Persistent Linux 'jails' on TrueNAS SCALE to install software (docker-compose, portainer, podman, etc.) with full access to all files via bind mounts. Without modifying the host OS at all thanks to systemd-nspawn!
USING THIS SCRIPT IS AT YOUR OWN RISK! IT COMES WITHOUT WARRANTY AND IS NOT SUPPORTED BY IXSYSTEMS.
The systemd-container package may be removed from a future release of TrueNAS SCALE without warning (unless it gets integrated). If that happens, you may be unable to start jails create with jlmkr.py
. The jail itself and the files within it will not be lost, but in order to start your jail you'd have to reinstall systemd-container, roll back to the previous release or migrate to LXC if iXsystems includes that. Since systemd-container comes by default with Debian on which SCALE is built, I don't think it will be removed. But there's no guarantee!
THIS SCRIPT NEEDS MORE COMMUNITY TESTING BEFORE ITS FIRST 1.0.0 RELEASE.
TrueNAS SCALE already has everything onboard to create persistent Linux 'jails' with systemd-nspawn. This script helps with the following:
- Setting up the jail so it won't be lost when you update SCALE
- Choosing a distro (Debian 11 strongly recommended, but Ubuntu, Arch Linux or Rocky Linux seem good choices too)
- Optional: configuring the jail so you can run Docker inside it
- Optional: GPU passthrough (including nvidia GPU with the drivers bind mounted from the host)
- Starting the jail with your config applied
Create a new dataset called jailmaker
with the default settings (from TrueNAS web interface). Then login as the root user and download jlmkr.py
.
cd /mnt/mypool/jailmaker
curl --location --remote-name https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Jip-Hop/jailmaker/main/jlmkr.py
chmod +x jlmkr.py
The jlmkr.py
script (and the jails + config it creates) are now stored on the jailmaker
dataset and will survive updates of TrueNAS SCALE.
Creating a jail is interactive. You'll be presented with questions which guide you through the process.
./jlmkr.py create myjail
After answering a few questions you should have your first jail up and running!
In order to start a jail automatically after TrueNAS boots, run /mnt/mypool/jailmaker/jlmkr.py start myjail
as Post Init Script with Type Command
from the TrueNAS web interface.
./jlmkr.py start myjail
./jlmkr.py list
machinectl stop myjail
./jlmkr.py delete myjail
For additional commands we can use machinectl
, systemctl
and journalctl
directly. The jlmkr.py
script does not play a role here.
machinectl shell myjail
systemctl status jlmkr-myjail
journalctl -u jlmkr-myjail
If you want to run a command inside a jail, for example from a shell script or a CRON job, you may use systemd-run
with the --machine
flag. The example below runs the env
command inside the jail.
systemd-run --machine myjail --quiet --pipe --wait --collect --service-type=exec env
Once you've created a jail, it will exist in a directory inside the jails
dir next to jlmkr.py
. For example ./jails/myjail
if you've named your jail myjail
. You may edit the jail configuration file. You'll have to stop the jail and start it again with jlmkr.py
for these changes to take effect.
By default the jail will have full access to the host network. No further setup is required. You may download and install additional packages inside the jail. Note that some ports are already occupied by TrueNAS SCALE (e.g. 443 for the web interface), so your jail can't listen on these ports. This is inconvenient if you want to host some services (e.g. traefik) inside the jail. To workaround this issue when using host networking, you may disable DHCP and add several static IP addresses (Aliases) through the TrueNAS web interface. If you setup the TrueNAS web interface to only listen on one of these IP addresses, the ports on the remaining IP addresses remain available for the jail to listen on.
See Advanced Networking for more.
Jailmaker won't install Docker for you, but it can setup the jail with the capabilities required to run docker. You can manually install Docker inside the jail using the official installation guide or use convenience script.
TODO: write comparison between systemd-nspawn (without jailmaker), LXC, VMs, Docker (on the host).
The rootfs image jlmkr.py
downloads comes from the Linux Containers Image server. These images are made for LXC. We can use them with systemd-nspawn too, although not all of them work properly. For example, the alpine
image doesn't work well. If you stick with common systemd based distros (Debian, Ubuntu, Arch Linux...) you should be fine.