The nydus project implements a content-addressable filesystem on top of a RAFS format that improves the current OCI image specification, in terms of container launching speed, image space, and network bandwidth efficiency, as well as data integrity.
The following benchmarking result shows the performance improvement compared with the OCI image for the container cold startup elapsed time on containerd. As the OCI image size increases, the container startup time of using Nydus image remains very short.
Nydus' key features include:
- Container images can be downloaded on demand in chunks for lazy pulling to boost container startup
- Chunk-based content-addressable data de-duplication to minimize storage, transmission and memory footprints
- Merged filesystem tree in order to remove all intermediate layers as an option
- in-kernel EROFS or FUSE filesystem together with overlayfs to provide full POSIX compatibility
- E2E image data integrity check. So security issues like "Supply Chain Attach" can be avoided and detected at runtime
- Compatible with the OCI artifacts spec and distribution spec, so nydus image can be stored in a regular container registry
- Native eStargz image support with remote snapshotter plugin
nydus-snapshotter
for containerd runtime. - Various container image storage backends are supported. For example, Registry, NAS, Aliyun/OSS.
- Integrated with CNCF incubating project Dragonfly to distribute container images in P2P fashion and mitigate the pressure on container registries
- Capable to prefetch data block before user IO hits the block thus to reduce read latency
- Record files access pattern during runtime gathering access trace/log, by which user abnormal behaviors are easily caught
- Access trace based prefetch table
- User I/O amplification to reduce the amount of small requests to storage backend.
Currently Nydus includes following tools:
Tool | Description |
---|---|
nydusd | Nydus user-space daemon, it processes all fscache/FUSE messages from the kernel and parses Nydus images to fullfil those requests |
nydus-image | Convert a single layer of OCI format container image into a nydus format container image generating meta part file and data part file respectively |
nydusify | It pulls OCI image down and unpack it, invokes nydus-image create to convert image and then pushes the converted image back to registry and data storage |
nydusctl | Nydusd CLI client (nydus-image inspect ), query daemon's working status/metrics and configure it |
ctr-remote | An enhanced containerd CLI tool enable nydus support with containerd ctr |
nydus-docker-graphdriver | Works as a docker remote graph driver to control how images and containers are stored and managed |
nydus-overlayfs | Containerd mount helper to invoke overlayfs mount with tweaking mount options a bit. So nydus prerequisites can be passed to vm-based runtime |
nydus-backend-proxy | A simple HTTP server to serve local directory as a blob backend for nydusd |
Currently Nydus is supporting the following platforms in container ecosystem:
Type | Platform | Description | Status |
---|---|---|---|
Storage | Registry/OSS/NAS | Support for OCI-compatible distribution implementations such as Docker Hub, Harbor, Github GHCR, Aliyun ACR, NAS, and Aliyun OSS-like object storage service | ✅ |
Storage/Build | Harbor | Provides a general service for Harbor to support acceleration image conversion based on kinds of accelerator like Nydus and eStargz etc | ✅ |
Distribution | Dragonfly | Improve the runtime performance of Nydus image even further with the Dragonfly P2P data distribution system | ✅ |
Build | Buildkit | Provides the ability to build and export Nydus images directly from Dockerfile | ✅ |
Runtime | Kubernetes | Run Nydus image using CRI interface | ✅ |
Runtime | Containerd | Nydus Snapshotter, a containerd remote plugin to run Nydus image | ✅ |
Runtime | CRI-O / Podman | Run Nydus image with CRI-O or Podman | 🚧 |
Runtime | Docker | Run Nydus image in Docker container with graphdriver plugin | ✅ |
Build/Runtime | Nerdctl | The containerd client to build or run (requires nydus snapshotter) Nydus image | ✅ |
Runtime | KataContainers | Run Nydus image in KataContainers as a native solution | ✅ |
Runtime | EROFS | Run Nydus image directly in-kernel EROFS for even greater performance improvement | ✅ |
To try nydus image service:
- Convert an original OCI image to nydus image and store it somewhere like Docker/Registry, NAS or Aliyun/OSS. This can be directly done by
nydusify
. Normal users don't have to get involved withnydus-image
. - Get
nydus-snapshotter
(containerd-nydus-grpc
) installed locally and configured properly. Or installnydus-docker-graphdriver
plugin. - Operate container in legacy approaches. For example,
docker
,nerdctl
,crictl
andctr
.
# build debug binary
make
# build release binary
make release
# build static binary with docker
make docker-static
For more details on how to lazily start a container with nydus-snapshotter
and nydus image on Kubernetes nodes or locally use nerdctl
rather than CRI, please refer to Nydus Setup
Build Nydus image from directory source: Nydus Image Builder.
Convert OCIv1 image to Nydus image: Nydusify, Acceld or Nerdctl.
Nydus-snapshotter is a non-core sub-project of containerd.
Check out its code and tutorial from Nydus-snapshotter repository.
It works as a containerd
remote snapshotter to help setup container rootfs with nydus images, which handles nydus image format when necessary. When running without nydus images, it is identical to the containerd's builtin overlayfs snapshotter.
Normally, users do not need to start nydusd
by hand. It is started by nydus-snapshotter
or nydus-docker-graphdriver
when a container rootfs is prepared.
Run Nydusd Daemon to serve Nydus image: Nydusd.
In-kernel EROFS has been fully compatible with RAFS v6 image format since Linux 5.16. In other words, uncompressed RAFS v6 images can be mounted over block devices since then.
Since Linux 5.19, EROFS has added a new file-based caching (fscache) backend. In this way, compressed RAFS v6 images can be mounted directly with fscache subsystem, even such images are partially available. estargz
can be converted on the fly and mounted in this way too.
Guide to running Nydus with fscache: Nydus-fscache
Nydus is deeply integrated with Dragonfly P2P system, which can greatly reduce the network latency and the single point of network pressure for registry server, testing in the production environment shows that using Dragonfly can reduce network latency by more than 80%, to understand the performance test data and how to configure Nydus to use Dragonfly, please refer to the doc.
Nydus cooperates with Harbor community to develop acceleration-service which provides a general service for Harbor to support image acceleration based on kinds of accelerators like Nydus, eStargz, etc.
Docker graph driver is also accompanied, it helps to start container from nydus image. For more particular instructions, please refer to
Browse the documentation to learn more. Here are some topics you may be interested in:
- A Nydus Tutorial for Beginners
- Nydus Design Doc
- Our talk on Open Infra Summit 2020: Toward Next Generation Container Image
- EROFS, What Are We Doing Now For Containers?
- The Evolution of the Nydus Image Acceleration (Video)
- Introduction to Nydus Image Service on In-kernel EROFS (Video)
- Nydus can also run with macfuse(a.k.a osxfuse).For more details please read nydus with macos.
The containerd remote snapshotter plugin nydus-snapshotter can be used to run nydus images, or to run eStargz images directly by appending --enable-stargz
command line option.
In the future, zstd::chunked
can work in this way as well.
Nydus aims to form a vendor-neutral opensource image distribution solution to all communities. Questions, bug reports, technical discussion, feature requests and contribution are always welcomed!
We're very pleased to hear your use cases any time. Feel free to reach/join us via Slack and/or Dingtalk
-
Slack
Join our Slack workspace
-
Dingtalk
Join nydus-devel group by clicking URL on your phone.
You can also search our talking group by number 34971767 and QR code
Nydus bi-weekly technical community meeting is also regularly available, currrently held on Wednesdays at 06:00 UTC (14:00 Beijing, Shanghai) starting from Aug 10, 2022. For more details, please see our HackMD page.