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An operating system designed for hosting containers

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Bottlerocket OS

Welcome to Bottlerocket!

Bottlerocket is a free and open-source Linux-based operating system meant for hosting containers.

If you’re ready to jump right in, read one of our setup guides for running Bottlerocket in Amazon EKS, Amazon ECS, or VMware.

Bottlerocket focuses on security and maintainability, providing a reliable, consistent, and safe platform for container-based workloads. This is a reflection of what we've learned building operating systems and services at Amazon. You can read more about what drives us in our charter.

The base operating system has just what you need to run containers reliably, and is built with standard open-source components. Bottlerocket-specific additions focus on reliable updates and on the API. Instead of making configuration changes manually, you can change settings with an API call, and these changes are automatically migrated through updates.

Some notable features include:

Contact us

If you find a security issue, please contact our security team rather than opening an issue.

If you're interested in contributing, thank you! Please see our contributor's guide.

We use GitHub issues to track other bug reports and feature requests. You can look at existing issues to see whether your concern is already known.

If not, you can select from a few templates and get some guidance on the type of information that would be most helpful. Contact us with a new issue here.

If you just have questions about Bottlerocket, please feel free to start or join a discussion.

We don't have other communication channels set up quite yet, but don't worry about making an issue or a discussion thread! You can let us know about things that seem difficult, or even ways you might like to help.

Variants

To start, we're focusing on the use of Bottlerocket as a host OS in AWS EKS Kubernetes clusters and Amazon ECS clusters. We’re excited to get early feedback and to continue working on more use cases!

Bottlerocket is architected such that different cloud environments and container orchestrators can be supported in the future. A build of Bottlerocket that supports different features or integration characteristics is known as a 'variant'. The artifacts of a build will include the architecture and variant name. For example, an x86_64 build of the aws-k8s-1.21 variant will produce an image named bottlerocket-aws-k8s-1.21-x86_64-<version>-<commit>.img.

The following variants support EKS, as described above:

  • aws-k8s-1.19
  • aws-k8s-1.20
  • aws-k8s-1.21
  • aws-k8s-1.21-nvidia

The following variant supports ECS:

  • aws-ecs-1

We also have variants that are designed to be Kubernetes worker nodes in VMware:

  • vmware-k8s-1.20
  • vmware-k8s-1.21
  • vmware-k8s-1.22

The following variants are no longer supported.:

  • aws-k8s-1.15
  • aws-k8s-1.16
  • aws-k8s-1.17
  • aws-k8s-1.18

We recommend users replace nodes running these variants with the latest variant compatible with their cluster.

Architectures

Our supported architectures include x86_64 and aarch64 (written as arm64 in some contexts).

Setup

🚶 🏃

Bottlerocket is best used with a container orchestrator. To get started with Kubernetes in Amazon EKS, please see QUICKSTART-EKS. To get started with Kubernetes in VMware, please see QUICKSTART-VMWARE. To get started with Amazon ECS, please see QUICKSTART-ECS. These guides describe:

  • how to set up a cluster with the orchestrator, so your Bottlerocket instance can run containers
  • how to launch a Bottlerocket instance in EC2 or VMware

To build your own Bottlerocket images, please see BUILDING. It describes:

  • how to build an image
  • how to register an EC2 AMI from an image

To publish your built Bottlerocket images, please see PUBLISHING. It describes:

  • how to make TUF repos including your image
  • how to copy your AMI across regions
  • how to mark your AMIs public or grant access to specific accounts
  • how to make your AMIs discoverable using SSM parameters

Exploration

To improve security, there's no SSH server in a Bottlerocket image, and not even a shell.

Don't panic!

There are a couple out-of-band access methods you can use to explore Bottlerocket like you would a typical Linux system. Either option will give you a shell within Bottlerocket. From there, you can change settings, manually update Bottlerocket, debug problems, and generally explore.

Note: These methods require that your instance has permission to access the ECR repository where these containers live; the appropriate policy to add to your instance's IAM role is AmazonEC2ContainerRegistryReadOnly.

Control container

Bottlerocket has a "control" container, enabled by default, that runs outside of the orchestrator in a separate instance of containerd. This container runs the AWS SSM agent that lets you run commands, or start shell sessions, on Bottlerocket instances in EC2. (You can easily replace this control container with your own just by changing the URI; see Settings.)

In AWS, you need to give your instance the SSM role for this to work; see the setup guide. Outside of AWS, you can use AWS Systems Manager for hybrid environments. There's more detail about hybrid environments in the control container documentation.

Once the instance is started, you can start a session:

  • Go to AWS SSM's Session Manager
  • Select "Start session" and choose your Bottlerocket instance
  • Select "Start session" again to get a shell

If you prefer a command-line tool, you can start a session with a recent AWS CLI and the session-manager-plugin. Then you'd be able to start a session using only your instance ID, like this:

aws ssm start-session --target INSTANCE_ID

With the default control container, you can make API calls to configure and manage your Bottlerocket host. To do even more, read the next section about the admin container. You can access the admin container from the control container like this:

enter-admin-container

Admin container

Bottlerocket has an administrative container, disabled by default, that runs outside of the orchestrator in a separate instance of containerd. This container has an SSH server that lets you log in as ec2-user using your EC2-registered SSH key. Outside of AWS, you can pass in your own SSH keys. (You can easily replace this admin container with your own just by changing the URI; see Settings.

To enable the container, you can change the setting in user data when starting Bottlerocket, for example EC2 instance user data:

[settings.host-containers.admin]
enabled = true

If Bottlerocket is already running, you can enable the admin container from the default control container like this:

enable-admin-container

Or you can start an interactive session immediately like this:

enter-admin-container

If you're using a custom control container, or want to make the API calls directly, you can enable the admin container like this instead:

apiclient set host-containers.admin.enabled=true

Once you've enabled the admin container, you can either access it through SSH or execute commands from the control container like this:

apiclient exec admin bash

Once you're in the admin container, you can run sheltie to get a full root shell in the Bottlerocket host. Be careful; while you can inspect and change even more as root, Bottlerocket's filesystem and dm-verity setup will prevent most changes from persisting over a restart - see Security.

Updates

Rather than a package manager that updates individual pieces of software, Bottlerocket downloads a full filesystem image and reboots into it. It can automatically roll back if boot failures occur, and workload failures can trigger manual rollbacks.

The update process uses images secured by TUF. For more details, see the update system documentation.

Update methods

There are several ways of updating your Bottlerocket hosts. We provide tools for automatically updating hosts, as well as an API for direct control of updates.

Automated updates

For EKS variants of Bottlerocket, we recommend using the Bottlerocket update operator for automated updates.

For the ECS variant of Bottlerocket, we recommend using the Bottlerocket ECS updater for automated updates.

Update API

The Bottlerocket API includes methods for checking and starting system updates. You can read more about the update APIs in our update system documentation.

apiclient knows how to handle those update APIs for you, and you can run it from the control or admin containers.

To see what updates are available:

apiclient update check

If an update is available, it will show up in the chosen_update field. The available_updates field will show the full list of available versions, including older versions, because Bottlerocket supports safely rolling back.

To apply the latest update:

apiclient update apply

The next time you reboot, you'll start up in the new version, and system configuration will be automatically migrated. To reboot right away:

apiclient reboot

If you're confident about updating, the apiclient update apply command has --check and --reboot flags to combine the above actions, so you can accomplish all of the above steps like this:

apiclient update apply --check --reboot

See the apiclient documentation for more details.

Update rollback

The system will automatically roll back if it's unable to boot. If the update is not functional for a given container workload, you can do a manual rollback:

signpost rollback-to-inactive
reboot

This doesn't require any external communication, so it's quicker than apiclient, and it's made to be as reliable as possible.

Settings

Here we'll describe the settings you can configure on your Bottlerocket instance, and how to do it.

(API endpoints are defined in our OpenAPI spec if you want more detail.)

Interacting with settings

Using the API client

You can see the current settings with an API request:

apiclient get settings

This will return all of the current settings in JSON format. For example, here's an abbreviated response:

{"motd":"...", {"kubernetes": ...}}

You can change settings like this:

apiclient set motd="hi there" kubernetes.node-labels.environment=test

You can also use a JSON input mode to help change many related settings at once, and a "raw" mode if you want more control over how the settings are committed and applied to the system. See the apiclient README for details.

Using user data

If you know what settings you want to change when you start your Bottlerocket instance, you can send them in the user data.

In user data, we structure the settings in TOML form to make things a bit simpler. Here's the user data to change the message of the day setting, as we did in the last section:

[settings]
motd = "my own value!"

If your user data is over the size limit of the platform (e.g. 16KiB for EC2) you can compress the contents with gzip. (With aws-cli, you can use --user-data fileb:///path/to/gz-file to pass binary data.)

Description of settings

Here we'll describe each setting you can change.

Note: You can see the default values (for any settings that are not generated at runtime) by looking in the defaults.d directory for a variant, for example aws-ecs-1.

When you're sending settings to the API, or receiving settings from the API, they're in a structured JSON format. This allows modification of any number of keys at once. It also lets us ensure that they fit the definition of the Bottlerocket data model - requests with invalid settings won't even parse correctly, helping ensure safety.

Here, however, we'll use the shortcut "dotted key" syntax for referring to keys. This is used in some API endpoints with less-structured requests or responses. It's also more compact for our needs here.

In this format, "settings.kubernetes.cluster-name" refers to the same key as in the JSON {"settings": {"kubernetes": {"cluster-name": "value"}}}.

Top-level settings

  • settings.motd: This setting is just written out to /etc/motd. It's useful as a way to get familiar with the API! Try changing it.

Kubernetes settings

See the EKS setup guide for much more detail on setting up Bottlerocket and Kubernetes in AWS EKS. For more details about running Bottlerocket as a Kubernetes worker node in VMware, see the VMware setup guide.

The following settings must be specified in order to join a Kubernetes cluster. You should specify them in user data.

  • settings.kubernetes.cluster-certificate: This is the base64-encoded certificate authority of the cluster.
  • settings.kubernetes.api-server: This is the cluster's Kubernetes API endpoint.

For Kubernetes variants in AWS, you must also specify:

  • settings.kubernetes.cluster-name: The cluster name you chose during setup; the setup guide uses "bottlerocket".

For Kubernetes variants in VMware, you must specify:

  • settings.kubernetes.cluster-dns-ip: The IP of the DNS service running in the cluster.
  • settings.kubernetes.bootstrap-token: The token used for TLS bootstrapping.

The following settings can be optionally set to customize the node labels and taints. Remember to quote keys (since they often contain ".") and to quote all values.

  • settings.kubernetes.node-labels: Labels in the form of key, value pairs added when registering the node in the cluster.
  • settings.kubernetes.node-taints: Taints in the form of key, values and effects entries added when registering the node in the cluster.
    • Example user data for setting up labels and taints:
      [settings.kubernetes.node-labels]
      "label1" = "foo"
      "label2" = "bar"
      [settings.kubernetes.node-taints]
      "dedicated" = ["experimental:PreferNoSchedule", "experimental:NoExecute"]
      "special" = ["true:NoSchedule"]
      

The following settings are optional and allow you to further configure your cluster.

  • settings.kubernetes.cluster-domain: The DNS domain for this cluster, allowing all Kubernetes-run containers to search this domain before the host's search domains. Defaults to cluster.local.
  • settings.kubernetes.standalone-mode: Whether to run the kubelet in standalone mode, without connecting to an API server. Defaults to false.
  • settings.kubernetes.cloud-provider: The cloud provider for this cluster. Defaults to aws for AWS variants, and external for other variants.
  • settings.kubernetes.authentication-mode: Which authentication method the kubelet should use to connect to the API server, and for incoming requests. Defaults to aws for AWS variants, and tls for other variants.
  • settings.kubernetes.server-tls-bootstrap: Enables or disables server certificate bootstrap. When enabled, the kubelet will request a certificate from the certificates.k8s.io API. This requires an approver to approve the certificate signing requests (CSR). Defaults to true.
  • settings.kubernetes.bootstrap-token: The token to use for TLS bootstrapping. This is only used with the tls authentication mode, and is otherwise ignored.
  • settings.kubernetes.eviction-hard: The signals and thresholds that trigger pod eviction. Remember to quote signals (since they all contain ".") and to quote all values.
    • Example user data for setting up eviction hard:
      [settings.kubernetes.eviction-hard]
      "memory.available" = "15%"
      
  • settings.kubernetes.allowed-unsafe-sysctls: Enables specified list of unsafe sysctls.
    • Example user data for setting up allowed unsafe sysctls:
      allowed-unsafe-sysctls = ["net.core.somaxconn", "net.ipv4.ip_local_port_range"]
      
  • settings.kubernetes.system-reserved: Resources reserved for system components.
    • Example user data for setting up system reserved:
      [settings.kubernetes.system-reserved]
      cpu = "10m"
      memory = "100Mi"
      ephemeral-storage= "1Gi"
      
  • settings.kubernetes.registry-qps: The registry pull QPS.
  • settings.kubernetes.registry-burst: The maximum size of bursty pulls.
  • settings.kubernetes.event-qps: The maximum event creations per second.
  • settings.kubernetes.event-burst: The maximum size of a burst of event creations.
  • settings.kubernetes.kube-api-qps: The QPS to use while talking with kubernetes apiserver.
  • settings.kubernetes.kube-api-burst: The burst to allow while talking with kubernetes.
  • settings.kubernetes.container-log-max-size: The maximum size of container log file before it is rotated.
  • settings.kubernetes.container-log-max-files: The maximum number of container log files that can be present for a container.
  • settings.kubernetes.cpu-manager-policy: Specifies the CPU manager policy. Possible values are static and none. Defaults to none. If you want to allow pods with certain resource characteristics to be granted increased CPU affinity and exclusivity on the node, you can set this setting to static. You should reboot if you change this setting after startup - try apiclient reboot.
  • settings.kubernetes.cpu-manager-reconcile-period: Specifies the CPU manager reconcile period, which controls how often updated CPU assignments are written to cgroupfs. The value is a duration like 30s for 30 seconds or 1h5m for 1 hour and 5 minutes.
  • settings.kubernetes.topology-manager-policy: Specifies the topology manager policy. Possible values are none, restricted, best-effort, and single-numa-node. Defaults to none.
  • settings.kubernetes.topology-manager-scope: Specifies the topology manager scope. Possible values are container and pod. Defaults to container. If you want to group all containers in a pod to a common set of NUMA nodes, you can set this setting to pod.

You can also optionally specify static pods for your node with the following settings. Static pods can be particularly useful when running in standalone mode.

  • settings.kubernetes.static-pods.<custom identifier>.manifest: A base64-encoded pod manifest.
  • settings.kubernetes.static-pods.<custom identifier>.enabled: Whether the static pod is enabled.

For Kubernetes variants in AWS and VMware, the following are set for you automatically, but you can override them if you know what you're doing! In AWS, pluto sets these based on runtime instance information. In VMware, Bottlerocket uses netdog (for node-ip) or relies on default values.

  • settings.kubernetes.node-ip: The IP address of this node.
  • settings.kubernetes.pod-infra-container-image: The URI of the "pause" container.
  • settings.kubernetes.kube-reserved: Resources reserved for node components.
    • Bottlerocket provides default values for the resources by schnauzer:
      • cpu: in millicores from the total number of vCPUs available on the instance.
      • memory: in mebibytes from the max num of pods on the instance. memory_to_reserve = max_num_pods * 11 + 255.
      • ephemeral-storage: defaults to 1Gi.

For Kubernetes variants in AWS, the following settings are set for you automatically by pluto.

  • settings.kubernetes.max-pods: The maximum number of pods that can be scheduled on this node (limited by number of available IPv4 addresses)
  • settings.kubernetes.cluster-dns-ip: Derived from the EKS Service IP CIDR or the CIDR block of the primary network interface.

Amazon ECS settings

See the setup guide for much more detail on setting up Bottlerocket and ECS.

The following settings are optional and allow you to configure how your instance joins an ECS cluster. Since joining a cluster happens at startup, they need to be specified in user data.

  • settings.ecs.cluster: The name or ARN of your Amazon ECS cluster. If left unspecified, Bottlerocket will join your default cluster.
  • settings.ecs.instance-attributes: Attributes in the form of key, value pairs added when registering the container instance in the cluster.
    • Example user data for setting up attributes:
      [settings.ecs.instance-attributes]
      attribute1 = "foo"
      attribute2 = "bar"
      

The following settings are optional and allow you to further configure your cluster. These settings can be changed at any time.

  • settings.ecs.logging-drivers: The list of logging drivers available on the container instance. The ECS agent running on a container instance must register available logging drivers before tasks that use those drivers are eligible to be placed on the instance. Bottlerocket enables the json-file, awslogs, and none drivers by default.
  • settings.ecs.allow-privileged-containers: Whether launching privileged containers is allowed on the container instance. If this value is set to false, privileged containers are not permitted. Bottlerocket sets this value to false by default.
  • settings.ecs.loglevel: The level of verbosity for the ECS agent's logs. Supported values are debug, info, warn, error, and crit, and the default is info.
  • settings.ecs.enable-spot-instance-draining: If the instance receives a spot termination notice, the agent will set the instance's state to DRAINING, so the workload can be moved gracefully before the instance is removed. Defaults to false.

CloudFormation signal helper settings

For AWS variants, these settings allow you to set up CloudFormation signaling to indicate whether Bottlerocket hosts running in EC2 have been successfully created or updated:

  • settings.cloudformation.should-signal: Whether to check status and send signal. Defaults to false. If set to true, both stack-name and logical-resource-id need to be specified.
  • settings.cloudformation.stack-name: Name of the CloudFormation Stack to signal.
  • settings.cloudformation.logical-resource-id: The logical ID of the AutoScalingGroup resource that you want to signal.

OCI Hooks settings

Bottlerocket allows you to opt-in to use additional OCI hooks for your orchestrated containers. Once you opt-in to use additional OCI hooks, any new orchestrated containers will be configured with them, but existing containers won't be changed.

  • settings.oci-hooks.log4j-hotpatch-enabled: Enables the hotdog OCI hooks, which are used to inject the Log4j Hot Patch into containers. Defaults to false.

Container image registry settings

The following setting is optional and allows you to configure image registry mirrors and pull-through caches for your containers.

  • settings.container-registry.mirrors: An array of container image registry mirror settings. Each element specifies the registry and the endpoints for said registry. When pulling an image from a registry, the container runtime will try the endpoints one by one and use the first working one. (Docker and containerd will still try the default registry URL if the mirrors fail.)
    • Example user data for setting up image registry mirrors:
    [[settings.container-registry.mirrors]]
    registry = "*"
    endpoint = ["https://<example-mirror>","https://<example-mirror-2>"]
    
    [[settings.container-registry.mirrors]]
    registry = "docker.io"
    endpoint = [ "https://<my-docker-hub-mirror-host>", "https://<my-docker-hub-mirror-host-2>"]
    
    If you use a Bottlerocket variant that uses Docker as the container runtime, like aws-ecs-1, you should be aware that Docker only supports pull-through caches for images from Docker Hub (docker.io). Mirrors for other registries are ignored in this case.

For host-container and bootstrap-container images from Amazon ECR private repositories, registry mirrors are currently unsupported.

The following setting is optional and allows you to configure image registry credentials.

  • settings.container-registry.credentials: An array of container images registry credential settings. Each element specifies the registry and the credential information for said registry. The credential fields map to containerd's registry credential fields, which in turn map to the fields in .docker/config.json. It is recommended to programmatically set these settings via apiclient through the Bottlerocket control container and/or custom host-containers.
    • An example apiclient call to set registry credentials for gcr.io and docker.io looks like this:
    apiclient set --json '{
      "container-registry": {
        "credentials": [
          {
            "registry": "gcr.io",
            "username": "example_username",
            "password": "example_password"
          },
          {
            "registry": "docker.io",
            "auth": "example_base64_encoded_auth_string"
          }
        ]
      }
    }'

In addition to the container runtime daemons, these credential settings will also apply to host-container and bootstrap-container image pulls as well.

Updates settings

  • settings.updates.metadata-base-url: The common portion of all URIs used to download update metadata.
  • settings.updates.targets-base-url: The common portion of all URIs used to download update files.
  • settings.updates.seed: A u32 value that determines how far into the update schedule this machine will accept an update. We recommend leaving this at its default generated value so that updates can be somewhat randomized in your cluster.
  • settings.updates.version-lock: Controls the version that will be selected when you issue an update request. Can be locked to a specific version like v1.0.0, or latest to take the latest available version. Defaults to latest.
  • settings.updates.ignore-waves: Updates are rolled out in waves to reduce the impact of issues. For testing purposes, you can set this to true to ignore those waves and update immediately.

Network settings

  • settings.network.hostname: The desired hostname of the system. Important note for all Kubernetes variants: Changing this setting at runtime (not via user data) can cause issues with kubelet registration, as hostname is closely tied to the identity of the system for both registration and certificates/authorization purposes.

Most users don't need to change this setting as the following defaults work for the majority of use cases. If this setting isn't set we attempt to use DNS reverse lookup for the hostname. If the lookup is unsuccessful, the IP of the node is used.

Proxy settings

These settings will configure the proxying behavior of the following services:

  • For all variants:

  • For Kubernetes variants:

  • For the ECS variant:

  • settings.network.https-proxy: The HTTPS proxy server to be used by services listed above.

  • settings.network.no-proxy: A list of hosts that are excluded from proxying. Example:

    [settings.network]
    https-proxy = "1.2.3.4:8080"
    no-proxy = ["localhost", "127.0.0.1"]
    

The no-proxy list will automatically include entries for localhost.

If you're running a Kubernetes variant, the no-proxy list will automatically include the Kubernetes API server endpoint and other commonly used Kubernetes DNS suffixes to facilitate intra-cluster networking.

Metrics settings

By default, Bottlerocket sends anonymous metrics when it boots, and once every six hours. This can be disabled by setting send-metrics to false. Here are the metrics settings:

  • settings.metrics.metrics-url: The endpoint to which metrics will be sent. The default is https://metrics.bottlerocket.aws/v1/metrics.
  • settings.metrics.send-metrics: Whether Bottlerocket will send anonymous metrics.
  • settings.metrics.service-checks: A list of systemd services that will be checked to determine whether a host is healthy.

Time settings

  • settings.ntp.time-servers: A list of NTP servers used to set and verify the system time.

Kernel settings

  • settings.kernel.lockdown: This allows further restrictions on what the Linux kernel will allow, for example preventing the loading of unsigned modules. May be set to "none" (the default in older variants, up through aws-k8s-1.19), "integrity" (the default for newer variants), or "confidentiality". Important note: this setting cannot be lowered (toward 'none') at runtime. You must reboot for a change to a lower level to take effect.
  • settings.kernel.sysctl: Key/value pairs representing Linux kernel parameters. Remember to quote keys (since they often contain ".") and to quote all values.
    • Example user data for setting up sysctl:
      [settings.kernel.sysctl]
      "user.max_user_namespaces" = "16384"
      "vm.max_map_count" = "262144"
      

Custom CA certificates settings

By default, Bottlerocket ships with the Mozilla CA certificate store, but you can add self-signed certificates through the API using these settings:

  • settings.pki.<bundle-name>.data: Base64-encoded PEM-formatted certificates bundle; it can contain more than one certificate
  • settings.pki.<bundle-name>.trusted: Whether the certificates in the bundle are trusted; defaults to false when not provided

Here's an example of adding a bundle of self-signed certificates as user data:

[settings.pki.my-trusted-bundle]
data="W3N..."
trusted=true

[settings.pki.dont-trust-these]
data="W3N..."
trusted=false

Here's the same example but using API calls:

apiclient set \
  pki.my-trusted-bundle.data="W3N..." \
  pki.my-trusted-bundle.trusted=true  \
  pki.dont-trust-these.data="N3W..."  \
  pki.dont-trust-there.trusted=false

You can use this method from within a bootstrap container, if your user data is over the size limit of the platform.

Host containers settings

  • settings.host-containers.admin.source: The URI of the admin container.
  • settings.host-containers.admin.enabled: Whether the admin container is enabled.
  • settings.host-containers.admin.superpowered: Whether the admin container has high levels of access to the Bottlerocket host.
  • settings.host-containers.control.source: The URI of the control container.
  • settings.host-containers.control.enabled: Whether the control container is enabled.
  • settings.host-containers.control.superpowered: Whether the control container has high levels of access to the Bottlerocket host.
Custom host containers

admin and control are our default host containers, but you're free to change this. Beyond just changing the settings above to affect the admin and control containers, you can add and remove host containers entirely. As long as you define the three fields above -- source with a URI, and enabled and superpowered with true/false -- you can add host containers with an API call or user data.

You can optionally define a user-data field with arbitrary base64-encoded data, which will be made available in the container at /.bottlerocket/host-containers/$HOST_CONTAINER_NAME/user-data and (since Bottlerocket v1.0.8) /.bottlerocket/host-containers/current/user-data. (It was inspired by instance user data, but is entirely separate; it can be any data your host container feels like interpreting.)

Keep in mind that the default admin container (since Bottlerocket v1.0.6) relies on user-data to store SSH keys. You can set user-data to customize the keys, or you can use it for your own purposes in a custom container.

Here's an example of adding a custom host container with API calls:

apiclient set \
   host-containers.custom.source=MY-CONTAINER-URI \
   host-containers.custom.enabled=true \
   host-containers.custom.superpowered=false

Here's the same example, but with the settings you'd add to user data:

[settings.host-containers.custom]
enabled = true
source = "MY-CONTAINER-URI"
superpowered = false

If the enabled flag is true, it will be started automatically.

All host containers will have the apiclient binary available at /usr/local/bin/apiclient so they're able to interact with the API. You can also use apiclient to run programs in other host containers. For example, to access the admin container:

apiclient exec admin bash

In addition, all host containers come with persistent storage that survives reboots and container start/stop cycles. It's available at /.bottlerocket/host-containers/$HOST_CONTAINER_NAME and (since Bottlerocket v1.0.8) /.bottlerocket/host-containers/current. The default admin host-container, for example, stores its SSH host keys under /.bottlerocket/host-containers/admin/etc/ssh/.

There are a few important caveats to understand about host containers:

  • They're not orchestrated. They only start or stop according to that enabled flag.
  • They run in a separate instance of containerd than the one used for orchestrated containers like Kubernetes pods.
  • They're not updated automatically. You need to update the source and commit those changes.
  • If you set superpowered to true, they'll essentially have root access to the host.

Because of these caveats, host containers are only intended for special use cases. We use them for the control container because it needs to be available early to give you access to the OS, and for the admin container because it needs high levels of privilege and because you need it to debug when orchestration isn't working.

Be careful, and make sure you have a similar low-level use case before reaching for host containers.

Bootstrap containers settings

  • settings.bootstrap-containers.<name>.source: the image for the container
  • settings.bootstrap-containers.<name>.mode: the mode of the container, it could be one of off, once or always. See below for a description of modes.
  • settings.bootstrap-containers.<name>.essential: whether or not the container should fail the boot process, defaults to false
  • settings.bootstrap-containers.<name>.user-data: field with arbitrary base64-encoded data

Bootstrap containers are host containers that can be used to "bootstrap" the host before services like ECS Agent, Kubernetes, and Docker start.

Bootstrap containers are very similar to normal host containers; they come with persistent storage and with optional user data. Unlike normal host containers, bootstrap containers can't be treated as superpowered containers. However, bootstrap containers do have additional permissions that normal host containers do not have. Bootstrap containers have access to the underlying root filesystem on /.bottlerocket/rootfs as well as to all the devices in the host, and they are set up with the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability. This allows bootstrap containers to create files, directories, and mounts that are visible to the host.

Bootstrap containers are set up to run after the systemd configured.target unit is active. The containers' systemd unit depends on this target (and not on any of the bootstrap containers' peers) which means that bootstrap containers will not execute in a deterministic order. The boot process will "wait" for as long as the bootstrap containers run. Bootstrap containers configured with essential=true will stop the boot process if they exit code is a non-zero value.

Bootstrap containers have three different modes:

  • always: with this setting, the container is executed on every boot.
  • off: the container won't run
  • once: with this setting, the container only runs on the first boot where the container is defined. Upon completion, the mode is changed to off.

Here's an example of adding a bootstrap container with API calls:

apiclient set \
   bootstrap-containers.bootstrap.source=MY-CONTAINER-URI \
   bootstrap-containers.bootstrap.mode=once \
   bootstrap-containers.bootstrap.essential=true

Here's the same example, but with the settings you'd add to user data:

[settings.bootstrap-containers.bootstrap]
source = "MY-CONTAINER-URI"
mode = "once"
essential = true
Mount propagations in bootstrap and superpowered containers

Both bootstrap and superpowered host containers are configured with the /.bottlerocket/rootfs/mnt bind mount that points to /mnt in the host, which itself is a bind mount of /local/mnt. This bind mount is set up with shared propagations, so any new mount point created underneath /.bottlerocket/rootfs/mnt in any bootstrap or superpowered host container will propagate across mount namespaces. You can use this feature to configure ephemeral disks attached to your hosts that you may want to use on your workloads.

Platform-specific settings

Platform-specific settings are automatically set at boot time by early-boot-config based on metadata available on the running platform. They can be overridden for testing purposes in the same way as other settings.

AWS-specific settings

AWS-specific settings are automatically set based on calls to the Instance MetaData Service (IMDS).

  • settings.aws.region: This is set to the AWS region in which the instance is running, for example us-west-2.

Logs

You can use logdog through the admin container to obtain an archive of log files from your Bottlerocket host. SSH to the Bottlerocket host or apiclient exec admin bash to access the admin container, then run:

sudo sheltie
logdog

This will write an archive of the logs to /var/log/support/bottlerocket-logs.tar.gz. You can use SSH to retrieve the file. Once you have exited from the Bottlerocket host, run a command like:

ssh -i YOUR_KEY_FILE \
    ec2-user@YOUR_HOST \
    "cat /.bottlerocket/rootfs/var/log/support/bottlerocket-logs.tar.gz" > bottlerocket-logs.tar.gz

(If your instance isn't accessible through SSH, you can use SSH over SSM.)

For a list of what is collected, see the logdog command list.

Kdump Support

Bottlerocket provides support to collect kernel crash dumps whenever the system kernel panics. Once this happens, both the dmesg log and vmcore dump are stored at /var/log/kdump, and the system reboots.

There are a few important caveats about the provided kdump support:

  • Currently, only vmware variants have kdump support enabled
  • The system kernel will reserve 256MB for the crash kernel, only when the host has at least 2GB of memory; the reserved space won't be available for processes running in the host
  • The crash kernel will only be loaded when the crashkernel parameter is present in the kernel's cmdline and if there is memory reserved for it

Details

Security

🛡️ 🦀

To learn more about security features in Bottlerocket, please see SECURITY FEATURES. It describes how we use features like dm-verity and SELinux to protect the system from security threats.

To learn more about security recommendations for Bottlerocket, please see SECURITY GUIDANCE. It documents additional steps you can take to secure the OS, and includes resources such as a Pod Security Policy for your reference.

In addition, almost all first-party components are written in Rust. Rust eliminates some classes of memory safety issues, and encourages design patterns that help security.

Packaging

Bottlerocket is built from source using a container toolchain. We use RPM package definitions to build and install individual packages into an image. RPM itself is not in the image - it's just a common and convenient package definition format.

We currently package the following major third-party components:

For further documentation or to see the rest of the packages, see the packaging directory.

Updates

The Bottlerocket image has two identical sets of partitions, A and B. When updating Bottlerocket, the partition table is updated to point from set A to set B, or vice versa.

We also track successful boots, and if there are failures it will automatically revert back to the prior working partition set.

The update process uses images secured by TUF. For more details, see the update system documentation.

API

There are two main ways you'd interact with a production Bottlerocket instance. (There are a couple more exploration methods above for test instances.)

The first method is through a container orchestrator, for when you want to run or manage containers. This uses the standard channel for your orchestrator, for example a tool like kubectl for Kubernetes.

The second method is through the Bottlerocket API, for example when you want to configure the system.

There's an HTTP API server that listens on a local Unix-domain socket. Remote access to the API requires an authenticated transport such as SSM's RunCommand or Session Manager, as described above. For more details, see the apiserver documentation.

The apiclient can be used to make requests. They're just HTTP requests, but the API client simplifies making requests with the Unix-domain socket.

To make configuration easier, we have early-boot-config, which can send an API request for you based on instance user data. If you start a virtual machine, like an EC2 instance, it will read TOML-formatted Bottlerocket configuration from user data and send it to the API server. This way, you can configure your Bottlerocket instance without having to make API calls after launch.

See Settings above for examples and to understand what you can configure.

You can also access host containers through the API using apiclient exec.

The server and client are the user-facing components of the API system, but there are a number of other components that work together to make sure your settings are applied, and that they survive upgrades of Bottlerocket.

For more details, see the API system documentation.

Default Volumes

Bottlerocket operates with two default storage volumes.

On boot Bottlerocket will increase the data partition size to use all of the data device. If you increase the size of the device, you can reboot Bottlerocket to extend the data partition. If you need to extend the data partition without rebooting, have a look at this discussion.

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