Difference between revisions of "Podman"
From John Freier
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podman run --detach --volume ./mongo-data:/data/db --pod mypod --name some-mongo mongo:4.4.13 | podman run --detach --volume ./mongo-data:/data/db --pod mypod --name some-mongo mongo:4.4.13 | ||
− | podman run -it --pod mypod --name myapp --volume ./config:/config e4ea21376d55 | + | podman run -it --pod mypod --name myapp --volume ./config:/config --entrypoint "/bin/bash" e4ea21376d55 |
Revision as of 14:59, 7 April 2022
List Images
podman images
List running images
podman ps
Pull an image
podman pull docker.io/library/httpd
Run an image
podman run -dt -p 8080:80/tcp docker.io/library/httpd
View Logs
podman logs ff22b3bfecc1
Stop the latest container
podman stop ff22b3bfecc1
List all containers
podman ps -a
Remove Container
podman rm ff22b3bfecc1
Load an Image
Worked cat cs-oci.tar | podman load Did not work. podman load oci-archive:cs-oci.tar:latest
Example run MongoDB
podman run \ --detach \ --publish 27017:27017 \ --userns=keep-id \ --volume ./mongo-data:/data/db \ --name some-mongo \ mongo:4.4.13 # --detach, -d - Detached mode: run the container in the background and print the new container ID. The default is false # --publish, -p - Publish a container’s port, or range of ports, to the host. # --userns - Because podman runs rootless we need to assign a user that can access the local volumn. This sets the podman user to the same user who ran the podman command. # --volume, -v - Create a bind mount. # --name - Assign a name to the container.
Example running with pods This is a test to see how apps can talk between each other in a podman network within a pod.
Create the pod
podman pod create --userns=keep-id --publish 8080:8080 --name mypod
podman run --detach --volume ./mongo-data:/data/db --pod mypod --name some-mongo mongo:4.4.13
podman run -it --pod mypod --name myapp --volume ./config:/config --entrypoint "/bin/bash" e4ea21376d55