# Frequently asked questions

## General issues

### How to enable LXD server for remote access?
By default, the LXD server is not accessible from the network as it only listens
on a local Unix socket. You can make LXD available from the network by specifying
additional addresses to listen to. This is done with the `core.https_address`
config variable.

To see the current server configuration, run:

```bash
lxc config show
```

To set the address to listen to, first find out what addresses are available and
then use the `config set` command on the server:

```bash
ip addr
lxc config set core.https_address 192.168.1.15
```

Also see {ref}`security_remote_access`.

### When I do a `lxc remote add` over https, it asks for a password?
By default, LXD has no password for security reasons, so you can't do a remote
add this way. To set a password, enter the following command on the host LXD is
running on:

```bash
lxc config set core.trust_password SECRET
```

This will set the remote password that you can then use to do `lxc remote add`.

You can also access the server without setting a password by copying the client
certificate from `.config/lxc/client.crt` to the server and adding it with:

```bash
lxc config trust add client.crt
```

See {doc}`authentication` for detailed information.

### How do I configure LXD storage?
LXD supports Btrfs, Ceph, directory, LVM and ZFS based storage.

First make sure you have the relevant tools for your file system of
choice installed on the machine (btrfs-progs, lvm2 or zfsutils-linux).

By default, LXD comes with no configured network or storage.
You can get a basic configuration done with:

```bash
    lxd init
```

`lxd init` supports both directory-based storage and ZFS.
If you want something else, you'll need to use the `lxc storage` command:

```bash
lxc storage create default BACKEND [OPTIONS...]
lxc profile device add default root disk path=/ pool=default
```

BACKEND is one of `btrfs`, `ceph`, `dir`, `lvm` or `zfs`.

Unless specified otherwise, LXD will set up loop-based storage with a sane default size.

For production environments, you should be using block-backed storage
instead, both for performance and reliability reasons.

### How can I live-migrate a container using LXD?
Live migration requires a tool installed on both hosts called
[CRIU](https://criu.org), which is available in Ubuntu via:

```bash
sudo apt install criu
```

Then, launch your container with the following:

```bash
lxc launch ubuntu SOME-NAME
sleep 5s # let the container get to an interesting state
lxc move host1:SOME-NAME host2:SOME-NAME
```

This should migrate your container. Be aware though that migration is still in
experimental stages and might not work for all workloads. Please report bugs on
lxc-devel, and we can escalate to CRIU lists as necessary.

### Can I bind-mount my home directory in a container?
Yes. This can be done using a disk device:

```bash
lxc config device add container-name home disk source=/home/${USER} path=/home/ubuntu
```

For unprivileged containers, you will also need one of:

 - Pass `shift=true` to the `lxc config device add` call. This depends on `shiftfs` being supported (see `lxc info`)
 - raw.idmap entry (see [Idmaps for user namespace](userns-idmap.md))
 - Recursive POSIX ACLs placed on your home directory

Either of those can be used to allow the user in the container to have working read/write permissions.
When not setting one of those, everything will show up as the overflow UID/GID (65536:65536)
and access to anything that's not world readable will fail.

Privileged containers do not have this issue because all UID/GID in the container are the same as outside.
But that's also the cause of most of the security issues with such privileged containers.

### How can I run Docker inside a LXD container?
To run Docker inside a LXD container, the `security.nesting` property of the container should be set to `true`.

```bash
lxc config set <container> security.nesting true
```

Note that LXD containers cannot load kernel modules, so depending on your
Docker configuration you might need to have the needed extra kernel modules
loaded by the host.

You can do so by setting a comma-separated list of kernel modules that your container needs with:

```bash
lxc config set <container> linux.kernel_modules <modules>
```

We have also received some reports that creating a `/.dockerenv` file in your
container can help Docker ignore some errors it's getting due to running in a
nested environment.

## Container startup issues

If your container is not starting, or not behaving as you would expect,
the first thing to do is to look at the console logs generated by the
container, using the `lxc console --show-log CONTAINERNAME` command.

In this example, we will investigate a RHEL 7 system in which `systemd`
cannot start.

    # lxc console --show-log systemd
    Console log:

    Failed to insert module 'autofs4'
    Failed to insert module 'unix'
    Failed to mount sysfs at /sys: Operation not permitted
    Failed to mount proc at /proc: Operation not permitted
    [!!!!!!] Failed to mount API filesystems, freezing.

The errors here say that `/sys` and `/proc` cannot be mounted - which is
correct in an unprivileged container.  However, LXD does mount these
file systems automatically _if it can_.

The [container requirements](container-environment.md) specify that
every container must come with an empty `/dev`, `/proc` and `/sys`
folder, as well as `/sbin/init` existing.  If those folders don't
exist, LXD will be unable to mount to them, and systemd will then
try to. As this is an unprivileged container, systemd does not have
the ability to do this, and it then freezes.

So you can see the environment before anything is changed, you can
explicitly change the init in a container using the `raw.lxc` configuration
parameter.  This is equivalent to setting `init=/bin/bash` on the Linux
kernel command line.

    lxc config set systemd raw.lxc 'lxc.init.cmd = /bin/bash'

Here is what it looks like:

    root@lxc-01:~# lxc config set systemd raw.lxc 'lxc.init.cmd = /bin/bash'
    root@lxc-01:~# lxc start systemd
    root@lxc-01:~# lxc console --show-log systemd

    Console log:

    [root@systemd /]#
    root@lxc-01:~#

Now that the container has started, you can check it and see that things are
not running as well as expected.

    root@lxc-01:~# lxc exec systemd bash
    [root@systemd ~]# ls
    [root@systemd ~]# mount
    mount: failed to read mtab: No such file or directory
    [root@systemd ~]# cd /
    [root@systemd /]# ls /proc/
    sys
    [root@systemd /]# exit

Because LXD tries to auto-heal, it *did* create some of the folders when it was
starting up. Shutting down and restarting the container will fix the problem, but
the original cause is still there - the **template does not contain the required
files**.

## Networking issues

In a larger [Production Environment](production-setup.md), it is common to have
multiple VLANs and have LXD clients attached directly to those VLANs. Be aware that
if you are using netplan and systemd-networkd, you will encounter some bugs that
could cause catastrophic issues.

### Do not use systemd-networkd with netplan and bridges based on VLANs

At time of writing (2019-03-05), netplan cannot assign a random MAC address to
a bridge attached to a VLAN. It always picks the same MAC address, which causes
layer2 issues when you have more than one machine on the same network segment.
It also has difficulty creating multiple bridges.  Make sure you use
`network-manager` instead. An example config is below, with a management
address of 10.61.0.25, and VLAN102 being used for client traffic.

    network:
      version: 2
      renderer: NetworkManager
      ethernets:
        eth0:
          dhcp4: no
          accept-ra: no
          # This is the 'Management Address'
          addresses: [ 10.61.0.25/24 ]
          gateway4: 10.61.0.1
          nameservers:
            addresses: [ 1.1.1.1, 8.8.8.8 ]
        eth1:
          dhcp4: no
          accept-ra: no
          # A bogus IP address is required to ensure the link state is up
          addresses: [ 10.254.254.25/32 ]

      vlans:
        vlan102:
          accept-ra: no
          dhcp4: no
          id: 102
          link: eth1

      bridges:
        br102:
          accept-ra: no
          dhcp4: no
          interfaces: [ "vlan102" ]
          # A bogus IP address is required to ensure the link state is up
          addresses: [ 10.254.102.25/32 ]
          parameters:
            stp: false

#### Things to note

* eth0 is the Management interface, with the default gateway.
* vlan102 uses eth1.
* br102 uses vlan102, and _has a bogus /32 IP address assigned to it_

The other important thing is to set `stp: false`, otherwise the bridge will sit
in `learning` state for up to 10 seconds, which is longer than most DHCP requests
last. As there is no possibility of cross-connecting and causing loops, this is
safe to do.

### Beware of port security

Many switches do *not* allow MAC address changes, and will either drop traffic
with an incorrect MAC or disable the port totally. If you can ping a LXD instance
from the host, but are not able to ping it from a _different_ host, this could be
the cause.  The way to diagnose this is to run a tcpdump on the uplink (in this case,
eth1), and you will see either "ARP Who has xx.xx.xx.xx tell yy.yy.yy.yy, with you
sending responses but them not getting acknowledged, or ICMP packets going in and
out successfully, but never being received by the other host.

### Do not run privileged containers unless necessary

A privileged container can do things that affect the entire host - for example, it
can use things in `/sys` to reset the network card, which will reset it for **the entire
host**, causing network blips. Almost everything can be run in an unprivileged container,
or - in cases of things that require unusual privileges, like wanting to mount NFS
file systems inside the container - you might need to use bind mounts.
