On Fri, Dec 28, 2012 at 1:57 PM, Stéphane Graber stgra...@ubuntu.comwrote:
On 12/28/2012 01:20 PM, Marko Anastasov wrote:
On Dec 28, 2012, at 11:47 , Stéphane Graber stgra...@ubuntu.com wrote:
On 12/28/2012 10:27 AM, Marko Anastasov wrote:
Hello,
What is the best way to broadcast
On Sat, Jan 5, 2013 at 12:21 PM, Alan McDuff alan.mcd...@yahoo.com wrote:
Hello,
since Ubuntu 12.04 made it very simple to create a lxc guest, I was able
to start experimenting with lxc.
I create and run the container using:
lxc-create -t ubuntu -n guest1
lxc-start -n guest1 -d
But how
On Sat, Jan 5, 2013 at 1:03 PM, Alan McDuff alan.mcd...@yahoo.com wrote:
Great, thank you, Marko. I had read the thread, but first it didn't make
sense to me. From Stephanes last reply I found that this is all I need:
user@host:~$ host guest1 10.0.3.1
Using domain server:
Name: 10.0.3.1
If you paste the .lxc part from
http://www.stgraber.org/2012/07/17/easily-ssh-to-your-containers-and-vms-on-ubuntu-12-04-lts/
into your ~/.ssh/config and start the container, then you should be able to
ssh with ssh ubu...@guest1.lxc.
Marko
Thanks, but this doesn't look like a clean setup to
Hi everyone,
I haven't yet tried this yet but thought I'd ask first because it seems
a bit crazy, but...
Is it possible to configure a container so that it has a bridge in it ?
Reason for asking is this: I have a container that runs a desktop
environment. I want to run VirtualBox on that