Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

You have successfully unsubscribed! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates about Ubuntu and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

How many containers can you run on your machine?

This article was last updated 4 years ago.



652 Linux containers running on a Laptop?  Are you kidding me???

A couple of weeks ago, at the OpenStack Summit in Vancouver, Canonical released the results of some scalability testing of Linux containers (LXC) managed by LXD.

Ryan Harper and James Page presented their results — some 536 Linux containers on a very modest little Intel server (16GB of RAM), versus 37 KVM virtual machines.

Ryan has published the code he used for the benchmarking, and I’ve used to to reproduce the test on my dev laptop (Thinkpad x230, 16GB of RAM, Intel i7-3520M).

I managed to pack a whopping 652 Ubuntu 14.04 LTS (Trusty) containers on my Ubuntu 15.04 (Vivid) laptop!

The system load peaked at 1056 (!!!), but I was using merely 56% of 15.4GB of system memory.  Amazingly, my Unity desktop and Byobu command line were still perfectly responsive, as were the containers that I ssh’d into.  (Aside: makes me wonder if the Linux system load average is accounting for container process correctly…)

Check out the process tree for a few hundred system containers here!

As for KVM, I managed to launch 31 virtual machines without KSM enabled, and 65 virtual machines with KSM enabled and working hard.  So that puts somewhere between 10x – 21x as many containers as virtual machines on the same laptop.

You can now repeat these tests, if you like.  Please share your results with #LXD on Google+ or Twitter!

I’d love to see someone try this in AWS, anywhere from an m3.small to an r3.8xlarge, and share your results.

Density test instructions

## Install lxd
$ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-lxc/lxd-git-master
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install -y lxd bzr
$ cd /tmp
## Grab the tests, disable the tools download
$ bzr branch lp:~raharper/+junk/density-check
$ cd density-check
$ mkdir lxd_tools
## Periodically squeeze your cache
$ sudo bash -x -c 'while true; do sleep 30;
echo 3 | sudo tee /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches;
free; done' &
## Run the LXD test
$ ./density-check-lxd --limit=mem:512m --load=idle release=trusty arch=amd64
## Run the KVM test
$ ./density-check-kvm --limit=mem:512m --load=idle release=trusty arch=amd64

As for the speed-of-launch test, I’ll cover that in a follow-up post!

ubuntu logo

What’s the risk of unsolved vulnerabilities in Docker images?

Recent surveys found that many popular containers had known vulnerabilities. Container images provenance is critical for a secure software supply chain in production. Benefit from Canonical’s security expertise with the LTS Docker images portfolio, a curated set of application images, free of vulnerabilities, with a 24/7 commitment.

Integrate with hardened LTS images ›

Newsletter signup

Get the latest Ubuntu news and updates in your inbox.

By submitting this form, I confirm that I have read and agree to Canonical's Privacy Policy.

Related posts

Entra ID authentication on Ubuntu at scale with Landscape

Authd allows Entra ID authentication on both Ubuntu Desktop and Server. Learn how to configure Authd at scale using Landscape and Cloud-init

Join Canonical in London at Dell Technologies Forum

Canonical is excited to be partnering with Dell Technologies at the upcoming Dell Technologies Forum – London, taking place on 26th November. This prestigious...

Profile-guided optimization: A case study

Software developers spend a huge amount of effort working on optimization – extracting more speed and better performance from their algorithms and programs....