1---
2title: "Crash Course to LXD"
3subtitle: "Quick instructions for installing LXD and setting up your first application."
4date: 2023-09-19T14:27:00-04:00
5categories:
6 - Technology
7tags:
8 - Sysadmin
9 - Containers
10 - VMs
11 - Docker
12 - LXD
13draft: true
14toc: true
15rss_only: false
16cover: ./cover.png
17---
18
19If you're wondering _why_ I like system containers, see the previous post, _[LXD: Containers for
20Human Beings.][lxd]_
21
22[lxd]: {{< ref "lxd-containers-for-human-beings" >}}
23
24## Installation
25
26{{< adm type="note" >}}
27
28**Note:** the instructions below say to install LXD using [Snap.][snap] I
29personally dislike Snap, but LXD is a Canonical product and they're doing their
30best to promote it as much as possible. [Incus] is a fork of LXD by the primary
31creators and maintainers and one of the first things they did was [rip out Snap
32support,][rsnap] so it will eventually be installable as a proper native
33package.
34
35[snap]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snap_(software)
36[Incus]: https://github.com/lxc/incus
37[rsnap]: https://github.com/lxc/incus/compare/9579f65cd0f215ecd847e8c1cea2ebe96c56be4a...3f64077a80e028bb92b491d42037124e9734d4c7
38
39{{< /adm >}}
40
411. Install snap following [Canonical's tutorial](https://earl.run/ZvUK)
42 - LXD is natively packaged for Arch and Alpine, but configuration can be a
43 massive headache.
442. `sudo snap install lxd`
453. `lxd init`
46 - Defaults are fine for the most part; you may want to increase the size of
47 the storage pool.
484. `lxc launch images:debian/12 container-name`
495. `lxc shell container-name`
50
51## Usage
52
53As an example of how to use LXD in a real situation, we'll set up [my URL
54shortener.][earl] You'll need a VPS with LXD installed and a (sub)domain pointed
55to the VPS.
56
57Run `lxc launch images:debian/12 earl` followed by `lxc shell earl` and `apt
58install curl`. Also `apt install` a text editor, like `vim` or `nano` depending
59on what you're comfortable with. Head to the **Installation** section of [earl's
60SourceHut page][earl] and expand the **List of latest binaries**. Copy the link
61to the binary appropriate for your platform, head back to your terminal, type
62`curl -LO`, and paste the link you copied. This will download the binary to your
63system. Run `mv <filename> earl` to rename it, `chmod +x earl` to make it
64executable, then `./earl` to execute it. It will create a file called
65`config.yaml` that you need to edit before proceeding. Change the `accessToken`
66to something else and replace the `listen` value, `127.0.0.1`, with `0.0.0.0`.
67This exposes the application to the host system so we can reverse proxy it.
68
69[earl]: https://earl.run/source
70
71The next step is daemonising it so it runs as soon as the system boots. Edit the
72file located at `/etc/systemd/system/earl.service` and paste the following code
73snippet into it.
74
75```ini
76[Unit]
77Description=personal link shortener
78After=network.target
79
80[Service]
81User=root
82Group=root
83WorkingDirectory=/root/
84ExecStart=/root/earl -c config.yaml
85
86[Install]
87WantedBy=multi-user.target
88```
89
90Save, then run `systemctl daemon-reload` followed by `systemctl enable --now
91earl`. You should be able to `curl localhost:8275` and see some HTML.
92
93Now we need a reverse proxy on the host. Exit the container with `exit` or
94`Ctrl+D`, and if you have a preferred webserver, install it. If you don't have a
95preferred webserver yet, I recommend [installing Caddy.][caddy] All that's left
96is running `lxc list`, making note of the `earl` container's `IPv4` address, and
97reverse proxying it. If you're using Caddy, edit `/etc/caddy/Caddyfile` and
98replace everything that's there with the following.
99
100[caddy]: https://caddyserver.com/docs/install
101
102```text
103<(sub)domain> {
104 encode zstd gzip
105 reverse_proxy <container IP address>:1313
106}
107```
108
109Run `systemctl restart caddy` and head to whatever domain or subdomain you
110entered. You should see the home page with just the text `earl` on it. If you go
111to `/login`, you'll be able to enter whatever access token you set earlier and
112log in.
113
114## Further tips
115
116One of the things you might want to do post-installation is mess around with
117profiles. There's a `default` profile in LXD that you can show with `lxc profile
118show default`.
119
120``` text
121$ lxc profile show default
122config: {}
123description: Default LXD profile
124devices:
125 eth0:
126 name: eth0
127 network: lxdbr0
128 type: nic
129 root:
130 path: /
131 pool: default
132 type: disk
133name: default
134used_by: []
135```
136
137Not all config options are listed here though; you'll need to read [the
138documentation] for a full enumeration.
139
140[the documentation]: https://documentation.ubuntu.com/lxd/en/latest/config-options/
141
142I've seen some people say that executing a fork bomb from inside a container is
143equivalent to executing it on the host. The fork bomb will blow up the whole
144system and render every application and container you're running inoperable.
145That's partially true because LXD _by default_ doesn't put a limit on how many
146processes a particular container can spawn. You can limit that number yourself
147by running
148
149```text
150lxc profile set default limits.processes <num-processes>
151```
152
153Any container you create under the `default` profile will have a total process
154limit of `<num-processes>`. I can't tell you what a good process limit is
155though; you'll need to do some testing and experimentation on your own.
156
157As stated in [the containers section][pp] of the previous post, this doesn't
158_save_ you from fork bombs. It just helps prevent a fork bomb from affecting the
159host OS or other containers.
160
161[pp]: {{< ref "lxd-containers-for-human-beings#containers" >}}