User Tools

Site Tools


about:system

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revision Previous revision
Next revision
Previous revision
about:system [2016/06/14 19:21]
nuxwin
about:system [2017/08/22 17:16] (current)
nuxwin
Line 1: Line 1:
 ====== System requirements ====== ====== System requirements ======
  
-  * Debianhttps://github.com/i-MSCP/imscp/blob/1.3.x/docs/Debian/INSTALL.md#1-requirements +  * 1 GHz or faster 32 bits (x86) or 64 bits (x64) processor 
-  * Ubuntu: https://github.com/i-MSCP/imscp/blob/1.3.x/docs/Ubuntu/INSTALL.md#1-requirements+  * 1 Gio memory (minimum) - For heavily loaded servers or high flow is recommended at least 8 Gio 
 +  * 1 Gio of available hard disk space for i-MSCP and managed services, excluding user data 
 +  * Internet access (at least 100 Mbits/s recommended) 
 +  * A Linux kernel >= 2.6.26 
 +  * A file system supporting extended attributes such as ext2, ext3, ext4 or reiserfs***** 
 +  * Appropriate privileges to create devices (**CAP_MKNOD** capability) 
 +  * Appropriate privileges to mount, unmount and remount filesystems (**CAP_SYS_ADMIN** capability) 
 + 
 +===== Reiserfs users ===== 
 + 
 +In order, to use the reiserfs file system with i-MSCP, you must follow these steps: 
 + 
 +Edit your **/​etc/​fstab** file to add the **attrs** option for your device (e.g. device containing the /var partition). For 
 +instance: 
 +    UUID=74699091-3ab8-43f2-bdd5-d1d898ab50fd ​    reiserfs notail ​         0    1 
 +should be updated to: 
 +    UUID=74699091-3ab8-43f2-bdd5-d1d898ab50fd ​    reiserfs notail,​attrs ​   0    1 
 +Once you did that, you can remount your deviceFor instance: 
 +    mount -o remount ​/dev/​disk/​by-uuid/​74699091-3ab8-43f2-bdd5-d1d898ab50fd 
 +If needed, you can find the uuid of your device, with the following command: 
 +    blkid <​device>​ 
 +where **<​device>​** must be replaced by your device path such as **/​dev/​sda1** 
 + 
 +===== LXC containers ===== 
 + 
 +If you want install ​i-MSCP ​inside a LXC container, the following conditions have to be met: 
 + 
 +  * You must have the **CAP_MKNOD** capability inside the container. Thus, you must ensure that **mknod** is not in the list of dropped capabilities 
 +  * You must have the **CAP_SYS_ADMIN** capability inside the container (required to mount filesystems). Thus, you must ensure that `sys_admin` is not in the list of dropped capabilities. 
 +  * You must allow the creation of devices inside the container by white-listing them. Easy solution is to add **lxc.cgroup.devices.allow = a *:* rwm** in LXC container configuration file. 
 +  * If you use **Apparmor**,​ you must allow **mount**,​**umount** and **remount** operations inside your container by modifying the default apparmor profile **/etc/apparmor.d/lxc/​lxc-default** or by creating a specific apparmor profile for the container. 
 + 
 +Note that these operations must be done on the host, not in the container. 
 + 
 +**See also:** 
 +  * https://i-mscp.net/index.php/​Thread/​14039-i-MSCP-inside-a-LXC-container-Managed-by-Proxmox-4-x 
 +  * https://​linuxcontainers.org/​fr/​lxc/​manpages/​man5/​lxc.container.conf.5.html 
 +  * https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/serverguide/lxc.html#​lxc-apparmor 
 +  * http://wiki.apparmor.net/index.php/AppArmor_Core_Policy_Reference#​Mount_rules_.28AppArmor_2.8_and_later.29 
 + 
 +===== OpenVZ containers (Proxmox and Virtuozzo) ===== 
 + 
 +You could have to increase the **fs.ve-mount-nr** limit, else, an error such as **mount: Cannot allocate memory** could be threw by CageFS. To avoid this problem you must: 
 + 
 +  - Increase the limit by adding an entry such as **fs.ve-mount-nr = 4096** to your **/etc/sysctl.conf** file 
 +  ​Make the new limit effective by executing the **sysctl -p** command 
 + 
 +Note that these operations must be done on the host, not in the container.
/var/www/virtual/i-mscp.net/wiki/htdocs/data/attic/about/system.1465932098.txt.gz · Last modified: 2016/06/14 19:21 by nuxwin