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CoreOS over macOS made simple

read this first
- You must be running macOS Yosemite, 10.10.3, or later on a 2010, or later, Macintosh (i.e. one with a CPU that supports EPT) for everything to work.
- Starting with 0.7.18 the bundled qcow-tool helper has a runtime dependency in libev. Until we sort out how to build it statically, you need to make it available in the local system - if you are using homebrew that is as easy as brew install libev.
- If you are still using any version of VirtualBox older than 4.3.30 then corectl will crash your system either if VirtualBox is running, or had been run previously after the last reboot (see xhyve's issues #5 and #9 for the full context). So, if for some reason, you are unable to update VirtualBox to the latest, either of the 4.x or 5.x streams, and were using it in your current session please make sure to restart your Mac before attempting to run corectl.
- If you are using some sort of desktop firewall in your macOS host (ESET, Little Snitch, whatever) please make sure that it allows traffic from/to the bridge100 interface to the host as otherwise no VM will ever able to succefully boot (as it can't fetch the ignition configs, etc from the host's running corectld)

step by step instructions

install corectl

installing a release build (prefered for end users)

❯❯❯ brew install corectl

downloading from GitHub

just go to our releases page and download the tarball with the binaries to your system, and then unpack its' contents placing them somewhere in some directory in your ${PATH} (/usr/local/bin/ is usually a good choice)

build it locally (for power users)

❯❯❯ mkdir -p ${GOPATH}/src/github.com/genevera/
❯❯❯ cd ${GOPATH}/src/github.com/genevera/
❯❯❯ git clone [email protected]:genevera/corectl.git
❯❯❯ cd corectl
❯❯❯ make

the built binaries will then appear inside ${GOPATH}/src/github.com/genevera/corectl/bin

start the corectl server daemon (corectld)

this is a required step starting with corectl's 0.7.0 release

❯❯❯ /usr/local/bin/corectld

kickstart a CoreOS VM

the following command will fetch the latest CoreOS Alpha image available, if not already available locally, verify its integrity, and then boot it.

❯❯❯ corectl run

In your terminal you will shortly see something like the following...

❯❯❯  corectl run
---> 'B4AF19D1-DDEE-4A16-8058-1A7C3579F203' started successfully with address 192.168.64.210 and PID 76202
---> 'B4AF19D1-DDEE-4A16-8058-1A7C3579F203' boot logs can be found at '/Users/am/.coreos/running/B4AF19D1-DDEE-4A16-8058-1A7C3579F203/log'
---> 'B4AF19D1-DDEE-4A16-8058-1A7C3579F203' console can be found at '/Users/am/.coreos/running/B4AF19D1-DDEE-4A16-8058-1A7C3579F203/tty'

Accessing the newly created CoreOS instance is just a few more clicks away...

❯❯❯  corectl ssh B4AF19D1-DDEE-4A16-8058-1A7C3579F203

usage (straight from the online help)

corectld

CoreOS over macOS made simple. <http://github.com/genevera/corectl>
Copyright (c) 2015-2016, António Meireles

Usage:
    corectld [flags]
    corectld [command]

Available Commands:
    start       Starts corectld
    status      Shows corectld status
    stop        Stops corectld
    version     Shows version information

Flags:
  -d, --debug   adds additional verbosity, and options, directed at debugging purposes and power users

Use "corectld [command] --help" for more information about a command.

All flags can also be set via upper-case environment variables prefixed with "COREOS_"
For example, "--debug" => "COREOS_DEBUG"

corectl

CoreOS over macOS made simple. <http://github.com/genevera/corectl>
Copyright (c) 2015-2016, António Meireles

Usage:
    corectl [flags]
    corectl [command]

Available Commands:
    kill        Halts one or more running CoreOS instances
    load        Loads CoreOS instances defined in an instrumentation file.
    ls          Lists the CoreOS images available locally
    ps          Lists running CoreOS instances
    pull        Pulls a CoreOS image from upstream
    put         copy file to inside VM
    query       Display information about the running CoreOS instances
    rm          Remove(s) CoreOS image(s) from the local filesystem
    run         Boots a new CoreOS instance
    ssh         Attach to or run commands inside a running CoreOS instance
    version     Shows version information

Flags:
  -d, --debug   adds additional verbosity, and options, directed at debugging purposes and power users

Use "corectl [command] --help" for more information about a command.

All flags can also be set via upper-case environment variables prefixed with "COREOS_"
For example, "--debug" => "COREOS_DEBUG"

here you can find the full auto-generated documentation.

simple usage recipe: a docker and rkt playground

create a volume to store your persistent data

qcow-tool, that we use below, is shipped together with corectl and creates qcow2 images.

Please do note that the --size argument must to be suffixed the right way - KiB/MiB/GiB/TiB/PiB

❯❯❯ qcow-tool create --size=16GiB var_lib_docker.img.qcow2

will become /var/lib/{docker|rkt}. In this example case we created a QCow2 volume with 16GB.

a quick note regarding Raw volumes
Raw volumes were the default until version 0.7.12.
They are still supported but become a deprecated feature that may disappear some point in the future.

format and label it

we'll format and label the newly created volume from within a transient VM as it's the simplest way. We're formatting it with ext4 but you can choose any filesystem you like assuming it is a CoreOS supported one.

❯❯❯ corectl run  --name foo --volume=var_lib_docker.img.qcow2
❯❯❯ corectl ssh foo "sudo mke2fs -b 1024 -i 1024 -t ext4 -m0 /dev/vda && \
      sudo e2label /dev/vda rkthdd "
❯❯❯ corectl halt foo

above, we labeled our volume rkthdd which is the signature that our recipe expects.

by relying in labels for volume identification we get around the issues we'd have otherwise if we were depending on the actual volume name (/dev/vd...) as those would have to be hardcoded (an issue, if one is mix and matching multiple recipes all dealing with different volumes...)

start your docker and rkt playground.

❯❯❯ UUID=deadbeef-dead-dead-dead-deaddeafbeef \
  corectl run --volume absolute_or_relative_path/to/persistent.img \
  --cloud_config examples/cloud-init/docker-only-with-persistent-storage.txt \
  --cpus 2 --memory 2048 --name containerland

this will start a VM named containerland with the volume we created previously attached, 2 virtual cores and 2GB of RAM. The provided cloud-config will format the given volume (if it wasn't yet) and bind mount both /var/lib/rkt and /var/lib/docker on top of it. Docker will also become available through socket activation.

above we passed arguments to the VM both via environment variables and command flags. both ways are fully supported, just use whatever suits your needs better.

now...

❯❯❯ corectl ps
Server:
  Version:      0.7.0
  Go Version:   go1.6.2
  Built:        Mon Jul 04 10:05:51 WEST 2016
  OS/Arch:      darwin/amd64

  Pid:          76155
  Uptime:       37 minutes ago

Activity:
Active VMs:     1
Total Memory:   2048
Total vCores:   2

UUID:           A163767A-78DC-41F9-AA66-E57B6C6CAB1A
  Name:         containerland
  Version:      1097.0.0
  Channel:      alpha
  vCPUs:        3
  Memory (MB):  2048
  Pid:          76807
  Uptime:       25 minutes ago
  Sees World:   true
  cloud-config: /Users/am/code/corectl/src/github.com/genevera/corectl/examples/cloud-init/docker-only-with-persistent-storage.txt
  Network:
    eth0:       192.168.64.2
  Volumes:
  /dev/vda      /Users/am/code/corectl/persistentData/var_lib_docker.img
❯❯❯ docker -H $(corectl q containerland --ip):2375 images -a
REPOSITORY          TAG                 IMAGE ID            CREATED             SIZE
centos              latest              05188b417f30        2 days ago          196.8 MB
busybox             latest              2b8fd9751c4c        10 days ago         1.093 MB
fedora              latest              f9873d530588        13 days ago         204.4 MB

or ...

  ❯❯❯ corectl ssh containerland
  CoreOS stable (1097.0.0)
  Last login: Mon Jul  4 09:17:26 2016 from 192.168.64.1
  Update Strategy: No Reboots

or ...

❯❯❯ corectl ssh containerland "sudo rkt list"
UUID	APP	IMAGE NAME	STATE	CREATED	STARTED	NETWORKS

All running VMs become reachable by name transparently on the host using macOS' native name resolution machinery

❯❯❯ ping -c 1 containerland
PING containerland.coreos.local (192.168.64.2): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 192.168.64.2: icmp_seq=0 ttl=64 time=0.239 ms

--- containerland.coreos.local ping statistics ---
1 packets transmitted, 1 packets received, 0.0% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 0.239/0.239/0.239/0.000 ms

have fun!

Tracing

Thanks to hyperkit (that we consume as corectld.runner) there are available a number of static DTrace probes to simplify investigation of performance problems. To list the probes supported by your version of corectl, type the following command while corectld is running:

$ sudo dtrace -l -P 'hyperkit$target' -p $(pgrep corectld.runner)

Refer to scripts in examples/dtrace/ directory for examples of possible usage and available probes.

projects using corectl

acknowledgements

contributing

corectl is an open source project released under the Apache License, Version 2.0, contributions and sugestions are gladly welcomed!