7.5 KiB
Conty
This is an easy to use compressed unprivileged Linux container packed into a single executable that works on most Linux distros. It's designed to be as simple and user-friendly as possible. You can use it to run any applications, including games (Vulkan and OpenGL).
Besides, Conty supports true filesystem sandboxing, so you can even use it to isolate applications.
Features
- A single executable - download (or create) and run, nothing else is required.
- Root rights are not required.
- Compressed (with squashfs or dwarfs), so it takes much less disk space than uncompressed containers and provides faster file system access.
- Contains many libraries and packages so it can run almost everything. And you don't need to install anything on your main (host) system. You can even run 32-bit applications on pure 64-bit systems.
- Based on Arch Linux, contains latest software (including latest videodrivers).
- Almost completely seamless experience. All applications that you run with Conty read and store their configs in your HOME directory as if you weren't using the container at all.
- No performance overhead. Since it's just a container, there is almost no overhead, thus all applications will run at full speed.
- Supports Xorg, Wayland and XWayland.
- Supports filesystem sandboxing (thanks to bubblewrap).
Requirements
The only requirements are bash, fuse2 (or fuse3), tar, gzip and coreutils. And your /tmp directory should allow files execution (which it does by default on most distros).
Your Linux kernel must be at least version 4.4 and should support unprivileged user namespaces. On some Linux distros this feature is disabled by default and can be enabled with sysfs:
sysctl kernel.unprivileged_userns_clone=1
Even if unprivileged user namespaces are not supported by your kernel, you can still use Conty if you have bwrap with SUID bit installed on your system, in this case just tell Conty to use system-wide utils instead of the builtin ones.
export USE_SYS_UTILS=1
./conty.sh command command_arguments
Usage
Either download a ready-to-use release from the releases page or create your own (the instructions are below). Make it executable before run.
chmod +x conty.sh
./conty.sh command command_arguments
Conty contains Steam, Lutris, PlayOnLinux, Wine-Staging-TkG and many more.
./conty.sh steam
./conty.sh lutris
./conty.sh playonlinux
./conty.sh wine app.exe
It has a builtin file manager (pcmanfm):
./conty.sh pcmanfm
Want to check if graphics acceleration works (OpenGL and Vulkan)? Run glxinfo, glxgears, vulkaninfo and vkcube:
./conty.sh glxinfo -B
./conty.sh glxgears
./conty.sh vulkaninfo
./conty.sh vkcube
You can even use Conty for compilation:
./conty.sh gcc src.c
./conty.sh git clone https://something.git
cd something && ./conty.sh ./configure
./conty.sh make
There are many more integrated programs. You can list all of them with:
./conty.sh ls /usr/bin
It is also possible to run binaries from your storage. For example, if you want to run an application that resides on your HOME, run something like:
./conty.sh /home/username/SomeApplication/binaryfile
There are some other features, see the internal help for more information.
./conty.sh --help
Sandbox
Conty uses bubblewrap and thus supports filesystem sandboxing. By default it's disabled and almost all directories on your system are available for the container.
Here are the environment variables that you can use to control the sandbox:
- SANDBOX - enables the sandboxing feature itself. Isolates all directories, creates a fake temporary home directory (in RAM), which is destroyed after closing the container.
- DISABLE_NET - completely disables internet access.
- HOME_DIR - sets a custom home directory. If you set this, HOME inside the container will still appear as /home/username, but actually a custom directory will be used for it.
- BIND - list of files/directories (separated by space) to bind to the container. You can use this variable to allow access to any files or directories.
Example:
export SANDBOX=1
export BIND="/home/username/.steam /home/username/.local/share/Steam"
./conty.sh steam
Another example:
mkdir "/home/username/custom_home_dir"
export DISABLE_NET=1
export SANDBOX=1
export HOME_DIR="/home/username/custom_home_dir"
./conty.sh lutris
If you just want a sandboxing functionality but don't need a container with a full-size Linux distro inside (which is what Conty mainly is), i recommend to take a look directly at these projects: bubblewrap and firejail. Sandboxing is a good additional feature of Conty, but is not its main purpose.
Known issues
Nvidia users will experience graphics acceleration problems if their Nvidia kernel module version mismatches the version of the Nvidia libraries inside Conty.
For example, if the version of your Nvidia kernel module is 460.56 and the libraries inside the container are from 460.67 version, then graphics acceleration will not work.
There is an experimental solution for this problem that can be enabled with the NVIDIA_FIX variable. I don't have a Nvidia GPU to test this function properly, so it might or might not work.
export NVIDIA_FIX=1
./conty.sh glxgears
How to update
There are three main ways to update Conty and get the latest packages, use whichever works best for you.
- First of all, you can simply download latest release from the releases page, i usually upload a new release every two weeks.
- You can use the self-update feature (
./conty.sh -u
) integrated into Conty, it will update all integrated packages and will rebuild the squashfs/dwarfs image. Read the internal help for more information about it. - You can manually create a Conty executable with latest packages inside, read the "How to create your own Conty executables" section below.
How to create your own Conty executables
If you want to create Arch-based container, use the create-arch-bootstrap.sh script, it will download latest Arch Linux bootstrap and will install latest packages into it. If you want to use any other distro, then you need to manually obtain it from somewhere. Root rights are required for this step, because chroot is used here.
./create-arch-bootstrap.sh
You can edit the script if you want to include different set of packages inside the container.
When distro is obtained, use the create-conty.sh script to create a squashfs (or dwarfs) image and pack everything needed into a single executable.
./create-conty.sh
By default it uses the lz4 algorithm for the squashfs compression, but you can edit it and choose zstd to get better compression ratio (keep in mind though that your squashfs-tools should support zstd for that to work).
Done!
For the sake of convenience, there are compiled binaries (utils.tar.gz) of bwrap, squashfuse and dwarfs and their dependencies uploaded in this repo, create-conty.sh uses them by default. However, you can easily compile your own binaries by using the create-utils.sh, it will compile bwrap, squashfuse and dwarfs and will create utils.tar.gz. If you are going to use your own utils.tar.gz, make sure to set the correct size for it in the conty-start.sh.