lxc-ls reports two rows of results - the first containing all containers, the second the active ones. It looks as though your output got squashed into one column containing all results. What happens when you do "lxc-ls | tail -1" ?
lxc-list is generally a nicer looking (but more tedious to script around) interface for viewing lists of containers. The actual format of lxc-ls output will be discussed at the upcoming UDS, and probably changed.
Thanks for reporting this bug.
Is this on quantal, precise, or something else?
lxc-ls reports two rows of results - the first containing all containers, the second the active ones. It looks as though your output got squashed into one column containing all results. What happens when you do "lxc-ls | tail -1" ?
lxc-list is generally a nicer looking (but more tedious to script around) interface for viewing lists of containers. The actual format of lxc-ls output will be discussed at the upcoming UDS, and probably changed.