UPD: Two years after creating this project I clearly can see some interest in building VM images from containers and/or Dockerfiles. If you’re aware of the real use of the docker-to-linux project, please drop me a message and share your experience. It may help me to develop a second generation of this tool covering real-world scenarios with a more user-friendly UX. Thanks!
There is no real goal behind this project. Just out of my curiosity what if:
- launch a base Linux container (debian, alpine, etc)
- pull in Linux kernel & init system (systemd, OpenRC, etc)
- dump container's filesystem to a disk image
- install bootloader (syslinux) to this image...
Then it should be probably possible to launch a real virtual machine with such an image!
Try it out:
# 1. Build the image.
# Depending on your setup, you may need to preceed `make` with `sudo`.
make debian # or ubuntu, or alpine
# 2. Run it! Use username `root` and password `root` to log in.
qemu-system-x86_64 -drive file=debian.img,index=0,media=disk,format=raw -m 4096
# 2. Alternate
qemu-system-x86_64 -hda debian.qcow2 -m 512
# 3. Clean up when you are done.
make clean
It works!
Check out Makefile
for more details or read my article on iximiuz.com.
- Real quick build a bootable Linux image with a single command!
- 3 target distributives: Ubuntu 20.04, Debian Bullseye, Alpine 3.13.5
- Build from macOS (including M1 chips) or Linux hosts
-
Q: I'm getting an error about "read-only filesystem". How can I make it writable?
A: It's Linux default behaviour to mount the / filesystem as read-only. You can always remount it with
mount -o remount,rw /
. -
Q: How can I access network from the VM / How can I SSH into the VM?
A: Networking is not configured at the moment. If you want to configure it yourself, search for TUN/TAP/bridge devices. Don't forget to open a PR if you come up with a working solution.
- Start using ext4 instead of ext3.
- Fix - Ubuntu 20.04 stopped working because of the changed path to vmlinuz and initrd files.
- Fix macOS support #10 (thanks to @xavigonzalvo for reporting and suggesting the fix)
- move
losetup
call from Makefile to the builder container - explicitly select amd64 architecture in target distr Dockerfiles to support builds on ARM hosts (aka M1)
- move
- Upgrade target distr versions
- Ubuntu 18.04 -> 20.04
- Debian Stretch -> Bullseye
- Alpine 3.9.4 -> 3.13.5
- Improve Alpine support #7 (creds @monperrus)
- Fix loopback device lookup #3 (creds @christau)
- Initial release
- add basic networking support
- make filesystem writable after boot
- support different image formats (e.g. VirtualBox VDI)
- support different target architectures (e.g. ARM)