# NVIDIA Container Toolkit CLI The NVIDIA Container Toolkit CLI `nvidia-ctk` provides a number of utilities that are useful for working with the NVIDIA Container Toolkit. ## Functionality ### Configure runtimes The `runtime` command of the `nvidia-ctk` CLI provides a set of utilities to related to the configuration and management of supported container engines. For example, running the following command: ```bash nvidia-ctk runtime configure --set-as-default ``` will ensure that the NVIDIA Container Runtime is added as the default runtime to the default container engine. ## Configure the NVIDIA Container Toolkit The `config` command of the `nvidia-ctk` CLI allows a user to display and manipulate the NVIDIA Container Toolkit configuration. For example, running the following command: ```bash nvidia-ctk config default ``` will display the default config for the detected platform. Whereas ```bash nvidia-ctk config ``` will display the effective NVIDIA Container Toolkit config using the configured config file, and running: Individual config options can be set by specifying these are key-value pairs to the `--set` argument: ```bash nvidia-ctk config --set nvidia-container-cli.no-cgroups=true ``` By default, all commands output to `STDOUT`, but specifying the `--output` flag writes the config to the specified file. ### Generate CDI specifications The [Container Device Interface (CDI)](https://tags.cncf.io/container-device-interface) provides a vendor-agnostic mechanism to make arbitrary devices accessible in containerized environments. To allow NVIDIA devices to be used in these environments, the NVIDIA Container Toolkit CLI includes functionality to generate a CDI specification for the available NVIDIA GPUs in a system. In order to generate the CDI specification for the available devices, run the following command:\ ```bash nvidia-ctk cdi generate ``` The default is to print the specification to STDOUT and a filename can be specified using the `--output` flag. The specification will contain a device entries as follows (where applicable): * An `nvidia.com/gpu=gpu{INDEX}` device for each non-MIG-enabled full GPU in the system * An `nvidia.com/gpu=mig{GPU_INDEX}:{MIG_INDEX}` device for each MIG-device in the system * A special device called `nvidia.com/gpu=all` which represents all available devices. For example, to generate the CDI specification in the default location where CDI-enabled tools such as `podman`, `containerd`, `cri-o`, or the NVIDIA Container Runtime can be configured to load it, the following command can be run: ```bash sudo nvidia-ctk cdi generate --output=/etc/cdi/nvidia.yaml ``` (Note that `sudo` is used to ensure the correct permissions to write to the `/etc/cdi` folder) With the specification generated, a GPU can be requested by specifying the fully-qualified CDI device name. With `podman` as an exmaple: ```bash podman run --rm -ti --device=nvidia.com/gpu=gpu0 ubuntu nvidia-smi -L ```