Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

An error occurred while submitting your form. Please try again or file a bug report. Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

Stéphane Graber
on 28 August 2017

LXD Weekly Status 12


This article originally appeared at the Linux Containers forum

Introduction

This week saw the release of LXD 2.17 and it’s now quickly rolling out to our users.

We’re still very busy with preparation work for LXC 2.1 with a tentative release date of Monday next week.

A lot of work has gone into our snap package, including Open vSwitch support, a number of new configuration options and debug options. We’ve issued a Call for testing on Friday and effectively consider our snap package to be equivalent to our traditional native package.

The rest of the week was spent working on bugfixes and various code refactoring as needed by current feature work.

Open Source Summit Europe

Christian Brauner (@brauner) and Stéphane Graber (@stgraber) will both be present at the Open Source Summit Europe in Prague this October.

We have a number of LXD and system containers talk there too!

Upcoming conferences

Ongoing projects

The list below is feature or refactoring work which will span several weeks/months and can’t be tied directly to a single Github issue or pull request.

Upstream changes

The items listed below are highlights of the work which happened upstream over the past week and which will be included in the next release.

LXD

LXC

LXCFS

  • Nothing to report this week

Distribution work

This section is used to track the work done in downstream Linux distributions to ship the latest LXC, LXD and LXCFS as well as work to get various software to work properly inside containers.

Ubuntu

  • LXD 2.0.10-0ubuntu1~ubuntu16.04.2 was uploaded to Ubuntu 16.04 in the “proposed” pocket. This fixes an issue in the image updating code. The package will be released to all Ubuntu 16.04 LTS users on Tuesday.
  • LXD 2.17-0ubuntu1 was uploaded to Ubuntu 17.10 and our PPAs. This is the initial upload for the new LXD 2.17 release.
  • LXD 2.17-0ubuntu2 was uploaded to Ubuntu 17.10 and our PPAs. This contains a number of bugfixes which were included upstream after the 2.17 release.
  • LXCFS 2.0.7-0ubuntu5 was uploaded to Ubuntu 17.10 and our PPAs. This was a packaging-only upload with no user visible changes in content.
  • LXC 2.0.8-0ubuntu6 was uploaded to Ubuntu 17.10 and our PPAs. This adds support for mixed cgroup configurations as needed by recent systemd releases.

Snap

  • Open vSwitch support was added.
  • Log output was cleaned up a bit.
  • When moving from a kernel with partial AppArmor support back to a fully supported kernel, the lxc.aa_allow_incomplete is now automatically cleared.
  • Our internal copy of /etc is now using the same generation code as we use for /run
  • A number of configuration options are now available through “snap set”.
  • Fixed some permission problems with the “lxc” command.
  • Reworked a number of our wrappers to use a common structure.
  • Updated the systemd restart condition to match the Debian package.
  • Bumped the startup timeout all the way to 10min (to allow for long SSL generation and container startup).
  • Added support for “systemctl reload snap.lxd.daemon”.
  • Made it possible to temporarily override the LXD binary used by the snap.
    This will be used for the custom debug binaries we sometimes provide our users.
  • Fixed lxcfs integration when using nested containers.
  • Updated our detection code to properly detect snap auto-updates.

Related posts


Gabriel Aguiar Noury
3 July 2025

JetPack 4 EOL – how to keep your userspace secure during migration

Ubuntu Article

NVIDIA JetPack 4 reached its end-of-life (EOL) in November 2024, marking the end of security updates for this widely deployed stack. JetPack 4 has driven innovation in countless devices powered by NVIDIA Jetson, serving as the foundation of edge AI production deployments across multiple sectors. But now, the absence of security maintenanc ...


Massimiliano Gori
2 July 2025

Source to production: Spring Boot containers made easy

Cloud and server Article

This blog is contributed by Pushkar Kulkarni, a Software Engineer at Canonical. Building on the rise in popularity of Spring Boot and the 12 factor paradigm, our Java offering also includes a way to package Spring workloads in production grade, minimal, well organized containers with a single command. This way, any developer can generate ...


Massimiliano Gori
2 July 2025

Spring support available on Ubuntu

Cloud and server Article

This blog is contributed by Vladimir Petko, a Software Engineer at Canonical. The release of Plucky Puffin earlier this year introduced the availability of the devpack for Spring, a new snap that streamlines the setup of developer environments for Spring on Ubuntu. In this blog, we’ll explain what devpacks are and provide an overview of ...