.TH ezjail\-admin 1 .SH NAME ezjail-admin \- Administrate ezjail .SH SYNOPSIS .T .B ezjail-admin create [-f flavour] [-r jailroot] [-s imagesize] [-ibx] [-c bde|eli] [-C attachargs] .I hostname jailip .T .B ezjail-admin delete [-w] .I hostname .T .B ezjail-admin list .T .B ezjail-admin config [-r run|norun] [-i attach|detach] .I jailname .T .B ezjail-admin install [-mps] [-h host] [-r release] .T .B ezjail-admin update [-s sourcetree] [-i] [-pP] .SH DESCRIPTION The .B ezjail-admin tool is used to manage jails inside the ezjail scope. It is not used to start or stop ezjails jails. Refer to ezjail(5) for more details. .SH ezjail-admin create copies the template jail to the root of a new jail, whose name and IP address are provided as mandatory parameters. If no jail root is specified via the -r option, it is derived from the jails name. In this case or, if a jail root is given and does not start with a '/', it is interpreted relative to ezjails root dir (default: .I /usr/jails ). If a specified jail root lies outside ezjail root dir, a soft link is created inside this root dir pointing to the newly created jails location. The -i and the -c option both require a size passed via the -s option and create a file based jail image, gbde or geli encrypted for the -c case. The image file is named as the jail root suffixed with .I .img . The -x (jail exists) option indicates, that an ezjail already exists at the jail root. .B In this case nothing is copied. ezjail only updates its config. This is useful in situations where you just want to alter some of a jail properties and called ezjail-admin delete without the -w option before. However, sanity checks are being performed. The script creates an entry in its config and a .I /etc/fstab.hostname file allowing the jail to be brought up after next reboot (or) via the EZJAIL_PREFIX/etc/rc.d/ezjail.sh script. The newly created jail can perform some initializiation actions, if the -f .I flavour option is given, where .I flavour is a directory tree under ezjails root dir (default: .I /usr/jails/flavours ). See section .B FLAVOURS below for more details. Options for newly created jails are read from .B ezjail.conf, refer to ezjail.conf(5) for more information. .SH ezjail-admin delete removes a jail from ezjails config and the corresponding .I /etc/fstab.hostname file, thus preventing the jail from being brought up on next reboot. If the -w (wipe) option is given, the directory pointed to by the jail root entry is removed as well as the soft link in ezjails root dir. .SH ezjail-admin list lists all jails inside ezjails scope. They are sorted by the order they start up, as defined by rcorder. The list format is straight forward. A status flag consisting of 2 or 3 letters, the first meaning .B (D)irectory based, .B (I)mage based, .B (B)de crypto image based, .B (E)li crypto image based. The second one meaning .B (R)unning , .B (A)ttached but not running, .B (S)topped . An optional .B (N)orun stands for disabled jails (see .I ezjail-admin config ). Rest of the row is follow by jails jid (if available), its IP, hostname and root directory. .SH ezjail-admin config manages existing specific ezjails. You can prevent an ezjail from being run at system start by the -r norun option and reenable it by -r run. You can attach image jails for administrative purposes by the -i attach option and detach them with -i detach. It is not possible to run or delete an attached jail. .SH ezjail-admin install fetches everything needed to setup a base jail from an FTP server and installs it. Default location for ezjails base jail is .I /usr/jails , so be sure you have enough space there (a FreeBSD base without man pages, sources and ports is around 120MB). The -m and -s option will fetch and install man pages (ca. 10MB) and sources packages (ca. 450MB) respectively. The -p option invokes the portsnap utility to fetch and extract a FreeBSD ports tree (ca. 475MB). Default OS version is, whatever uname -r returns. If this does not match "*-RELEASE", you will be prompted for a better guess. (Normally ftp-servers do not provide release candidates or CURRENT builds). You can use the -r option to specify a release from command line. Default host to fetch packages from is ftp.freebsd.org, you may want to change this via the -h option or in ezjail.conf(5). If the specified location begins with file://, your local copy of the release is used. That way you can do some modifications to install.sh scripts before executing them. You can later update your world from CVS or update ports by .U ezjail-admin update or rerun this subcommand with another OS version. .SH ezjail-admin update creates or update ezjails basejail. Depending on the parameters given it will install a FreeBSD system from a source tree whose location is either provided in the .B ezjail.conf config file or via the -s option. If the -p or -P options are given, the base jail also is given a copy of FreeBSDs ports tree, which is in turn linked into all newly created ezjails. The portsnap utility is invoked to do the actual work. If the -P option is given, .B only the ports tree will be updated, this can be done, while jails are running. If the -i (install only) option is given, .B ezjail-admin update only performes a .I make installworld, otherwise .I make world is invoked. .SH NOTES .B ezjail-admin update uses a temporary directory to install its world to, thus leaving intact all installed libraries, if a base jail already exists. When using the .B ezjail-admin update option, be careful to use the same FreeBSD source tree used to build the host systems world, or at least its kernel. Combining a make world in the host system with .B ezjail-admin update is considered a good idea. When a ports tree exists in base jail, a make.conf containing reasonable values for having ports in jails is created in the template jail. .SH FLAVOURS .B ezjail-admin provides an easy way to create many jails with similar or identical properties. A sample flavour config directory resides under .I EZJAIL_PREFIX/share/examples/ezjail/default/. Some typical Jail initialization actions are demonstrated and you are encouraged to use it as a template for your flavours. If a flavour is selected on jail creation, the flavour root is being copied to the new Jails root, mostly containing an .I /ezjail.flavour . If the Jail starts up for the first time this script is run. In its default form it will create some groups and users, change the ownership of some files and installs all packages residing under /pkg. It allows you to add some post install actions. .SH EXAMPLES ezjail-admin update -p .br ezjail-admin create -f httpd -r /jails/web12 web12.test.org 10.0.1.12 .br EZJAIL_PREFIX/etc/rc.d/ezjail.sh start web12.test.org .br EZJAIL_PREFIX/etc/rc.d/ezjail.sh stop ns.test.org .br ezjail-admin delete ns.test.org .br ezjail-admin create -x -r /jails/ns ns.test.org 10.0.2.1 .SH BUGS Due to the way ezjail handles jail config files it is not possible to create multiple jails if their names are identical when piped through .B tr -C [:alnum:] _ Sure to be others. .SH FILES .T4 EZJAIL_PREFIX/etc/ezjail.conf .br EZJAIL_PREFIX/etc/rc.d/ezjail.sh .br EZJAIL_PREFIX/share/examples/ezjail/ .SH "SEE ALSO" ezjail(5), ezjail.conf(5), jail(8), devfs(5), fdescfs(5), procfs(5), pw(8) .SH AUTHOR Dirk Engling