Re: [Lxc-users] bind (re)mount possible?

2013-10-25 Thread Ulli Horlacher
On Thu 2013-10-24 (15:11), Serge Hallyn wrote: If your kernel is new enough (check whether /proc/self/ns/mnt exists) you could lxc-attach into the container with the -e flag to keep elevated privileges, and do the remount. Ubuntu 12.04: root@vms3:~# l /proc/self/ns/mnt l: /proc/self/ns/mnt -

Re: [Lxc-users] bind (re)mount possible?

2013-10-25 Thread Serge Hallyn
Quoting Ulli Horlacher (frams...@rus.uni-stuttgart.de): On Thu 2013-10-24 (15:11), Serge Hallyn wrote: If your kernel is new enough (check whether /proc/self/ns/mnt exists) you could lxc-attach into the container with the -e flag to keep elevated privileges, and do the remount. Ubuntu

Re: [Lxc-users] bind (re)mount possible?

2013-10-25 Thread Stéphane Graber
On Fri, Oct 25, 2013 at 12:35:04AM -0500, Serge Hallyn wrote: Quoting Ulli Horlacher (frams...@rus.uni-stuttgart.de): On Thu 2013-10-24 (15:11), Serge Hallyn wrote: If your kernel is new enough (check whether /proc/self/ns/mnt exists) you could lxc-attach into the container with the -e

[Lxc-users] container affecting host - lxc-1.0.0alpha1 on ubuntu 13.10

2013-10-25 Thread Marc Paradise
Hi all, I've run into some unusual behaviors when creating/starting containers -- any help or suggestions are much appreciated. - /tmp on the *host* is overwritten any time I start a container. - shutting down a container via lxc-stop will perform a graceful shutdown of the host - lxc-console to