lxc 2.0.0~rc9-0ubuntu1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

lxc (2.0.0~rc9-0ubuntu1) xenial; urgency=medium

  * New upstream release (2.0.0~rc9)
    - cgfsng: Fix bad readline length.
    - cgfsng: Workaround issue with small size reallocs on i386.
    - cgfsng: Make sure a cgroup does not already exist.

 -- Stéphane Graber <email address hidden>  Wed, 09 Mar 2016 03:06:27 -0500

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Uploaded by:
Stéphane Graber
Uploaded to:
Xenial
Original maintainer:
Ubuntu Developers
Architectures:
linux-any all
Section:
admin
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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lxc_2.0.0~rc9-0ubuntu1.debian.tar.xz 99.3 KiB 64cf861e15d956bbb6a0cc161fdedba2872c414848e76ade5eb7e3567478a71f
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Binary packages built by this source

liblxc1: Linux Containers userspace tools (library)

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package contains the libraries.

liblxc1-dbgsym: debug symbols for package liblxc1

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package contains the libraries.

lua-lxc: Linux Containers userspace tools (Lua bindings)

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package contains the Lua bindings.

lua-lxc-dbgsym: debug symbols for package lua-lxc

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package contains the Lua bindings.

lxc: Transitional package for lxc1

 This is a transitional dummy package. It can safely be removed.
 .
 The currently recommended LXC experience is available as lxc2 and is
 provided by LXD using the LXC backend.

lxc-common: Linux Containers userspace tools (common tools)

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package contains a few binaries and security profiles required by
 all liblxc1 users.

lxc-common-dbgsym: debug symbols for package lxc-common

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package contains a few binaries and security profiles required by
 all liblxc1 users.

lxc-dev: Linux Containers userspace tools (development)

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package contains the development files.

lxc-templates: Linux Containers userspace tools (templates)

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package contains the templates.

lxc-templates-dbgsym: debug symbols for package lxc-templates

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package contains the templates.

lxc-tests: Linux Containers userspace tools (test binaries)

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package contains the test binaries. Those binaries are primarily
 used for autopkgtest and by some developers. They are not meant to be
 installed on regular user systems.

lxc-tests-dbgsym: debug symbols for package lxc-tests

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package contains the test binaries. Those binaries are primarily
 used for autopkgtest and by some developers. They are not meant to be
 installed on regular user systems.

lxc1: Linux Containers userspace tools

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package provides the lxc-* tools, which can be used to start a single
 daemon in a container, or to boot an entire "containerized" system, and to
 manage and debug your containers.

lxc1-dbgsym: debug symbols for package lxc1

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package provides the lxc-* tools, which can be used to start a single
 daemon in a container, or to boot an entire "containerized" system, and to
 manage and debug your containers.

python3-lxc: Linux Containers userspace tools (Python 3.x bindings)

 Containers are insulated areas inside a system, which have their own namespace
 for filesystem, network, PID, IPC, CPU and memory allocation and which can be
 created using the Control Group and Namespace features included in the Linux
 kernel.
 .
 This package contains the Python 3.x bindings.