Containerd/nerdctl supports a number of snapshotter plugins: Nydus, e Stargz, SOCI: Seekable OCI, fuse-overlayfs;
containerd/stargz-snapshotter:
https://github.com/containerd/stargz-snapshotter
containerd/nerdctl//docs/nydus.md:
https://github.com/containerd/nerdctl/blob/main/docs/nydus.m... :
nydusify and Check Nydus image: https://github.com/dragonflyoss/nydus/blob/master/docs/nydus... :
> Nydusify provides a checker to validate Nydus image, the checklist includes image manifest, Nydus bootstrap, file metadata, and data consistency in rootfs with the original OCI image. Meanwhile, the checker dumps OCI & Nydus image information to output (default) directory.
nydus: https://github.com/dragonflyoss/nydus
awslabs/soci-snapshotter:
https://github.com/awslabs/soci-snapshotter ; lazy start standard OCI images
/? lxc copy on write: https://www.google.com/search?q=lxc+copy+on+write : lxc-copy supports btrfs, zfs, lvm, overlayfs
lxc/incus: "Add OCI image support" https://github.com/lxc/incus/issues/908
opencontainers/image-spec; OCI Image spec:
https://github.com/opencontainers/image-spec
opencontainers/distribution-spec; OCI Image distribution spec:
https://github.com/opencontainers/distribution-spec
But then in the
opencontainers/runtime-spec//config.md OCI runtime spec TODO bundle config.json there is an example of a config.json
https://github.com/opencontainers/runtime-spec/blob/main/con...
The LXC approach is to run systemd in the container.
The quadlet approach is to not run systemd /sbin/init in the container; instead create .container files in /etc/containers/systemd/ (rootful) or ~/.config/containers/systemd/*.container (for rootless) so that the host systemd manages and logs the container processes.
Then realized you said QEMU not LXC.
LXD: https://canonical.com/lxd :
> LXD provides both [QEMU,] KVM-based VMs and system containers based on LXC – that can run a full Linux OS – in a single open source virtualisation platform. LXD has numerous built-in management features, including live migration, snapshots, resource restrictions, projects and profiles, and governs the interaction with various storage and networking options.
From https://documentation.ubuntu.com/lxd/latest/reference/storag... :
> LXD supports the following storage drivers for storing images, instances and custom volumes:
> Btrfs, CephFS, Ceph Object,
Ceph RBD,
Dell PowerFlex,
Pure Storage,
HPE Alletra,
Directory,
LVM,
ZFS
You can run Podman or Docker within an LXD host; with or without a backing storage pool. FWIU it's possible for containers in an LXD VM to use BTRFS, ZFS, or KVM storage drivers to create e.g. BTRFS subvolumes instead of running overlayfs within the VM by editing storage.conf.