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How to Use systemd-nspawn for Lightweight Linux Containers

·181 words·1 min·
linux

Are you tired of cluttering your OS with unnecessary dependencies and dev tools for side projects that you might only use once? Do you want a simple way to keep all your project assets together? If so, you should try using systemd-nspawn to create lightweight Linux containers for your projects.

First, create a minimal Debian install using the debootstrap command:

sudo debootstrap stable `pwd`/os/

or (in my particular use case, I’m working with Debian unstable)

sudo debootstrap unstable `pwd`/os/

This will create a container that is only 240 megabytes in size. Next, start the container using the following command:

sudo systemd-nspawn -D `pwd`/os -M MACHINENAME

Once the container is started, you can set up an account by running the following commands:

# set up account 
useradd -m user
passwd user

To set up software, run the following commands:

# this may be necessary on debian stable
apt install ca-certificates 
# set up software 
apt update
apt install nano vim curl # etc

With these simple steps, you can easily create lightweight Linux containers for your development and experimentation projects using systemd-nspawn.

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