I have a physical host machine with Ubuntu 14.04 running on it. It has 100G disk and 100M network bandwidth. I installed Docker and launched 10 containers. I would like to limit each container to a maximum of 10G disk and 10M network bandwidth.
After going though the official documents and searching on the Internet, I still can't find a way to allocate specified size disk and network bandwidth to a container.
I think this may not be possible in Docker directly, maybe we need to bypass Docker. Does this means we should use something "underlying", such as LXC or Cgroup? Can anyone give some suggestions?
Edit:
@Mbarthelemy, your suggestion seems to work but I still have some questions about disk:
1) Is it possible to allocate other size (such as 20G, 30G etc) to each container? You said it is hardcoded in Docker so it seems impossible.
2) I use the command below to start the Docker daemon and container:
docker -d -s devicemapper
docker run -i -t training/webapp /bin/bash
then I use df -h
to view the disk usage, it gives the following output:
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/mapper/docker-longid 9.8G 276M 9.0G 3% /
/dev/mapper/Chris--vg-root 27G 5.5G 20G 22% /etc/hosts
from the above I think the maximum disk a container can use is still larger than 10G, what do you think
?
question from:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/24391660/limit-disk-size-and-bandwidth-of-a-docker-container 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…