mikenye / s6-overlay

s6 overlay for containers (includes execline, s6-linux-utils & a custom init)

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s6 overlay Build Status

s6-overlay is an easy-to-install (just extract a tarball or two!) set of scripts and utilities allowing you to use existing Docker images while using s6 as a pid 1 for your container and process supervisor for your services.

Quickstart

Build the following Dockerfile and try it out:

# Use your favorite image
FROM ubuntu
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y nginx xz-utils
RUN echo "daemon off;" >> /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
CMD ["/usr/sbin/nginx"]

ADD https://github.com/just-containers/s6-overlay/releases/download/v3.0.0.0/s6-overlay-noarch-3.0.0.0.tar.xz /tmp
RUN tar -C / -Jxpf /tmp/s6-overlay-noarch-3.0.0.0.tar.xz
ADD https://github.com/just-containers/s6-overlay/releases/download/v3.0.0.0/s6-overlay-x86_64-3.0.0.0.tar.xz /tmp
RUN tar -C / -Jxpf /tmp/s6-overlay-x86_64-3.0.0.0.tar.xz
ENTRYPOINT ["/init"]
docker-host $ docker build -t demo .
docker-host $ docker run --name s6demo -d -p 80:80 demo
docker-host $ docker top s6demo acxf
PID                 TTY                 STAT                TIME                COMMAND
11735               ?                   Ss                  0:00                \_ s6-svscan
11772               ?                   S                   0:00                \_ s6-supervise
11773               ?                   Ss                  0:00                | \_ s6-linux-init-s
11771               ?                   Ss                  0:00                \_ rc.init
11812               ?                   S                   0:00                | \_ nginx
11814               ?                   S                   0:00                | \_ nginx
11816               ?                   S                   0:00                | \_ nginx
11813               ?                   S                   0:00                | \_ nginx
11815               ?                   S                   0:00                | \_ nginx
11779               ?                   S                   0:00                \_ s6-supervise
11785               ?                   Ss                  0:00                | \_ s6-ipcserverd
11778               ?                   S                   0:00                \_ s6-supervise
docker-host $ curl --head http://127.0.0.1/
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Server: nginx/1.18.0 (Ubuntu)
Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2022 13:33:58 GMT
Content-Type: text/html
Content-Length: 612
Last-Modified: Mon, 17 Jan 2022 13:32:11 GMT
Connection: keep-alive
ETag: "61e56fdb-264"
Accept-Ranges: bytes

Goals

The project has the following goals:

  • Be usable on top of any Docker image
  • Make it easy to create new images, that will operate like any other images
  • Provide users with a turnkey s6 installation that will give them a stable pid 1, a fast and orderly init sequence and shutdown sequence, and the power of process supervision and automatically rotated logs.

Features

  • A simple init process which allows the end-user to execute tasks like initialization (cont-init.d), finalization (cont-finish.d) and their own services with dependencies between them
  • The s6-overlay provides proper PID 1 functionality
    • You'll never have zombie processes hanging around in your container, they will be properly cleaned up.
  • Multiple processes in a single container
  • Able to operate in "The Docker Way"
  • Usable with all base images - Ubuntu, CentOS, Fedora, Alpine, Busybox...
  • Distributed as a small number of .tar.xz files depending on what exact functionality you need - to keep your image's number of layers small.
  • A whole set of utilities included in s6 and s6-portable-utils. They include handy and composable utilities which make our lives much, much easier.
  • Log rotating out-of-the-box through logutil-service which uses s6-log under the hood.
  • Some support for Docker's USER directive, to run your whole process tree as a specific user. Not compatible with all features, details in the notes section.

The Docker Way?

One of the oft-repeated Docker mantras is "one process per container", but we disagree. There's nothing inherently bad about running multiple processes in a container. The more abstract "one thing per container" is our policy - a container should do one thing, such as "run a chat service" or "run gitlab." This may involve multiple processes, which is fine.

The other reason image authors shy away from process supervisors is they believe a process supervisor must restart failed services, meaning the Docker container will never die.

This does effectively break the Docker ecosystem - most images run one process that will exit when there's an error. By exiting on error, you allow the system administrator to handle failures however they prefer. If your image will never exit, you now need some alternative method of error recovery and failure notification.

Our policy is that if "the thing" fails, then the container should fail, too. We do this by determining which processes can restart, and which should bring down the container. For example, if cron or syslog fails, your container can most likely restart it without any ill effects, but if ejabberd fails, the container should exit so the system administrator can take action.

Our interpretation of "The Docker Way" is thus:

  • Containers should do one thing
  • Containers should stop when that thing stops

and our init system is designed to do exactly that. Your images will behave like other Docker images and fit in with the existing ecosystem of images.

See "Writing an optional finish script" under the Usage section for details on stopping "the thing."

Init stages

Our overlay init is a properly customized one to run appropriately in containerized environments. This section briefly explains how stages work but if you want to know how a complete init system should work, you can read this article: How to run s6-svscan as process 1

  1. stage 1: Its purpose is to set up the image to execute the supervision tree which will handle all the auxiliary services, and to launch stage 2. Stage 1 is where all the black magic happens, all the container setup details that we handle for you so that you don't have to care about them.
  2. stage 2: This is where most of the end-user provided files are meant to be executed:
    1. Execute legacy oneshot user scripts contained in /etc/cont-init.d.
    2. Run user s6-rc services declared in /etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d, following dependencies
    3. Copy legacy longrun user services (/etc/services.d) to a temporary directory and have s6 start (and supervise) them.
  3. stage 3: This is the shutdown stage. When the container is supposed to exit, it will:
    1. Send a TERM signal to all legacy longrun services and, if required, wait for them to exit.
    2. Bring down user s6-rc services in an orderly fashion.
    3. Run any finalization scripts contained in /etc/cont-finish.d.
    4. Send all remaining processes a TERM signal. There should not be any remaining processes anyway.
    5. Sleep for a small grace time, to allow stray processes to exit cleanly.
    6. Send all processes a KILL signal. Then the container exits.

Installation

s6-overlay comes as a set of tarballs that you can extract onto your image. The tarballs you need are a function of the image you use; most people will need the first two, and the other ones are extras you can use at your convenience.

Note that this documentation may not be quite up-to-date and you may need to replace 3.0.0.0 with the latest version of s6-overlay. :-)

  1. s6-overlay-noarch-3.0.0.0.tar.xz: this tarball contains the scripts implementing the overlay. We call it "noarch" because it is architecture- independent: it only contains scripts and other text files. Everyone who wants to run s6-overlay needs to extract this tarball.
  2. s6-overlay-x86_64-3.0.0.0.tar.xz: replace x86_64 with your system's architecture. This tarball contains all the necessary binaries from the s6 ecosystem, all linked statically and out of the way of your image's binaries. Unless you know for sure that your image already comes with all the packages providing the binaries used in the overlay, you need to extract this tarball.
  3. s6-overlay-symlinks-noarch-3.0.0.0.tar.xz: this tarball contains symlinks to the s6-overlay scripts so they are accessible via /usr/bin. It is normally not needed, all the scripts are accessible via the PATH environment variable, but if you have old user scripts containing shebangs such as #!/usr/bin/with-contenv, installing these symlinks will make them work.
  4. s6-overlay-symlinks-arch-3.0.0.0.tar.xz: this tarball contains symlinks to the binaries from the s6 ecosystem provided by the second tarball, to make them accessible via /usr/bin. It is normally not needed, but if you have old user scripts containing shebangs such as #!/usr/bin/execlineb, installing these symlinks will make them work.
  5. syslogd-overlay-noarch-3.0.0.0.tar.xz: this tarball contains definitions for a syslogd service. If you are running daemons that cannot log to stderr to take advantage of the s6 logging infrastructure, but hardcode the use of the old syslog() mechanism, you can extract this tarball, and your container will run a lightweight emulation of a syslogd daemon, so your syslog logs will be caught and stored to disk.

To install those tarballs, add lines to your Dockerfile that correspond to the functionality you want to install. For instance, most people would use the following:

ADD https://github.com/just-containers/s6-overlay/releases/download/v3.0.0.0/s6-overlay-noarch-3.0.0.0.tar.xz /tmp
RUN tar -C / -Jxpf /tmp/s6-overlay-noarch-3.0.0.0.tar.xz
ADD https://github.com/just-containers/s6-overlay/releases/download/v3.0.0.0/s6-overlay-x86_64-3.0.0.0.tar.xz /tmp
RUN tar -C / -Jxpf /tmp/s6-overlay-x86_64-3.0.0.0.tar.xz

Usage

The project is distributed as a set of standard .tar.xz files, which you extract at the root of your image. Afterwards, set your ENTRYPOINT to /init.

Right now, we recommend using Docker's ADD directive instead of running wget or curl in a RUN directive - Docker is able to handle the https URL when you use ADD, whereas your base image might not be able to use https, or might not even have wget or curl installed at all.

From there, you have a couple of options:

  • If you want the container to exit when your program exits: run the program as your image's CMD.
  • If you want the container to run until told to exit, and your program to be supervised by s6: write a service script for your program.

Using CMD

Using CMD is a convenient way to take advantage of the overlay. Your CMD can be given at build time in the Dockerfile, or at run time on the command line, either way is fine. It will be run as a normal process in the environment set up by s6; when it fails or exits, the container will shut down cleanly and exit. You can run interactive programs in this manner: only the CMD will receive your interactive command, the support processes will be unimpacted.

For example:

FROM busybox
ADD https://github.com/just-containers/s6-overlay/releases/download/v3.0.0.0/s6-overlay-noarch-3.0.0.0.tar.xz /tmp
RUN tar -C / -Jxpf /tmp/s6-overlay-noarch-3.0.0.0.tar.xz
ADD https://github.com/just-containers/s6-overlay/releases/download/v3.0.0.0/s6-overlay-x86_64-3.0.0.0.tar.xz /tmp
RUN tar -C / -Jxpf /tmp/s6-overlay-x86_64-3.0.0.0.tar.xz
ENTRYPOINT ["/init"]
docker-host $ docker build -t s6demo .
docker-host $ docker run -ti s6demo /bin/sh
/package/admin/s6-overlay/libexec/preinit: notice: /var/run is not a symlink to /run, fixing it
s6-rc: info: service s6rc-oneshot-runner: starting
s6-rc: info: service s6rc-oneshot-runner successfully started
s6-rc: info: service fix-attrs: starting
s6-rc: info: service fix-attrs successfully started
s6-rc: info: service legacy-cont-init: starting
s6-rc: info: service legacy-cont-init successfully started
s6-rc: info: service legacy-services: starting
s6-rc: info: service legacy-services successfully started
/ # ps
PID   USER     TIME  COMMAND
    1 root      0:00 /package/admin/s6/command/s6-svscan -d4 -- /run/service
   17 root      0:00 {rc.init} /bin/sh -e /run/s6/basedir/scripts/rc.init top /bin/sh
   18 root      0:00 s6-supervise s6-linux-init-shutdownd
   20 root      0:00 /package/admin/s6-linux-init/command/s6-linux-init-shutdownd -c /run/s6/basedir -g 3000 -C -B
   24 root      0:00 s6-supervise s6rc-fdholder
   25 root      0:00 s6-supervise s6rc-oneshot-runner
   31 root      0:00 /package/admin/s6/command/s6-ipcserverd -1 -- /package/admin/s6/command/s6-ipcserver-access -v0 -E -l0 -i data/rules -- /packa
   58 root      0:00 /bin/sh
   66 root      0:00 ps
/ # exit
s6-rc: info: service legacy-services: stopping
s6-rc: info: service legacy-services successfully stopped
s6-rc: info: service legacy-cont-init: stopping
s6-rc: info: service legacy-cont-init successfully stopped
s6-rc: info: service fix-attrs: stopping
s6-rc: info: service fix-attrs successfully stopped
s6-rc: info: service s6rc-oneshot-runner: stopping
s6-rc: info: service s6rc-oneshot-runner successfully stopped
docker-host $

Writing a service script

The other way to use a container with s6-overlay is to make your services supervised. You can supervise any number of services; usually they're just support services for the main daemon you run as a CMD, but if that's what you want, nothing prevents you from having an empty CMD and running your main daemon as a supervised service as well. In that case, the daemon will be restarted by s6 whenever it exits; the container will only stop when you tell it to do so, either via a docker stop command, or from inside the container with the /run/s6/basedir/bin/halt command.

There are two ways of making a supervised service. The old way, which is still supported, is to make a "pure s6" service directory. Create a directory with the name of your service in /etc/services.d and put an executable run file into it; this is the file in which you'll put your long-lived process execution. For details of supervision of service directories, and how you can configure how s6 handles your daemon, you can take a look at the servicedir documentation. A simple example would look like this:

/etc/services.d/myapp/run:

#!/command/execlineb -P
nginx -g "daemon off;"

The new way is to make an s6-rc source definition directory in the /etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d directory, and add the name of that directory to the user bundle, i.e. create an empty file with the same name in the /etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/user/contents.d directory. The format of a source definition directory is described in this page. Note that you can define longruns, i.e. daemons that will get supervised by s6 just like with the /etc/services.d method, but also oneshots, i.e. programs that will run once and exit. Your main service is probably a longrun, not a oneshot: you probably need a daemon to stick around.

The advantage of this new format is that it allows you to define dependencies between services: if B depends on A, then A will start first, then B will start when A is ready, and when the container is told to exit, B will stop first, then A. If you have a complex architecture where various processes depends on one another, or simply where you have to mix oneshots and longruns in a precise order, this may be for you.

The example above could be rewritten this way:

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/myapp/type:

longrun

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/myapp/run:

#!/command/execlineb -P
nginx -g "daemon off;"

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/user/contents.d/myapp: empty file

We encourage you to switch to the new format, but if you don't need its benefits, you can stick with regular service directories in /etc/services.d, it will work just as well.

Fixing ownership and permissions

This section describes a functionality from the versions of s6-overlay that are anterior to 3.0.0.0. fix-attrs is still supported in 3.0.0.0, but is deprecated, for several reasons: one of them is that it's generally not good policy to change ownership dynamically when it can be done statically. Another reason is that it doesn't work with USER containers. Instead of fix-attrs, we now recommend you to take care of ownership and permissions on host mounts offline, before running the container. This should be done in your Dockerfile, when you have all the needed information.

That said, here is what we wrote for previous versions and that is still applicable today (but please stop depending on it):

Sometimes it's interesting to fix ownership & permissions before proceeding because, for example, you have mounted/mapped a host folder inside your container. Our overlay provides a way to tackle this issue using files in /etc/fix-attrs.d. This is the pattern format followed by fix-attrs files:

path recurse account fmode dmode
  • path: File or dir path.
  • recurse: (Set to true or false) If a folder is found, recurse through all containing files & folders in it.
  • account: Target account. It's possible to default to fallback uid:gid if the account isn't found. For example, nobody,32768:32768 would try to use the nobody account first, then fallback to uid 32768 instead. If, for instance, daemon account is UID=2 and GID=2, these are the possible values for account field:
    • daemon: UID=2 GID=2
    • daemon,3:4: UID=2 GID=2
    • 2:2,3:4: UID=2 GID=2
    • daemon:11111,3:4: UID=2 GID=11111
    • 11111:daemon,3:4: UID=11111 GID=2
    • daemon:daemon,3:4: UID=2 GID=2
    • daemon:unexisting,3:4: UID=2 GID=4
    • unexisting:daemon,3:4: UID=3 GID=2
    • 11111:11111,3:4: UID=11111 GID=11111
  • fmode: Target file mode. For example, 0644.
  • dmode: Target dir/folder mode. For example, 0755.

Here you have some working examples:

/etc/fix-attrs.d/01-mysql-data-dir:

/var/lib/mysql true mysql 0600 0700

/etc/fix-attrs.d/02-mysql-log-dirs:

/var/log/mysql-error-logs true nobody,32768:32768 0644 2700
/var/log/mysql-general-logs true nobody,32768:32768 0644 2700
/var/log/mysql-slow-query-logs true nobody,32768:32768 0644 2700

Executing initialization and finalization tasks

Here is the old way of doing it:

After fixing attributes (through /etc/fix-attrs.d/) and before starting user provided services (through s6-rc or /etc/services.d) our overlay will execute all the scripts found in /etc/cont-init.d, for example:

/etc/cont-init.d/02-confd-onetime:

#!/command/execlineb -P

with-contenv
s6-envuidgid nginx
multisubstitute
{
  import -u -D0 UID
  import -u -D0 GID
  import -u CONFD_PREFIX
  define CONFD_CHECK_CMD "/usr/sbin/nginx -t -c {{ .src }}"
}
confd --onetime --prefix="${CONFD_PREFIX}" --tmpl-uid="${UID}" --tmpl-gid="${GID}" --tmpl-src="/etc/nginx/nginx.conf.tmpl" --tmpl-dest="/etc/nginx/nginx.conf" --tmpl-check-cmd="${CONFD_CHECK_CMD}" etcd

This way is still supported. However, there is now a more generic and efficient way to do it: writing your oneshot initialization and finalization tasks as s6-rc services, by adding service definition directories in /etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d and making them part of the user bundle. All the information on s6-rc can be found here.

When the container is started, the operations are performed in this order:

  • (deprecated) Attribute fixing is performed according to files in /etc/fix-attrs.d.
  • (legacy) One-shot initialization scripts in /etc/cont-init.d are run sequentially.
  • Services in the user bundle are started by s6-rc, in an order defined by dependencies. Services can be oneshots (initialization tasks) or longruns (daemons that will run throughout the container's lifetime).
  • (legacy) Longrun services in /etc/services.d are started.

When the container is stopped, either because the admin sent a stop command or because the CMD exited, the operations are performed in the reverse order:

  • (legacy) Longrun services in /etc/services.d are stopped.
  • All s6-rc services are stopped, in an order defined by dependencies. For oneshots, that means that the down script in the source definition directory is executed; that's how s6-rc can perform finalization tasks.
  • (legacy) One shot finalization scripts in /etc/cont-finish.d are run sequentially.

Writing an optional finish script

By default, services created in /etc/services.d will automatically restart. If a service should bring the container down, you should probably run it as a CMD instead; but if you'd rather run it as a supervised service, then you'll need to write a finish script, which will be run when the service is down; to make the container stop, the /run/s6/basedir/bin/halt command must be invoked. Here's an example finish script:

/etc/services.d/myapp/finish:

#!/command/execlineb -S0

foreground { redirfd -w 1 /run/s6-linux-init-container-results/exitcode echo 0 }
/run/s6/basedir/bin/halt

The first line of the script writes 0 to the /run/s6-linux-init-container-results/exitcode file. The second line stops the container. When you stop the container via the /run/s6/basedir/bin/halt command run from inside the container, /run/s6-linux-init-container-results/exitcode is read and its contents are used as the exit code for the docker run command that launched the container. If the file doesn't exist, or if the container is stopped with docker stop or another reason, that exit code defaults to 0.

It is possible to do more advanced operations in a finish script. For example, here's a script from that only brings down the service when it exits nonzero:

/etc/services.d/myapp/finish:

#!/command/execlineb -S1
if { s6-test ${1} -ne 0 -a ${1} -ne 256 }
/run/s6/basedir/bin/halt

Note that in general, finish scripts should only be used for local cleanups after a daemon dies. If a service is so important that the container needs to stop when it dies, we really recommend runnning it as the CMD.

Logging

Every service can have its dedicated logger. A logger is a s6 service that automatically reads from the stdout of your service, and logs the data to an automatically rotated file in the place you want. Note that daemons usually log to stderr, not stdout, so you should probably start your service's run script with exec 2>&1 in shell, or with fdmove -c 2 1 in execline, in order to catch stderr.

s6-overlay provides a utility called logutil-service which is a wrapper over the s6-log program. This helper does the following:

  • read how s6-log should proceed reading the logging script contained in S6_LOGGING_SCRIPT
  • drop privileges to the nobody user (defaulting to 65534:65534 if it doesn't exist)
  • clean all the environments variables
  • execute into s6-log.

s6-log will then run forever, reading data from your service and writing it to the directory you specified to logutil-service.

Please note:

  • Since the privileges are dropped automatically, there is no need to switch users with s6-setuidgid
  • You should ensure the log folder either:
    • exists, and is writable by the nobody user
    • does not exist, but the parent folder is writable by the nobody user.

You can create log folders in cont-init.d scripts, or as s6-rc oneshots. Here is an example of a logged service myapp implemented the old way:

/etc/cont-init.d/myapp-log-prepare:

#!/bin/sh -e
mkdir -p /var/log/myapp
chown nobody:nogroup /var/log/myapp
chmod 02755 /var/log/myapp

/etc/services.d/myapp/run:

#!/bin/sh
exec 2>&1
exec mydaemon-in-the-foreground-and-logging-to-stderr

/etc/services.d/myapp/log/run:

#!/bin/sh
exec logutil-service /var/log/myapp

And here is the same service, myapp, implemented in s6-rc.

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/myapp-log-prepare/type:

oneshot

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/myapp-log-prepare/up:

if { mkdir -p /var/log/myapp }
if { chown nobody:nogroup /var/log/myapp }
chmod 02755 /var/log/myapp

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/myapp/type:

longrun

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/myapp/run:

#!/bin/sh
exec 2>&1
exec mydaemon-in-the-foreground-and-logging-to-stderr

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/myapp/producer-for:

myapp-log

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/myapp-log/type:

oneshot

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/myapp-log/run:

#!/bin/sh
exec logutil-service /var/log/myapp

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/myapp-log/consumer-for:

myapp

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/myapp-log/dependencies:

myapp-log-prepare

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/myapp-log/pipeline-name:

myapp-pipeline

/etc/s6-overlay/s6-rc.d/user/contents.d/myapp-pipeline: empty file

That's a lot of files! A summary of what it all means is:

  • myapp-log-prepare is a oneshot, preparing the logging directory. It is a dependency of myapp-log, so it will be started before myapp-log.
  • myapp is a producer for myapp-log and myapp-log is a consumer for myapp, so what myapp writes to its stdout will go to myapp-log's stdin. Both are longruns, i.e. daemons that will be supervised by s6.
  • The myapp | myapp-log pipeline is given a name, myapp-pipeline, and this name is declared as a part of the user bundle, so it will be started when the container starts.

It really accomplishes the same things as the /etc/cont-init.d plus /etc/services.d method, but it's a lot cleaner underneath, and can handle much more complex dependency graphs, so whenever you get the opportunity, we recommend you familiarize yourself with the s6-rc way of declaring your services and your loggers.

Dropping privileges

When it comes to executing a service, no matter whether it's a service or a logger, a good practice is to drop privileges before executing it. s6 already includes utilities to do exactly these kind of things:

In execline:

#!/command/execlineb -P
s6-setuidgid daemon
myservice

In sh:

#!/bin/sh
exec s6-setuidgid daemon myservice

If you want to know more about these utilities, please take a look at: s6-setuidgid, s6-envuidgid, and s6-applyuidgid.

Container environment

If you want your custom script to have container environments available: you can use the with-contenv helper, which will push all of those into your execution environment, for example:

/etc/cont-init.d/01-contenv-example:

#!/usr/bin/with-contenv sh
env

This script will output the contents of your container environment.

Read-Only Root Filesystem

Recent versions of Docker allow running containers with a read-only root filesystem. If your container is in such a case, you should set S6_READ_ONLY_ROOT=1 to inform s6-overlay that it should not attempt to write to certain areas - instead, it will perform copies into a tmpfs mounted on /run.

Note that s6-overlay assumes that:

  • /run exists and is writable. If it is not, it will attempt to mount a tmpfs there.
  • /var/run is a symbolic link to /run, for compatibility with previous versions. If it is not, it will make it so.

In general your default docker settings should already provide a suitable tmpfs in /run.

Customizing s6 behaviour

It is possible somehow to tweak s6 behaviour by providing an already predefined set of environment variables to the execution context:

  • S6_KEEP_ENV (default = 0): if set, then environment is not reset and whole supervision tree sees original set of env vars. It switches with-contenv into noop.
  • S6_LOGGING (default = 0):
    • 0: Outputs everything to stdout/stderr.
    • 1: Uses an internal catch-all logger and persists everything on it, it is located in /var/log/s6-uncaught-logs. Anything run as a CMD is still output to stdout/stderr.
    • 2: Uses an internal catch-all logger and persists everything on it, including the output of CMD. Absolutely nothing is written to stdout/stderr.
  • S6_CATCHALL_USER (default = root): if set, and if S6_LOGGING is 1 or 2, then the catch-all logger is run as this user, which must be defined in your image's /etc/passwd. Every bit of privilege separation helps a little with security.
  • S6_BEHAVIOUR_IF_STAGE2_FAILS (default = 0):
    • 0: Continue silently even if any script (fix-attrs or cont-init) has failed.
    • 1: Continue but warn with an annoying error message.
    • 2: Stop by sending a termination signal to the supervision tree.
  • S6_KILL_FINISH_MAXTIME (default = 5000): The maximum time (in milliseconds) a script in /etc/cont-finish.d could take before sending a KILL signal to it. Take into account that this parameter will be used per each script execution, it's not a max time for the whole set of scripts.
  • S6_SERVICES_GRACETIME (default = 3000): How long (in milliseconds) s6 should wait services before sending a TERM signal.
  • S6_KILL_GRACETIME (default = 3000): How long (in milliseconds) s6 should wait to reap zombies before sending a KILL signal.
  • S6_LOGGING_SCRIPT (default = "n20 s1000000 T"): This env decides what to log and how, by default every line will prepend with ISO8601, rotated when the current logging file reaches 1mb and archived, at most, with 20 files.
  • S6_CMD_ARG0 (default = not set): Value of this env var will be prepended to any CMD args passed by docker. Use it if you are migrting an existing image to a s6-overlay and want to make it a drop-in replacement, then setting this variable to a value of previously used ENTRYPOINT will improve compatibility with the way image is used.
  • S6_FIX_ATTRS_HIDDEN (default = 0): Controls how fix-attrs.d scripts process files and directories.
    • 0: Hidden files and directories are excluded.
    • 1: All files and directories are processed.
  • S6_CMD_WAIT_FOR_SERVICES (default = 0): In order to proceed executing CMD overlay will wait until services are up. Be aware that up doesn't mean ready. Depending if notification-fd was found inside the servicedir overlay will use s6-svwait -U or s6-svwait -u as the waiting statement.
  • S6_CMD_WAIT_FOR_SERVICES_MAXTIME (default = 5000): The maximum time (in milliseconds) the services could take to bring up before proceding to CMD executing.
  • S6_READ_ONLY_ROOT (default = 0): When running in a container whose root filesystem is read-only, set this env to 1 to inform init stage 2 that it should copy user-provided initialization scripts from /etc to /var/run/s6/etc before it attempts to change permissions, etc. See Read-Only Root Filesystem for more information.
  • S6_SYNC_DISKS (default = 0): Set this env to 1 to inform init stage 3 that it should attempt to sync filesystems before stopping the container. Note: this will likely sync all filesystems on the host.

syslog

If software running in your container requires syslog, extract the syslogd-overlay-noarch-3.0.0.0.tar.xz tarball: that will give you a small syslogd emulation. Logs will be found under various subdirectories of /var/log/syslogd, for instance messages will be found in the /var/log/syslogd/messages/ directory, the latest logs being available in the /var/log/syslogd/messages/current file. Logging directories are used rather than files so that logs can be automatically rotated without race conditions (that is a feature of s6-log).

It is recommended to add syslog and sysllog users to your image, for privilege separation; the syslogd emulation processes will run as these users if they exist. Otherwise they will default to 32760:32760 and 32761:32761, numeric uids/gids that may already exist on your system.

Performance

  • The noarch and symlinks tarballs are all tiny. The biggest tarball is the one that contains the binaries; it's around 660 kB.
  • Uncompressed on a tmpfs, the overlay scripts use about 120 kB, and the binaries for x86_64 use about 6.5 MB.
  • We haven't yet measured the time it takes for the container to be up and running once you run docker run, but you will notice it's fast. Faster than previous versions of s6-overlay, with fewer delays. And if you convert your /etc/cont-init.d scripts to the s6-rc format, they will be able to run in parallel, so you will gain even more performance. If you have benchmarks, please send them to us!

Verifying Downloads

The s6-overlay releases are not yet signed; we will get to it really soon. You can import our gpg public key:

$ curl https://keybase.io/justcontainers/key.asc | gpg --import

When we've signed the releases, you can then verify the downloaded files:

$ gpg --verify s6-overlay-x86_64-3.0.0.0.tar.xz.sig s6-overlay-x86_64-3.0.0.0.tar.xz
gpg: Signature made Sun 22 Nov 2015 09:11:29 AM CST using RSA key ID BD7BF0DC
gpg: Good signature from "Just Containers <just-containers@jrjrtech.com>"

Notes

USER directive

As of version 3.0.0.0, s6-overlay has limited support for running as a user other than root:

  • Tools like fix-attrs and logutil-service are unlikely to work (they rely on being able to change UIDs).
  • The syslogd emulation will not work.

Generally speaking, if you're running a simple container with a main application and one or two support services, you may benefit from the USER directive if that is your preferred way of running containers. However, if you're running more than a few services, or daemons that expect a real system with complete Unix infrastructure, then USER is probably not a good idea and you would benefit more from using privilege separation between services in your container.

Releases

Over on the releases tab, we have a number of tarballs:

  • s6-overlay-noarch-${version}.tar.xz: the s6-overlay scripts.
  • s6-overlay-${arch}-${version}.tar.xz: the binaries for platform ${arch}. They are statically compiled and will work with any Linux distribution.
  • s6-overlay-symlinks-noarch-${version}.tar.xz: /usr/bin symlinks to the s6-overlay scripts. Totally optional.
  • s6-overlay-symlinks-arch-${version}.tar.xz: /usr/bin symlinks to the skaware binaries. Totally optional.
  • syslogd-overlay-noarch-${version}.tar.xz: the syslogd emulation. Totally optional.
  • s6-overlay-${version}.tar.xz: the s6-overlay source. Download it if you want to build s6-overlay yourself.

We have binaries for at least x86_64, aarch64, arm32, i486, i686, and riscv64. The full list of supported arches can be found in conf/toolchains.

Contributing

Anyway you want! Open issues, open PRs, we welcome all contributors!

Building the overlay yourself

  • Download the [s6-overlay source].
  • Check the conf/defaults.mk file for variables you may want to change. Do not modify the file itself.
  • Call make followed by your variable assignments. Example: make ARCH=riscv64-linux-musl to build the overlay for RISCV64.
  • The tarballs will be in the output subdirectory, unless you changed the OUTPUT variable.

Upgrade Notes

Please see CHANGELOG.

About

s6 overlay for containers (includes execline, s6-linux-utils & a custom init)

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