I use full privileged containers, since this is just a mechanism to move
around higly complex installations.
In my business there is one host and one container per box, which uses up
all resources available.
What you are saying, basically, is the root-privileged containers is not
support by LXC, since a container does hijack the host's TTY.
Any confirmation of this?
I cannot believe this is impossible to solve.


On Wed, Nov 15, 2017 at 10:19 PM, Fajar A. Nugraha <l...@fajar.net> wrote:

> On Thu, Nov 16, 2017 at 10:04 AM, Saint Michael <vene...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> I did apply all suggested solutions that you found googling. None works.
>> I do not use LXD, just plain LXC.
>> lxc-start --version
>> 2.0.9
>> lsb_release -a
>> No LSB modules are available.
>> Distributor ID: Ubuntu
>> Description:    Ubuntu 16.04.3 LTS
>> Release:        16.04
>> Codename:       xenial
>>
>>
>>
> Short version: use root-owned unprivileged containers.
> If you don't know how to do that (or think it's too troublesome to
> configure with lxc), then just use LXD (which use root-owned unprivileged
> containers by default).
>
> --
> Fajar
>
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