Quoting Andreas Hasenack ([email protected]): > Hi, > > > > > I just tried this here now. I used 100 overlayfs clones, started them > > all, and did > > > > time sudo lxc-ls -P /mnt/lxc -f > > > > real 0m3.448s > > user 0m0.397s > > sys 0m0.594s > > > > Now maybe this has to do with the types of containers you are using. Can > > you try the following and see if you get the results I do? > > > > sudo lxc-create -t download -n c-1 -- -d ubuntu -r trusty -a amd64 > > for i in `seq 1 100`; do > > sudo lxc-clone -s -o c-1 -n clone-$i > > done > > for i in `seq 1 100`; do > > sudo lxc-start -n clone-$i -d > > done > > time sudo lxc-ls -f > > > > > Sorry for taking this long to get back to you, my mailing list filter > needed some adjusting. > > I did the steps above, and: > > # time lxc-ls --fancy > (...) > real 0m3.926s > user 0m0.531s > sys 0m0.829s > > All 100 containers are running. > > That's very acceptable. Looks like it's how the containers were created.
Can you whip up a brief script to show how, from a fresh cloud instance, you can recreate the pathological environment? -- ubuntu-server mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-server More info: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ServerTeam
