the backend features that LXD itself uses:

raw.apparmor

AppArmor profile entries

Key: raw.apparmor
Type:

blob

Live update:

yes

The specified entries are appended to the generated profile.

raw.idmap

Raw idmap configuration

Key: raw.idmap
Type:

blob

Live update:

no

Condition:

unprivileged container

For example: both 1000 1000

raw.lxc

Raw LXC configuration to be appended to the generated one

Key: raw.lxc
Type:

blob

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

raw.qemu

Raw QEMU configuration to be appended to the generated command line

Key: raw.qemu
Type:

blob

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

raw.qemu.conf

Addition/override to the generated qemu.conf file

Key: raw.qemu.conf
Type:

blob

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

See Override QEMU configuration for more information.

raw.seccomp

Raw Seccomp configuration

Key: raw.seccomp
Type:

blob

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

Important

Setting these raw.* keys might break LXD in non-obvious ways. Therefore, you should avoid setting any of these keys.

Override QEMU configuration

For VM instances, LXD configures QEMU through a configuration file that is passed to QEMU with the -readconfig command-line option. This configuration file is generated for each instance before boot. It can be found at /var/log/lxd/<instance_name>/qemu.conf.

The default configuration works fine for LXD’s most common use case: modern UEFI guests with VirtIO devices. In some situations, however, you might need to override the generated configuration. For example:

  • To run an old guest OS that doesn’t support UEFI.

  • To specify custom virtual devices when VirtIO is not supported by the guest OS.

  • To add devices that are not supported by LXD before the machines boots.

  • To remove devices that conflict with the guest OS.

To override the configuration, set the raw.qemu.conf option. It supports a format similar to qemu.conf, with some additions. Since it is a multi-line configuration option, you can use it to modify multiple sections or keys.

  • To replace a section or key in the generated configuration file, add a section with a different value.

    For example, use the following section to override the default virtio-gpu-pci GPU driver:

    raw.qemu.conf: |-
        [device "qemu_gpu"]
        driver = "qxl-vga"
    
  • To remove a section, specify a section without any keys. For example:

    raw.qemu.conf: |-
        [device "qemu_gpu"]
    
  • To remove a key, specify an empty string as the value. For example:

    raw.qemu.conf: |-
        [device "qemu_gpu"]
        driver = ""
    
  • To add a new section, specify a section name that is not present in the configuration file.

The configuration file format used by QEMU allows multiple sections with the same name. Here’s a piece of the configuration generated by LXD:

[global]
driver = "ICH9-LPC"
property = "disable_s3"
value = "1"

[global]
driver = "ICH9-LPC"
property = "disable_s4"
value = "1"

To specify which section to override, specify an index. For example:

raw.qemu.conf: |-
    [global][1]
    value = "0"

Section indexes start at 0 (which is the default value when not specified), so the above example would generate the following configuration:

[global]
driver = "ICH9-LPC"
property = "disable_s3"
value = "1"

[global]
driver = "ICH9-LPC"
property = "disable_s4"
value = "0"

Security policies

The following instance options control the About security policies of the instance:

security.agent.metrics

Whether the lxd-agent is queried for state information and metrics

Key: security.agent.metrics
Type:

bool

Default:

true

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

security.csm

Whether to use a firmware that supports UEFI-incompatible operating systems

Key: security.csm
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

When enabling this option, set security.secureboot to false.

security.devlxd

Whether /dev/lxd is present in the instance

Key: security.devlxd
Type:

bool

Default:

true

Live update:

no

See Communication between instance and host for more information.

security.devlxd.images

Controls the availability of the /1.0/images API over devlxd

Key: security.devlxd.images
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

yes

security.idmap.base

The base host ID to use for the allocation

Key: security.idmap.base
Type:

integer

Live update:

no

Condition:

unprivileged container

Setting this option overrides auto-detection.

security.idmap.isolated

Whether to use a unique idmap for this instance

Key: security.idmap.isolated
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

unprivileged container

If specified, the idmap used for this instance is unique among instances that have this option set.

security.idmap.size

The size of the idmap to use

Key: security.idmap.size
Type:

integer

Live update:

no

Condition:

unprivileged container

security.nesting

Whether to support running LXD (nested) inside the instance

Key: security.nesting
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

security.privileged

Whether to run the instance in privileged mode

Key: security.privileged
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

See Container security for more information.

security.protection.delete

Whether to prevent the instance from being deleted

Key: security.protection.delete
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

yes

security.protection.shift

Whether to protect the file system from being UID/GID shifted

Key: security.protection.shift
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

Set this option to true to prevent the instance’s file system from being UID/GID shifted on startup.

security.protection.start

Whether to prevent the instance from being started

Key: security.protection.start
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

yes

security.secureboot

Whether UEFI secure boot is enabled with the default Microsoft keys

Key: security.secureboot
Type:

bool

Default:

true

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

When disabling this option, consider enabling security.csm.

security.sev

Whether AMD SEV (Secure Encrypted Virtualization) is enabled for this VM

Key: security.sev
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

security.sev.policy.es

Whether AMD SEV-ES (SEV Encrypted State) is enabled for this VM

Key: security.sev.policy.es
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

security.sev.session.data

The guest owner’s base64-encoded session blob

Key: security.sev.session.data
Type:

string

Default:

true

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

security.sev.session.dh

The guest owner’s base64-encoded Diffie-Hellman key

Key: security.sev.session.dh
Type:

string

Default:

true

Live update:

no

Condition:

virtual machine

security.syscalls.allow

List of syscalls to allow

Key: security.syscalls.allow
Type:

string

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

A \n-separated list of syscalls to allow. This list must be mutually exclusive with security.syscalls.deny*.

security.syscalls.deny

List of syscalls to deny

Key: security.syscalls.deny
Type:

string

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

A \n-separated list of syscalls to deny. This list must be mutually exclusive with security.syscalls.allow.

security.syscalls.deny_compat

Whether to block compat_* syscalls (x86_64 only)

Key: security.syscalls.deny_compat
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

On x86_64, this option controls whether to block compat_* syscalls. On other architectures, the option is ignored.

security.syscalls.deny_default

Whether to enable the default syscall deny

Key: security.syscalls.deny_default
Type:

bool

Default:

true

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

security.syscalls.intercept.bpf

Whether to handle the bpf() system call

Key: security.syscalls.intercept.bpf
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

security.syscalls.intercept.bpf.devices

Whether to allow BPF programs

Key: security.syscalls.intercept.bpf.devices
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

This option controls whether to allow BPF programs for the devices cgroup in the unified hierarchy to be loaded.

security.syscalls.intercept.mknod

Whether to handle the mknod and mknodat system calls

Key: security.syscalls.intercept.mknod
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

These system calls allow creation of a limited subset of char/block devices.

security.syscalls.intercept.mount

Whether to handle the mount system call

Key: security.syscalls.intercept.mount
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

security.syscalls.intercept.mount.allowed

File systems that can be mounted

Key: security.syscalls.intercept.mount.allowed
Type:

string

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

Specify a comma-separated list of file systems that are safe to mount for processes inside the instance.

security.syscalls.intercept.mount.fuse

File system that should be redirected to FUSE implementation

Key: security.syscalls.intercept.mount.fuse
Type:

string

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

Specify the mounts of a given file system that should be redirected to their FUSE implementation (for example, ext4=fuse2fs).

security.syscalls.intercept.mount.shift

Whether to use idmapped mounts for syscall interception

Key: security.syscalls.intercept.mount.shift
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

yes

Condition:

container

security.syscalls.intercept.sched_setscheduler

Whether to handle the sched_setscheduler system call

Key: security.syscalls.intercept.sched_setscheduler
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

This system call allows increasing process priority.

security.syscalls.intercept.setxattr

Whether to handle the setxattr system call

Key: security.syscalls.intercept.setxattr
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

This system call allows setting a limited subset of restricted extended attributes.

security.syscalls.intercept.sysinfo

Whether to handle the sysinfo system call

Key: security.syscalls.intercept.sysinfo
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Condition:

container

This system call can be used to get cgroup-based resource usage information.

Snapshot scheduling and configuration

The following instance options control the creation and expiry of instance snapshots:

snapshots.expiry

When snapshots are to be deleted

Key: snapshots.expiry
Type:

string

Live update:

no

Specify an expression like 1M 2H 3d 4w 5m 6y.

snapshots.pattern

Template for the snapshot name

Key: snapshots.pattern
Type:

string

Default:

snap%d

Live update:

no

Specify a Pongo2 template string that represents the snapshot name. This template is used for scheduled snapshots and for unnamed snapshots.

See Automatic snapshot names for more information.

snapshots.schedule

Schedule for automatic instance snapshots

Key: snapshots.schedule
Type:

string

Default:

empty

Live update:

no

Specify either a cron expression (<minute> <hour> <dom> <month> <dow>), a comma-separated list of schedule aliases (@hourly, @daily, @midnight, @weekly, @monthly, @annually, @yearly), or leave empty to disable automatic snapshots.

snapshots.schedule.stopped

Whether to automatically snapshot stopped instances

Key: snapshots.schedule.stopped
Type:

bool

Default:

false

Live update:

no

Automatic snapshot names

The snapshots.pattern option takes a Pongo2 template string to format the snapshot name.

To add a time stamp to the snapshot name, use the Pongo2 context variable creation_date. Make sure to format the date in your template string to avoid forbidden characters in the snapshot name. For example, set snapshots.pattern to {{ creation_date|date:'2006-01-02_15-04-05' }} to name the snapshots after their time of creation, down to the precision of a second.

Another way to avoid name collisions is to use the placeholder %d in the pattern. For the first snapshot, the placeholder is replaced with 0. For subsequent snapshots, the existing snapshot names are taken into account to find the highest number at the placeholder’s position. This number is then incremented by one for the new name.

Volatile internal data

The following volatile keys are currently used internally by LXD to store internal data specific to an instance:

Important

Setting these volatile.* keys might break LXD in non-obvious ways. Therefore, you should avoid setting any of these keys.

volatile.<name>.apply_quota

Disk quota

Key: volatile.<name>.apply_quota
Type:

string

The disk quota is applied the next time the instance starts.

volatile.<name>.ceph_rbd

RBD device path for Ceph disk devices

Key: volatile.<name>.ceph_rbd
Type:

string

volatile.<name>.host_name

Network device name on the host

Key: volatile.<name>.host_name
Type:

string

volatile.<name>.hwaddr

Network device MAC address

Key: volatile.<name>.hwaddr
Type:

string

The network device MAC address is used when no hwaddr property is set on the device itself.

volatile.<name>.last_state.created

Whether the network device physical device was created

Key: volatile.<name>.last_state.created
Type:

string

Possible values are true or false.

volatile.<name>.last_state.hwaddr

Network device original MAC

Key: volatile.<name>.last_state.hwaddr
Type:

string

The original MAC that was used when moving a physical device into an instance.

volatile.<name>.last_state.mtu

Network device original MTU

Key: volatile.<name>.last_state.mtu
Type:

string

The original MTU that was used when moving a physical device into an instance.

volatile.<name>.last_state.vdpa.name

VDPA device name

Key: volatile.<name>.last_state.vdpa.name
Type:

string

The VDPA device name used when moving a VDPA device file descriptor into an instance.

volatile.<name>.last_state.vf.hwaddr

SR-IOV virtual function original MAC

Key: volatile.<name>.last_state.vf.hwaddr
Type:

string

The original MAC used when moving a VF into an instance.

volatile.<name>.last_state.vf.id

SR-IOV virtual function ID

Key: volatile.<name>.last_state.vf.id
Type:

string

The ID used when moving a VF into an instance.

volatile.<name>.last_state.vf.spoofcheck

SR-IOV virtual function original spoof check setting

Key: volatile.<name>.last_state.vf.spoofcheck
Type:

string

The original spoof check setting used when moving a VF into an instance.

volatile.<name>.last_state.vf.vlan

SR-IOV virtual function original VLAN

Key: volatile.<name>.last_state.vf.vlan
Type:

string

The original VLAN used when moving a VF into an instance.

volatile.apply_nvram

Whether to regenerate VM NVRAM the next time the instance starts

Key: volatile.apply_nvram
Type:

bool

volatile.apply_template

Template hook

Key: volatile.apply_template
Type:

string

The template with the given name is triggered upon next startup.

volatile.base_image

Hash of the base image

Key: volatile.base_image
Type:

string

The hash of the image that the instance was created from (empty if the instance was not created from an image).

volatile.cloud-init.instance-id

instance-id (UUID) exposed to cloud-init

Key: volatile.cloud-init.instance-id
Type:

string

volatile.evacuate.origin

The origin of the evacuated instance

Key: volatile.evacuate.origin
Type:

string

The cluster member that the instance lived on before evacuation.

volatile.idmap.base

The first ID in the instance’s primary idmap range

Key: volatile.idmap.base
Type:

integer

volatile.idmap.current

The idmap currently in use by the instance

Key: volatile.idmap.current
Type:

string

volatile.idmap.next

The idmap to use the next time the instance starts

Key: volatile.idmap.next
Type:

string

volatile.last_state.idmap

Serialized instance UID/GID map

Key: volatile.last_state.idmap
Type:

string

volatile.last_state.power

Instance state as of last host shutdown

Key: volatile.last_state.power
Type:

string

volatile.uuid

Instance UUID

Key: volatile.uuid
Type:

string

The instance UUID is globally unique across all servers and projects.

volatile.uuid.generation

Instance generation UUID

Key: volatile.uuid.generation
Type:

string

The instance generation UUID changes whenever the instance’s place in time moves backwards. It is globally unique across all servers and projects.

volatile.vsock_id

Instance vsock ID used as of last start

Key: volatile.vsock_id
Type:

string

Note

Volatile keys cannot be set by the user.