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  1. Cloudron Forum
  2. Feature Requests
  3. Add ability to run VM like containers in Cloudron via Sysbox

Add ability to run VM like containers in Cloudron via Sysbox

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docker
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  • LonkleL Lonkle

    @robi What does sysbox allow for beyond @mehdi's suggestion of just adjusting Cloudron itself into having the ability to be inside it's own container - which for me would allow for box code contributions to use the same development flow as my app development flow - so I'd contribute more to the project, given it is open-source.

    I don't think I'd need something like Sysbox if that's all I want it for, right?

    LonkleL Offline
    LonkleL Offline
    Lonkle
    wrote on last edited by
    #12

    Yeah, I reread this and I see sysbox of just being needless overhead when Cloudron can just be adapted as an app (to easier develop on, it the developers ever alright that). Reminds me of the whole "you can only emulate the Apple OS on Apple Hardware" thing. But it would be cool if I could alter Cloudron a little bit to give it the ability to run inside another Cloudron. The dev benefits alone, so much more speedy for box changes. At least for external contributors. I don't have a build flow for box so if we're ever able to use our normal cloudron update for it, I'll be contributing a lot more to this project with feature forks.

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    • robiR Offline
      robiR Offline
      robi
      wrote on last edited by
      #13

      Who doesn't want strongly isolated containers without having to run actual VMs?

      Nestybox empowers containers to act as virtual servers capable of running the same workloads as VMs (e.g., Systemd, Docker, Kubernetes, and even legacy apps).

      ​Currently this requires unsecure privileged containers plus complicated Docker images with tricky entrypoints and custom volume mounts.

      No more.
      Nestybox enables you to do this using:

      • Simple Docker commands
      • Simple Docker images
      • Strongly Isolated Containers
      • No Hardware Virtualization (VMs)

      Use Cases:
      Kubernetes-in-Docker

      • Running Kubernetes clusters inside containers is very useful for development, testing, and CI/CD.
      • It avoids the need for heavy and costly VMs or cloud-based clusters.
      • There exist a few tools to run Kubernetes-in-Docker. However these use complex container images and very unsecure privileged containers.
      • Nestybox fixes this, enabling you to deploy the cluster in containers using strong isolation and very simple container images that you fully control.

      Lightweight VM

      • Sysbox makes it easy to use containers as lightweight VMs. For example, a container image can include systemd, ssh, a Docker daemon, preloaded inner container images, etc. You have full root access inside the container, but no capabilities outside of it.
      • You can pack 2x as many containers as VMs on the same machine and get the same performance. And you can provision them 10x faster than VMs.

      Docker-in-Docker

      • It's often useful to run Docker inside a container for development, testing, and CI/CD.
      • Up to now, the only way to do this was to use very unsecure privileged containers or exposing the host's Docker socket into a container. Neither is ideal.
      • Nestybox removes these limitations, enabling you to run Docker inside a container with total isolation from the host.
      • You can even preload inner container images into the outer container using a Dockerfile or Docker commit.

      Legacy Apps

      • With Nestybox, legacy apps may be lift-and-shifted into containers, enabling them to operate within cloud-native frameworks without resorting to VMs. This voids the need for re-architecting such applications.

      Conscious tech

      LonkleL 1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • robiR robi

        Who doesn't want strongly isolated containers without having to run actual VMs?

        Nestybox empowers containers to act as virtual servers capable of running the same workloads as VMs (e.g., Systemd, Docker, Kubernetes, and even legacy apps).

        ​Currently this requires unsecure privileged containers plus complicated Docker images with tricky entrypoints and custom volume mounts.

        No more.
        Nestybox enables you to do this using:

        • Simple Docker commands
        • Simple Docker images
        • Strongly Isolated Containers
        • No Hardware Virtualization (VMs)

        Use Cases:
        Kubernetes-in-Docker

        • Running Kubernetes clusters inside containers is very useful for development, testing, and CI/CD.
        • It avoids the need for heavy and costly VMs or cloud-based clusters.
        • There exist a few tools to run Kubernetes-in-Docker. However these use complex container images and very unsecure privileged containers.
        • Nestybox fixes this, enabling you to deploy the cluster in containers using strong isolation and very simple container images that you fully control.

        Lightweight VM

        • Sysbox makes it easy to use containers as lightweight VMs. For example, a container image can include systemd, ssh, a Docker daemon, preloaded inner container images, etc. You have full root access inside the container, but no capabilities outside of it.
        • You can pack 2x as many containers as VMs on the same machine and get the same performance. And you can provision them 10x faster than VMs.

        Docker-in-Docker

        • It's often useful to run Docker inside a container for development, testing, and CI/CD.
        • Up to now, the only way to do this was to use very unsecure privileged containers or exposing the host's Docker socket into a container. Neither is ideal.
        • Nestybox removes these limitations, enabling you to run Docker inside a container with total isolation from the host.
        • You can even preload inner container images into the outer container using a Dockerfile or Docker commit.

        Legacy Apps

        • With Nestybox, legacy apps may be lift-and-shifted into containers, enabling them to operate within cloud-native frameworks without resorting to VMs. This voids the need for re-architecting such applications.
        LonkleL Offline
        LonkleL Offline
        Lonkle
        wrote on last edited by
        #14

        @robi Okay, I'm interested - compare the current system to this proposed system with some pros and cons?

        robiR 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • LonkleL Lonkle

          @robi Okay, I'm interested - compare the current system to this proposed system with some pros and cons?

          robiR Offline
          robiR Offline
          robi
          wrote on last edited by
          #15

          @lonk That would be great, try it out and see what breaks and where there are gaps.

          Conscious tech

          LonkleL 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • robiR robi

            @lonk That would be great, try it out and see what breaks and where there are gaps.

            LonkleL Offline
            LonkleL Offline
            Lonkle
            wrote on last edited by
            #16

            @robi No no, I'm asking, what does this give us in a practical sense and how hard would it be to implement do you think?

            robiR murgeroM 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • LonkleL Lonkle

              @robi No no, I'm asking, what does this give us in a practical sense and how hard would it be to implement do you think?

              robiR Offline
              robiR Offline
              robi
              wrote on last edited by
              #17

              @lonk maybe read the thread again? 😉

              Conscious tech

              LonkleL 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • robiR robi

                @lonk maybe read the thread again? 😉

                LonkleL Offline
                LonkleL Offline
                Lonkle
                wrote on last edited by
                #18

                @robi So the pro is you can run your own OS completely inside a Docker container?

                robiR 1 Reply Last reply
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                • LonkleL Lonkle

                  @robi So the pro is you can run your own OS completely inside a Docker container?

                  robiR Offline
                  robiR Offline
                  robi
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #19

                  @lonk yes, that was mentioned.

                  Conscious tech

                  LonkleL 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • robiR robi

                    @lonk yes, that was mentioned.

                    LonkleL Offline
                    LonkleL Offline
                    Lonkle
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #20

                    @robi So there’s more. But the developers seem against it. Can you tell why?

                    robiR 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • LonkleL Lonkle

                      @robi So there’s more. But the developers seem against it. Can you tell why?

                      robiR Offline
                      robiR Offline
                      robi
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #21

                      @lonk against it? where does it say that?

                      Conscious tech

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • LonkleL Lonkle

                        @robi No no, I'm asking, what does this give us in a practical sense and how hard would it be to implement do you think?

                        murgeroM Offline
                        murgeroM Offline
                        murgero
                        App Dev
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #22

                        @lonk said in Add ability to run VMs in containers in Cloudron via Sysbox:

                        No no, I'm asking, what does this give us in a practical sense and how hard would it be to implement do you think?

                        imho - What I can see down the road is the ability for companies to run some applications without the need to officially packaging the app. This can be useful for in-house apps that use parts of the filesystem that is normally read-only for example.

                        --
                        https://urgero.org
                        ~ Professional Nerd. Freelance Programmer. ~

                        robiR 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • murgeroM murgero

                          @lonk said in Add ability to run VMs in containers in Cloudron via Sysbox:

                          No no, I'm asking, what does this give us in a practical sense and how hard would it be to implement do you think?

                          imho - What I can see down the road is the ability for companies to run some applications without the need to officially packaging the app. This can be useful for in-house apps that use parts of the filesystem that is normally read-only for example.

                          robiR Offline
                          robiR Offline
                          robi
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #23

                          @murgero Yes, that is what is meant by the Legacy Apps point above.

                          Conscious tech

                          LonkleL 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • robiR robi

                            @murgero Yes, that is what is meant by the Legacy Apps point above.

                            LonkleL Offline
                            LonkleL Offline
                            Lonkle
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #24

                            @robi Does it accomplish this by running another layer on top of the already existing Docker layer then?

                            murgeroM 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • LonkleL Lonkle

                              @robi Does it accomplish this by running another layer on top of the already existing Docker layer then?

                              murgeroM Offline
                              murgeroM Offline
                              murgero
                              App Dev
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #25

                              @lonk I believe sysbox is a different container engine?

                              --
                              https://urgero.org
                              ~ Professional Nerd. Freelance Programmer. ~

                              LonkleL robiR 2 Replies Last reply
                              0
                              • murgeroM murgero

                                @lonk I believe sysbox is a different container engine?

                                LonkleL Offline
                                LonkleL Offline
                                Lonkle
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #26

                                @murgero said in Add ability to run VMs in containers in Cloudron via Sysbox:

                                @lonk I believe sysbox is a different container engine?

                                Oh, now that I re-look at everything. You're right, I think it's too late for a restructure now. 😅

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • murgeroM murgero

                                  @lonk I believe sysbox is a different container engine?

                                  robiR Offline
                                  robiR Offline
                                  robi
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #27

                                  @murgero No.

                                  It's simply a different container runtime.

                                  Docker remains the same, we just tell it to use sysbox vs the default runcby adding --runtime sysbox-runc to the docker command line or default config.

                                  That's it.

                                  Simple.

                                  Conscious tech

                                  murgeroM 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • robiR robi

                                    @murgero No.

                                    It's simply a different container runtime.

                                    Docker remains the same, we just tell it to use sysbox vs the default runcby adding --runtime sysbox-runc to the docker command line or default config.

                                    That's it.

                                    Simple.

                                    murgeroM Offline
                                    murgeroM Offline
                                    murgero
                                    App Dev
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #28

                                    @robi said in Add ability to run VMs in containers in Cloudron via Sysbox:

                                    container runtime.

                                    isn't that the same thing as engine? Or is docker the engine and containerd is the runtime?

                                    --
                                    https://urgero.org
                                    ~ Professional Nerd. Freelance Programmer. ~

                                    robiR 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • murgeroM murgero

                                      @robi said in Add ability to run VMs in containers in Cloudron via Sysbox:

                                      container runtime.

                                      isn't that the same thing as engine? Or is docker the engine and containerd is the runtime?

                                      robiR Offline
                                      robiR Offline
                                      robi
                                      wrote on last edited by robi
                                      #29

                                      @murgero said in Add ability to run VMs in containers in Cloudron via Sysbox:

                                      isn't that the same thing as engine? Or is docker the engine and containerd is the runtime?

                                      No.
                                      Docker Engine is a product name that uses containerd (the container daemon) which relies on runc (run container) which is a CLI tool for spawning and running containers according to the OCI specification.

                                      All have a different abstraction level.

                                      Therefore sysbox-runc is an alternate runc that is more secure and offers all of the above benefits.

                                      Docker Engine and containerd don't change, and accept a parameter to specify which runtime (runc) to use.

                                      Conscious tech

                                      LonkleL 1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • robiR robi

                                        @murgero said in Add ability to run VMs in containers in Cloudron via Sysbox:

                                        isn't that the same thing as engine? Or is docker the engine and containerd is the runtime?

                                        No.
                                        Docker Engine is a product name that uses containerd (the container daemon) which relies on runc (run container) which is a CLI tool for spawning and running containers according to the OCI specification.

                                        All have a different abstraction level.

                                        Therefore sysbox-runc is an alternate runc that is more secure and offers all of the above benefits.

                                        Docker Engine and containerd don't change, and accept a parameter to specify which runtime (runc) to use.

                                        LonkleL Offline
                                        LonkleL Offline
                                        Lonkle
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #30

                                        @robi Thanks for going so much further into detail. Why do you personally want this feature?

                                        robiR 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • LonkleL Lonkle

                                          @robi Thanks for going so much further into detail. Why do you personally want this feature?

                                          robiR Offline
                                          robiR Offline
                                          robi
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #31

                                          @lonk Let me count the ways.

                                          1. It makes Cloudron better in so many ways already described above
                                          2. It would let me have a build env in Cloudron
                                          3. It would let me have a VDI in Cloudron via Guacamole
                                          4. It would speed development
                                          5. It would let me run more non-packaged apps more easily
                                          6. It would open other opportunities we haven't even explored yet.

                                          Conscious tech

                                          LonkleL 1 Reply Last reply
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