## Type of Change
- [ ] Bug fix
- [x] New feature
- [ ] Breaking change
- [ ] Documentation update
## Motivation and Context
`container` runs each workload in an ephemeral VM, so there's no
built-in way to keep a persistent Linux environment you can log into and
work in. `container machine` adds one.
A container machine is a lightweight, persistent, and integrated Linux
environments that feel like an extension of your Mac, created from
standard OCI images with a familiar UX. The login user matches your host
account with passwordless `sudo`, your home directory is mounted inside
the VM, and each machine keeps its filesystem and runs the image's own
init system (such as`systemd` or `openrc`).
```bash
container machine create alpine:3.22 --name my-machine
container machine run -n my-machine # interactive shell
container machine set -n my-machine cpus=4 memory=8G
```
Subcommands: `create`, `run`, `list` (`ls`), `inspect`, `set`,
`set-default`, `logs`, `stop`, `delete` (`rm`); `m` aliases `machine`.
Docs added to `docs/command-reference.md` (Machine Management) and
`docs/how-to.md` ("Use container machines").
## Testing
- [x] Tested locally
- [x] Added/updated tests
- [x] Added/updated docs
Signed-off-by: Raj Aryan Singh <rajaryan_singh@apple.com>
Co-authored-by: Jaewon Hur <jaewon_hur@apple.com>
Co-authored-by: John Logan <john_logan@apple.com>
Co-authored-by: Michael Crosby <michael_crosby@apple.com>
Co-authored-by: Eric Ernst <eric_ernst@apple.com>
Co-authored-by: Danny Canter <danny_canter@apple.com>
- Closes#1581.
- This adds stop signal support to the cli. The priority is:
1. If an explicit stop signal is passed on the cli use this.
2. If not, check if there is a stop signal in the image config.
3. Finally, use the default (TERM).
Closes#1352
Containerization has had support for a bit, it was just never brought
over here. It's exposed on the CLI via the classic `--cap-add` and
`--cap-drop` UX.
Closes#1225
Add a flag to signify that we'd like to run a minimal init process that
can reap zombie processes. The actual support for this is in the
Containerization library so the plumbing here is very simple.
- Closes#461.
- Extract core types into ContainerResources target.
- Extract ContainerNetworkServiceClient from ContainerNetworkService.
- Relocate sandbox client from ContainerClient to
ContainerSandboxServiceClient.
- Relocate ContainerClient to ContainerAPIServiceClient.
- Common structure from services and clients under Source/Services.
Updated project hierarchy:
```
Sources/CAuditToken - audit token access wrapper
Sources/CLI - CLI executable
Sources/ContainerBuild - builder
Sources/ContainerCommands - CLI command implementations
Sources/ContainerLog - logging helpers
Sources/ContainerPersistence - persistent data and system property helpers
Sources/ContainerPlugin - plugin system
Sources/ContainerResource - resource (container, image, volume, network) types
Sources/ContainerVersion - version helpers
Sources/ContainerXPC - XPC helpers
Sources/CVersion - injected project version
Sources/DNSServer - container DNS resolver
Sources/Helpers - service executables
Sources/Services/*/Client - service clients
Sources/Services/*/Server - service implementations
Sources/SocketForwarder - port forwarding
Sources/TerminalProgress - progress bar
```
## Type of Change
- [ ] Bug fix
- [ ] New feature
- [x] Breaking change
- [ ] Documentation update
## Motivation and Context
The ContainerClient library was a bit of a grab bag. This refactor
applies a more sensible project and library structure for resource data
types, services, and clients.
## Testing
- [x] Tested locally
- [x] Added/updated tests
- [ ] Added/updated docs