Document Information
Preface
Solaris Virtualization Product Overview
Part I Resource Management
1. Introduction to Solaris Resource Management
2. Projects and Tasks (Overview)
3. Administering Projects and Tasks
4. Extended Accounting (Overview)
5. Administering Extended Accounting (Tasks)
6. Resource Controls (Overview)
7. Administering Resource Controls (Tasks)
8. Fair Share Scheduler (Overview)
9. Administering the Fair Share Scheduler (Tasks)
10. Physical Memory Control Using the Resource Capping Daemon (Overview)
11. Administering the Resource Capping Daemon (Tasks)
12. Resource Pools (Overview)
13. Creating and Administering Resource Pools (Tasks)
14. Resource Management Configuration Example
15. Resource Control Functionality in the Solaris Management Console
Part II Zones
16. Introduction to Solaris Zones
17. Non-Global Zone Configuration (Overview)
About Resources in Zones
Pre-Installation Configuration Process
Zone Components
Using the zonecfg Command
zonecfg Modes
Tecla Command-Line Editing Library
18. Planning and Configuring Non-Global Zones (Tasks)
19. About Installing, Halting, Cloning, and Uninstalling Non-Global Zones (Overview)
20. Installing, Booting, Halting, Uninstalling, and Cloning Non-Global Zones (Tasks)
21. Non-Global Zone Login (Overview)
22. Logging In to Non-Global Zones (Tasks)
23. Moving and Migrating Non-Global Zones (Tasks)
24. About Packages and Patches on a Solaris System With Zones Installed (Overview)
25. Adding and Removing Packages and Patches on a Solaris System With Zones Installed (Tasks)
26. Solaris Zones Administration (Overview)
27. Administering Solaris Zones (Tasks)
28. Troubleshooting Miscellaneous Solaris Zones Problems
Part III Branded Zones
29. About Branded Zones and the Linux Branded Zone
30. Planning the lx Branded Zone Configuration (Overview)
31. Configuring the lx Branded Zone (Tasks)
32. About Installing, Booting, Halting, Cloning, and Uninstalling lx Branded Zones (Overview)
33. Installing, Booting, Halting, Uninstalling and Cloning lx Branded Zones (Tasks)
34. Logging In to lx Branded Zones (Tasks)
35. Moving and Migrating lx Branded Zones (Tasks)
36. Administering and Running Applications in lx Branded Zones (Tasks)
Part IV Sun xVM
37. Sun xVM Hypervisor System Requirements
38. Booting and Running the Sun xVM Hypervisor
39. Xvnc
40. Using virt-install to Install a Domain
41. xVM System Administration
42. Troubleshooting Miscellaneous Sun xVM Problems
Glossary
Index
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Zone Configuration Data
Zone configuration data consists of two kinds of entities: resources and properties. Each
resource has a type, and each resource can also have a set of
one or more properties. The properties have names and values. The set of
properties is dependent on the resource type.
Resource and Property Types
The resource and property types are described as follows: - zonename
The name of the zone. The following rules apply to zone names:
Each zone must have a unique name.
A zone name is case-sensitive.
A zone name must begin with an alphanumeric character. The name can contain alphanumeric characters, underbars (_), hyphens (-), and periods (.).
The name cannot be longer than 64 characters.
The name global and all names beginning with SUNW are reserved and cannot be used.
- zonepath
The zonepath property is the path to the zone root. Each zone has a path to its root directory that is relative to the global zone's root directory. At installation time, the global zone directory is required to have restricted visibility. It must be owned by root with the mode 700. The non-global zone's root path is one level lower. The zone's root directory has the same ownership and permissions as the root directory (/) in the global zone. The zone directory must be owned by root with the mode 755. These directories are created automatically with the correct permissions, and do not need to be verified by the zone administrator. This hierarchy ensures that unprivileged users in the global zone are prevented from traversing a non-global zone's file system. Path |
Description |
/home/export/my-zone |
zonecfg zonepath |
/home/export/my-zone/root |
Root of the zone |
/home/export/my-zone/root/dev |
Devices created for the zone |
See Traversing File Systems for a further discussion of this issue.
Note - You can move a zone to another location on the same system by specifying a new, full zonepath with the move subcommand of zoneadm. See Moving a Non-Global Zone for instructions.
- autoboot
If this property is set to true, the zone is automatically booted when the global zone is booted. Note that if the zones service, svc:/system/zones:default is disabled, the zone will not autoboot, regardless of the setting of this property. You can enable the zones service with the svcadm command described in the svcadm(1M) man page: global# svcadm enable zones
- bootargs
This property is used to set a boot argument for the zone. The boot argument is applied unless overridden by the reboot, zoneadm boot, or zoneadm reboot commands. See Zone Boot Arguments.
- pool
This property is used to associate the zone with a resource pool on the system. Multiple zones can share the resources of one pool. Also see dedicated-cpu Resource.
- limitpriv
This property is used to specify a privilege mask other than the default. See Privileges in a Non-Global Zone. Privileges are added by specifying the privilege name, with or without the leading priv_. Privileges are excluded by preceding the name with a dash (-) or an exclamation mark (!). The privilege values are separated by commas and placed within quotation marks (“). As described in priv_str_to_set(3C), the special privilege sets of none, all, and basic expand to their normal definitions. Because zone configuration takes place from the global zone, the special privilege set zone cannot be used. Because a common use is to alter the default privilege set by adding or removing certain privileges, the special set default maps to the default, set of privileges. When default appears at the beginning of the limitpriv property, it expands to the default set. The following entry adds the ability to use DTrace programs that only require the dtrace_proc and dtrace_user privileges in the zone: global# zonecfg -z userzone
zonecfg:userzone> set limitpriv="default,dtrace_proc,dtrace_user" If the zone's privilege set contains a disallowed privilege, is missing a required privilege, or includes an unknown privilege, an attempt to verify, ready, or boot the zone will fail with an error message.
- scheduling-class
This property sets the scheduling class for the zone. See Scheduling Class for additional information and tips.
- ip-type
This property is required to be set only if the zone is an exclusive-IP zone. See Exclusive-IP Non-Global Zones and How to Configure the Zone.
- dedicated-cpu
This resource dedicates a subset of the system's processors to the zone while it is running. The dedicated-cpu resource provides limits for ncpus and, optionally, importance. For more information, see dedicated-cpu Resource.
- capped-cpu
This resource sets a limit on the amount of CPU resources that can be consumed by the zone while it is running. The capped-cpu resource provides a limit for ncpus. For more information, see capped-cpu Resource.
- capped-memory
This resource groups the properties used when capping memory for the zone. The capped-memory resource provides limits for physical, swap, and locked memory. At least one of these properties must be specified.
- dataset
Adding a Zetabyte File System (ZFS) dataset resource enables the delegation of storage administration to a non-global zone. The zone administrator can create and destroy file systems within that dataset, and modify properties of the dataset. The zone administrator cannot affect datasets that have not been added to the zone or exceed any top level quotas set on the dataset assigned to the zone. ZFS datasets can be added to a zone in the following ways.
See Chapter 10, ZFS Advanced Topics, in Solaris ZFS Administration Guide and File Systems and Non-Global Zones. Also see Chapter 28, Troubleshooting Miscellaneous Solaris Zones Problems for information on dataset issues.
- fs
Each zone can have various file systems that are mounted when the zone transitions from the installed state to the ready state. The file system resource specifies the path to the file system mount point. For more information about the use of file systems in zones, see File Systems and Non-Global Zones.
- inherit-pkg-dir
This resource should not be configured in a whole root zone. In a sparse root zone, the inherit-pkg-dir resource is used to represent directories that contain packaged software that a non-global zone shares with the global zone. The contents of software packages transferred into the inherit-pkg-dir directory are inherited in read-only mode by the non-global zone. The zone's packaging database is updated to reflect the packages. These resources cannot be modified or removed after the zone has been installed using zoneadm.
Note - Four default inherit-pkg-dir resources are included in the configuration. These directory resources indicate which directories should have their associated packages inherited from the global zone. The resources are implemented through a read-only loopback file system mount.
/lib
/platform
/sbin
/usr
- net
The network interface resource is the interface name. Each zone can have network interfaces that should be set up when the zone transitions from the installed state to the ready state.
- device
The device resource is the device matching specifier. Each zone can have devices that should be configured when the zone transitions from the installed state to the ready state.
- rctl
The rctl resource is used for zone-wide resource controls. The controls are enabled when the zone transitions from the installed state to the ready state. See Setting Zone-Wide Resource Controls for more information.
Note - To configure zone-wide controls using the set global_property_name subcommand of zonefig instead of the rctl resource, see How to Configure the Zone.
- attr
This generic attribute can be used for user comments or by other subsystems. The name property of an attr must begin with an alphanumeric character. The name property can contain alphanumeric characters, hyphens (-), and periods (.). Attribute names beginning with zone. are reserved for use by the system.
Resource Type Properties
Resources also have properties to configure. The following properties are associated with the
resource types shown. - dedicated-cpu
ncpus, importance Specify the number of CPUs and, optionally, the relative importance of the pool. The following example specifies a CPU range for use by the zone my-zone. importance is also set. zonecfg:my-zone> add dedicated-cpu
zonecfg:my-zone:dedicated-cpu> set ncpus=1-3
zonecfg:my-zone:dedicated-cpu> set importance=2
zonecfg:my-zone:dedicated-cpu> end
- capped-cpu
ncpus Specify the number of CPUs. The following example specifies a CPU cap of 3.5 CPUs for the zone my-zone. zonecfg:my-zone> add capped-cpu
zonecfg:my-zone:capped-cpu> set ncpus=3.5
zonecfg:my-zone:capped-cpu> end
- capped-memory
physical, swap, lockedSpecify the memory limits for the zone my-zone. Each limit is optional, but at least one must be set. zonecfg:my-zone> add capped-memory
zonecfg:my-zone:capped-memory> set physical=50m
zonecfg:my-zone:capped-memory> set swap=100m
zonecfg:my-zone:capped-memory> set locked=30m
zonecfg:my-zone:capped-memory> end
- fs
dir, special, raw, type, options The fs resource parameters supply the values that determine how and where to mount file systems. The fs parameters are defined as follows: - dir
Specifies the mount point for the file system
- special
Specifies the block special device name or directory from the global zone to mount
- raw
Specifies the raw device on which to run fsck before mounting the file system
- type
Specifies the file system type
- options
Specifies mount options similar to those found with the mount command
The lines in the following example specify that /dev/dsk/c0t0d0s2 in the global zone is to be mounted as /mnt in a zone being configured. The raw property specifies an optional device on which the fsck command is to be run before an attempt is made to mount the file system. The file system type to use is UFS. The options nodevices and logging are added. zonecfg:my-zone> add fs
zonecfg:my-zone:fs> set dir=/mnt
zonecfg:my-zone:fs> set special=/dev/dsk/c0t0d0s2
zonecfg:my-zone:fs> set raw=/dev/rdsk/c0t0d0s2
zonecfg:my-zone:fs> set type=ufs
zonecfg:my-zone:fs> add options [nodevices,logging]
zonecfg:my-zone:fs> end For more information, see The -o nosuid Option, Security Restrictions and File System Behavior, and the fsck(1M) and mount(1M) man pages. Also note that section 1M man pages are available for mount options that are unique to a specific file system. The names of these man pages have the form mount_filesystem.
Note - To add a ZFS file system using the fs resource property, see Adding ZFS File Systems to a Non-Global Zone in Solaris ZFS Administration Guide.
- dataset
name The lines in the following example specify that the dataset sales is to be visible and mounted in the non-global zone and no longer visible in the global zone. zonecfg:my-zone> add dataset
zonecfg:my-zone> set name=tank/sales
zonecfg:my-zone> end
- inherit-pkg-dir
dir The lines in the following example specify that /opt/sfw is to be loopback mounted from the global zone. zonecfg:my-zone> add inherit-pkg-dir
zonecfg:my-zone:inherit-pkg-dir> set dir=/opt/sfw
zonecfg:my-zone:inherit-pkg-dir> end
- net
address, physical, defrouter
Note - For a shared-IP zone, both the IP address and the device are specified. Optionally, the default router can be set . For an exclusive-IP zone, only the physical interface is specified.
In the following example for a shared-IP zone, the IP address 192.168.0.1 is added to the zone. An hme0 card is used for the physical interface. To determine which physical interface to use, type ifconfig -a on your system. Each line of the output, other than loopback driver lines, begins with the name of a card installed on your system. Lines that contain LOOPBACK in the descriptions do not apply to cards. The default route is set to 10.0.0.1 for the zone. zonecfg:my-zone> add net
zonecfg:my-zone:net> set physical=hme0
zonecfg:my-zone:net> set address=192.168.0.1
zonecfg:my-zone:net> set defrouter=10.0.0.1
zonecfg:my-zone:net> end In the following example for an exclusive-IP zone, a bge32001 link is used for the physical interface, which is a VLAN on bge1. To determine which data-links are available, use the command dladm show-link. Note that ip-type=exclusive must also be specified. zonecfg:my-zone> set ip-type=exclusive
zonecfg:my-zone> add net
zonecfg:my-zone:net> set physical=bge32001
zonecfg:my-zone:net> end
Note - Prior to OpenSolarisTM build snv_83, the data-link used with exclusive-IP zones must be GLDv3 . Non-GLDv3 data-links appear as type: legacy in the dladm show-link output. The ce legacy device is an exception. This device can support an exclusive-IP zone.
- device
match In the following example, a /dev/pts device is included in a zone. zonecfg:my-zone> add device
zonecfg:my-zone:device> set match=/dev/pts*
zonecfg:my-zone:device> end
Note - See Device Use in Non-Global Zones.
- rctl
name, value The following zone-wide resource controls are available.
zone.cpu-cap
zone.cpu-shares (preferred: cpu-shares)
zone.max-locked-memory
zone.max-lwps (preferred: max-lwps)
zone.max-msg-ids (preferred: max-msg-ids)
zone.max-sem-ids (preferred: max-sem-ids)
zone.max-shm-ids (preferred: max-shm-ids)
zone.max-shm-memory (preferred: max-shm-memory)
zone.max-swap
Note that the preferred, simpler method for setting a zone-wide resource control is to use the property name instead of the rctl resource, as shown in How to Configure the Zone. If zone-wide resource control entries in a zone are configured using add rctl, the format is different than resource control entries in the project database. In a zone configuration, the rctl resource type consists of three name/value pairs. The names are priv, limit, and action. Each of the names takes a simple value. zonecfg:my-zone> add rctl
zonecfg:my-zone:rctl> set name=zone.cpu-shares
zonecfg:my-zone:rctl> add value (priv=privileged,limit=10,action=none)zonecfg:my-zone:rctl> end zonecfg:my-zone> add rctl
zonecfg:my-zone:rctl> set name=zone.max-lwps
zonecfg:my-zone:rctl> add value (priv=privileged,limit=100,action=deny)
zonecfg:my-zone:rctl> end For general information about resource controls and attributes, see Chapter 6, Resource Controls (Overview) and Resource Controls Used in Non-Global Zones.
- attr
name, type, value In the following example, a comment about a zone is added. zonecfg:my-zone> add attr
zonecfg:my-zone:attr> set name=comment
zonecfg:my-zone:attr> set type=string
zonecfg:my-zone:attr> set value="Production zone"
zonecfg:my-zone:attr> end
You can use the export subcommand to print a zone configuration to standard
output. The configuration is saved in a form that can be used in
a command file.
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