This repository contains the runtime for the Kata Containers project.
For details of the other Kata Containers repositories, see the repository summary.
- Introduction
- License
- Platform support
- Download and install
- Quick start for developers
- Architecture overview
- Configuration
- Logging
- Debugging
- Limitations
- Community
- Further information
- Additional packages
kata-runtime
, referred to as "the runtime", is the Command-Line Interface
(CLI) part of the Kata Containers runtime component. It leverages the
virtcontainers
package to provide a high-performance standards-compliant runtime that creates
hardware-virtualized Linux containers running on Linux hosts.
The runtime is OCI-compatible, CRI-O-compatible, and Containerd-compatible, allowing it to work seamlessly with both Docker and Kubernetes respectively.
The code is licensed under an Apache 2.0 license.
See the license file for further details.
Kata Containers currently works on systems supporting the following technologies:
- Intel VT-x technology.
- ARM Hyp mode (virtualization extension).
- IBM Power Systems.
- IBM Z mainframes.
The runtime has a built-in command to determine if your host system is capable of running and creating a Kata Container:
$ kata-runtime kata-check
Note:
By default, only a brief success / failure message is printed. If more details are needed, the
--verbose
flag can be used to display the list of all the checks performed.
root
permission is needed to check if the system is capable of running Kata containers. In this case, additional checks are performed (e.g., if another incompatible hypervisor is running).
See the installation guides available for various operating systems.
See the developer guide.
See the architecture overview for details on the Kata Containers design.
The runtime uses a TOML format configuration file called configuration.toml
.
The file contains comments explaining all options.
Note:
The initial values in the configuration file provide a good default configuration. You might need to modify this file if you have specialist needs.
Since the runtime supports a
stateless system,
it checks for this configuration file in multiple locations, two of which are
built in to the runtime. The default location is
/usr/share/defaults/kata-containers/configuration.toml
for a standard
system. However, if /etc/kata-containers/configuration.toml
exists, this
takes priority.
The command below lists the full paths to the configuration files that the runtime attempts to load. The first path that exists is used:
$ kata-runtime --kata-show-default-config-paths
Aside from the built-in locations, it is possible to specify the path to a
custom configuration file using the --kata-config
option:
$ kata-runtime --kata-config=/some/where/configuration.toml ...
The runtime will log the full path to the configuration file it is using. See the logging section for further details.
To see details of your systems runtime environment (including the location of the configuration file being used), run:
$ kata-runtime kata-env
The runtime provides --log=
and --log-format=
options. However, the
runtime always logs to the system log (syslog
or journald
).
To view runtime log output:
$ sudo journalctl -t kata-runtime
For detailed information and analysis on obtaining logs for other system
components, see the documentation for the
kata-log-parser
tool.
See the debugging section of the developer guide.
See the limitations file for further details.
See how to reach the community.
See the project table of contents and the documentation repository.
For details of the other packages contained in this repository, see the package documentation.