According to the MySQL manual, this is a perfectly legal way of
shutting down the server. The shutdown logs also looks fine:
systemd[1]: Stopping MySQL Server...
mysqld[5114]: 140319 8:36:12 [Note] /nix/store/sc26mz82k97mbpx3d1abzn3rrbd155ws-mariadb-10.0.8/bin/mysqld: Normal shutdown
mysqld[5114]: 140319 8:36:12 [Note] Event Scheduler: Purging the queue. 0 events
mysqld[5114]: 140319 8:36:12 [Note] InnoDB: FTS optimize thread exiting.
mysqld[5114]: 140319 8:36:12 [Note] InnoDB: Starting shutdown...
mysqld[5114]: 140319 8:36:14 [Note] InnoDB: Shutdown completed; log sequence number 1619078
mysqld[5114]: 140319 8:36:14 [Note] /nix/store/sc26mz82k97mbpx3d1abzn3rrbd155ws-mariadb-10.0.8/bin/mysqld: Shutdown complete
systemd[1]: Stopped MySQL Server.
This introduces the following changes:
- hetznerctl: Fix UnicodeEncodeError in server product name.
- Support rebooting of vServers.
- Server now has a new attribute is_vserver.
- Add a README.md with examples.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This reverts commit 4e6eae45ee8c2357acf3dc7e3caba9d86c2edeac. It
breaks running the test driver interactively (in that it causes all
VMs to be started immediately, which is not always what you wnat).
For example, the following sets up a container named ‘foo’. The
container will have a single network interface eth0, with IP address
10.231.136.2. The host will have an interface c-foo with IP address
10.231.136.1.
systemd.containers.foo =
{ privateNetwork = true;
hostAddress = "10.231.136.1";
localAddress = "10.231.136.2";
config =
{ services.openssh.enable = true; };
};
With ‘privateNetwork = true’, the container has the CAP_NET_ADMIN
capability, allowing it to do arbitrary network configuration, such as
setting up firewall rules. This is secure because it cannot touch the
interfaces of the host.
The helper program ‘run-in-netns’ is needed at the moment because ‘ip
netns exec’ doesn't quite do the right thing (it remounts /sys without
bind-mounting the original /sys/fs/cgroups).