Container Images and CernVM-FS

CernVM-FS interacts with container technologies in two main ways:

  1. CernVM-FS application repositories (e.g. /cvmfs/atlas.cern.ch) can be mounted into a stock container (e.g. CentOS 8)

  2. The container root filesystem (e.g. the root file system “/” of CentOS 8) itself can be served directly from CernVM-FS

Both ways have a similar goal, that is to give users access to a reproducible, ready-to-use environment while retaining the advantages of CernVM-FS regarding data distribution, content de-duplication, software preservation and ease of operations.

Mounting /cvmfs inside a container

The simplest way to access /cvmfs from inside a container is to bind-mount the /cvmfs host directory inside the container.

Using this approach will allow using small images to create a basic operating system environment, and to access all the necessary application software through /cvmfs.

This is supported by all the common containers runtimes, including:

  1. Docker

  2. Podman

  3. Apptainer

  4. Kubernetes

Examples

To bind-mount CVMFS inside a docker container, it is sufficient to use the --volume/-v flag.

For instance:

docker run -it --volume /cvmfs:/cvmfs:shared ubuntu ls -lna /cvmfs/atlas.cern.ch

Of course, it is also possible to limit the bind-mount to only one repository, or a few repositories:

$ docker run -it -v /cvmfs/alice.cern.ch:/cvmfs/alice.cern.ch \
                 -v /cvmfs/sft.cern.ch:/cvmfs/sft.cern.ch ubuntu
root@808d42605e97:/# ll /cvmfs/
total 17
drwxr-xr-x 17  125  130 4096 Nov 27  2012 alice.cern.ch/
drwxr-xr-x  8  125  130 4096 Oct 15  2018 sft.cern.ch/

Podman has the same interface as docker, but it requires the ro options when mounting a single repository.

$ podman run -it -v /cvmfs/alice.cern.ch:/cvmfs/alice.cern.ch:ro ubuntu ls -lna /cvmfs/
total 13
drwxr-xr-x  3     0     0 4096 Apr 20 11:34 .
drwxr-xr-x 22     0     0 4096 Apr 20 11:34 ..
drwxr-xr-x 17 65534 65534 4096 Nov 27  2012 alice.cern.ch

A similar approach is possible with apptainer, but the syntax is a little different.

$ apptainer exec --bind /cvmfs docker://library/ubuntu ls -l /cvmfs/lhcb.cern.ch
total 2
drwxrwxr-x.  3 cvmfs cvmfs  3 Jan  6  2011 etc
lrwxrwxrwx.  1 cvmfs cvmfs 16 Aug  6  2011 group_login.csh -> lib/etc/LHCb.csh
lrwxrwxrwx.  1 cvmfs cvmfs 15 Aug  6  2011 group_login.sh -> lib/etc/LHCb.sh
drwxrwxr-x. 20 cvmfs cvmfs  3 Apr 24 12:39 lib

Also in apptainer it is possible to use the syntax host_directory:container_directory and it is possible to mount multiple paths at the same time separating the --bind arguments with a comma.

$ apptainer exec --bind /cvmfs/alice.cern.ch:/cvmfs/alice.cern.ch,/cvmfs/lhcb.cern.ch \
    docker://library/ubuntu ls -l /cvmfs/
total 5
drwxr-xr-x 17      125      130 4096 Nov 27  2012 alice.cern.ch/
drwxrwxr-x  4      125      130    6 Nov 16  2010 lhcb.cern.ch/

For Kubernetes, the approach is more heterogeneous and it depends on the cluster settings. A recommended approach is creating a DaemonSet so that on every node one pod exposes /cvmfs to other pods. This pod may use the cvmfs service container.

Alternatively, a CSI-plugin makes it simple to mount a repository inside a Kubernetes managed container. The plugin is distributed and available to the CERN Kubernetes managed clusters.

Distributing container images on CernVM-FS

Image distribution on CernVM-FS works with unpacked layers or image root file systems. Any CernVM-FS repository can store container images.

A number of images are already provided in /cvmfs/unpacked.cern.ch, a repository managed at CERN to host container images for various purposes and groups. The repository is managed using the CernVM-FS container tools to publish images from registries on CernVM-FS.

Every container image is stored in two forms on CernVM-FS

  1. All the unpacked layers of the image

  2. The whole unpacked root filesystem of the image

With the whole filesystem root directory in /cvmfs, apptainer can directly start a container.

apptainer exec /cvmfs/unpacked.cern.ch/registry.hub.docker.com/library/centos\:centos7 /bin/bash

The layers can be used, e.g., with containerd and the CernVM-FS snapshotter. In addition, the container tools create the chains of an image. Chains are partial root filesystem directores where layers are applied one after another. This is used internally to incrementally publish image updates if only a subset of layers changed.

Using unpacked.cern.ch

The unpacked.cern.ch repository provides a centrally managed container image hub without burdening users with managing their CernVM-FS repositories or conversion of images. It also enables saving storage space because of cvmfs deduplication of files that are common between different images. The repository is publicly available.

To add your image to unpacked.cern.ch you can add the image name to any one of the following two files, the so-called wishlists.

  1. https://gitlab.cern.ch/unpacked/sync/-/blob/master/recipe.yaml

  2. https://github.com/cvmfs/images-unpacked.cern.ch/blob/master/recipe.yaml

The first file is accessible from CERN infrastructure, while the second is on Github open to everybody.

A simple pull request against one of those files is sufficient, the image is vetted, and the pull request merged. Soon after the pull request is merged DUCC publishes the image to /cvmfs/unpacked.cern.ch. Depending on the size of the image, ingesting an image in unpacked.cern.ch takes ~15 minutes.

The images are continuously checked for updates. If you push another version of the image with the same tag, the updated propagates to CernVM-FS usually within ~15 minutes of delay.

Image wishlist syntax

The image must be specified like the following examples:

https://registry.hub.docker.com/library/centos:latest
https://registry.hub.docker.com/cmssw/cc8:latest
https://gitlab-registry.cern.ch/clange/jetmetanalysis:latest

The first two refer to images in Docker Hub, the standard centos using the latest tag and the cms version of centos8, again using the latest tag. The third image refers to an image hosted on CERN GitLab that contains the code for an analysis by a CERN user.

It is possible to use the * wildcard to specify multiple tags.

For instance:

https://registry.hub.docker.com/atlas/analysisbase:21.2.1*

is a valid image specification, and triggers conversion of all the atlas/analysisbase images whose tags start with 21.2.1, including:

atlas/analysisbase:21.2.10
atlas/analysisbase:21.2.100-20191127
atlas/analysisbase:21.2.15-20180118

But not atlas/analysisbase:21.3.10.

The * wildcard can also be used to specify all the tags of an image, like in this example:

https://registry.hub.docker.com/pyhf/pyhf:*

All the tags of the image pyhf/pyhf that are published on Docker Hub will be published in unpacked.cern.ch.

Updated images and new tags

The unpacked.cern.ch service polls the upstream registries continuously. As soon as a new or modified container image is detected it starts the conversion process.

containerd snapshotter plugin (pre-production)

CernVM-FS integration with containerd is achieved by the cvmfs snapshotter plugin, a specialized component responsible for assembling all the layers of container images into a stacked filesystem that containerd can use. The snapshotter takes as input the list of required layers and outputs a directory containing the final filesystem. It is also responsible to clean-up the output directory when containers using it are stopped.

How to use the CernVM-FS Snapshotter

The CernVM-FS snapshotter runs alongside the containerd service. The snapshotter communicates with containerd via gRPC over a UNIX domain socket. The default socket is /run/containerd-cvmfs-grpc/containerd-cvmfs-grpc.sock. This socket is created automatically by the snapshotter if it does not exist.

The containerd snapshotter is available from http://ecsft.cern.ch/dist/cvmfs/snapshotter/. Packages will be made available in future.

The binary accepts the following command line options:

  • --address: address for the snapshotter’s GRPC server. The default one is /run/containerd-cvmfs-grpc/containerd-cvmfs-grpc.sock

  • --config: path to the configuration file. Creating a configuration file is useful to customize the default values.

  • --log-level: logging level [trace, debug, info, warn, error, fatal, panic]. The default value is info.

  • --root: path to the root directory for this snapshotter. The default one is /var/lib/containerd-cvmfs-grpc.

By default, the repository used to search for the layers is unpacked.cern.ch. The default values can be overwritten in the config.toml file using the --config option. A template config.toml file looks like this:

version = 2

# Source of image layers
repository = "unpacked.cern.ch"
absolute-mountpoint = "/cvmfs/unpacked.cern.ch"

# Ask containerd to use this particular snapshotter
[plugins."io.containerd.grpc.v1.cri".containerd]
    snapshotter = "cvmfs-snapshotter"
    disable_snapshot_annotations = false

# Set the communication endpoint between containerd and the snapshotter
[proxy_plugins]
    [proxy_plugins.cvmfs]
        type = "snapshot"
        address = "/run/containerd-cvmfs-grpc/containerd-cvmfs-grpc.sock"

Note that if only the repository is specified under the key value repository, the mountpoint (under the key value absolute-mountpoint) is by default constructed as /cvmfs/<repo_name>.

podman integration (pre-production)

In order to use images from unpacked.cern.ch with podman, the podman client needs to point to an image store that references the images on /cvmfs. The image store is a directory is a directory with a a certain file structure that provides an index of images and layers. The CernVM-FS container tools by default create a podman image store for published images.

In order to set the image store, edit /etc/containers/storage.conf or ${HOME}/.config/containers/storage.conf like in this example:

[storage]
driver = "overlay"

[storage.options]
additionalimagestores = [ "/cvmfs/unpacked.cern.ch/podmanStore" ]
# mount_program = "/usr/bin/fuse-overlayfs"

[storage.options.overlay]
mount_program = "/usr/bin/fuse-overlayfs"

The configuration can be checked with the podman images command.

Note: the image store in the unpacked.cern.ch repository currently provides access only to test images. This is due to poor performance in the image conversion when the image store is updated. This will be fixed in a future version.