A client for communicating with a local or remote instance of linux containers. The interface is object-oriented, simple and uniform. Unrestrictive with an open MIT license.
$ npm install --save node-lxd
The following example connects to the local LXC instance and launches a new container.
var lxd = require("node-lxd");
var client = lxd();
client.create("myContainer", "ubuntu", function(err, container) {
container.start(function(err) {
if (!err)
console.log("Started " + container.name());
});
});
The following example uses an express application to allow users to create containers and execute commands.
// requires
var express = require("express");
var lxd = require("node-lxd");
var client = lxd();
var app = express();
var containers = {};
app.post("/create", function(req, res) {
client.launch(req.query.name, function(err, container) {
if (err) res.json({success: false, message: err.getMessage()});
else {
containers[req.query.name] = container;
res.json({success: true, message: "Container launched"});
}
});
});
app.post("/run", function(req, res) {
if (!containers.hasOwnProperty(req.query.name)) {
res.json({success: false, message: "Container does not exist"});
return;
}
containers[req.query.name].run(req.query.cmd.split(" "), function(err, stdOut, stdErr) {
if (err) res.json({success: false, message: err.getMessage()});
else if (stdErr.length > 0) res.json({success: false, message: stdErr});
else {
res.json({success: true, message: stdOut});
}
});
});
app.listen(3000, function(err) {
if (!err)
console.log("listening on port 3000");
});
The client class is documented here.
The container class is documented here.
The process class is documented here.