# API extensions The changes below were introduced to the LXC API after the 3.0 API was finalized. They are all backward compatible and can be detected by client tools by called the `lxc_has_api_extension` function. ## lxc\_log This introduces a way to initialize a logging instance from the API for a given container. ## lxc\_config\_item\_is\_supported This introduces the `lxc_config_item_is_supported` function. It allows users to check whether their LXC instance supports a given configuration key. ## console\_log This adds support to container's console log. The console log is implemented as an efficient ringbuffer. ## reboot2 This adds `reboot2()` as a new API extension. This function properly waits until a reboot succeeded. It takes a timeout argument. When set to `> 0` `reboot2()` will block until the timeout is reached, if timeout is set to zero `reboot2()` will not block, if set to -1 `reboot2()` will block indefinitely. ## mount\_injection This adds support for injecting and removing mounts into/from a running containers. Two new API functions `mount()` and `umount()` are added. They mirror the current mount and umount API of the kernel. ## seccomp\_allow\_nesting This adds support for seccomp filters to be stacked regardless of whether a seccomp profile is already loaded. This allows nested containers to load their own seccomp profile. ## seccomp\_notify This adds "notify" as seccomp action that will cause LXC to register a seccomp listener and retrieve a listener file descriptor from the kernel. When a syscall is made that is registered as "notify" the kernel will generate a poll event and send a message over the file descriptor. The caller can read this message, inspect the syscalls including its arguments. Based on this information the caller is expected to send back a message informing the kernel which action to take. Until that message is sent the kernel will block the calling process. The format of the messages to read and sent is documented in seccomp itself. ## network\_veth\_routes This introduces the `lxc.net.[i].veth.ipv4.route` and `lxc.net.[i].veth.ipv6.route` properties on `veth` type network interfaces. This allows adding static routes on host to the container's network interface.