sudo pacman -S podman
sudo yum -y install podman
Built-in, no need to install
sudo emerge app-emulation/libpod
sudo zypper install podman
Built-in, no need to install
Subscribe, then enable Extras channel and install podman.
sudo subscription-manager repos --enable=rhel-7-server-extras-rpms
sudo yum -y install podman
sudo yum module enable -y container-tools:1.0
sudo yum module install -y container-tools:1.0
sudo apt-get update -qq
sudo apt-get install -qq -y software-properties-common
sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:projectatomic/ppa
sudo apt-get -qq -y install podman
The latest version of runc
is expected to be installed on the system. It is picked up as the default runtime by podman.
The latest version of conmon
is expected to be installed on the system. Conmon is used to monitor OCI Runtimes.
A proper description of setting up CNI networking is given in the cni
README.
But the gist is that you need to have some basic network configurations enabled and
CNI plugins installed on your system.
Required
Fedora, CentOS, RHEL, and related distributions:
yum install -y \
atomic-registries \
btrfs-progs-devel \
conmon \
containernetworking-cni \
device-mapper-devel \
git \
glib2-devel \
glibc-devel \
glibc-static \
go \
golang-github-cpuguy83-go-md2man \
gpgme-devel \
iptables \
libassuan-devel \
libgpg-error-devel \
libseccomp-devel \
libselinux-devel \
make \
ostree-devel \
pkgconfig \
runc \
skopeo-containers
Debian, Ubuntu, and related distributions:
apt-get install -y \
btrfs-tools \
git \
golang-go \
go-md2man \
iptables \
libassuan-dev \
libdevmapper-dev \
libglib2.0-dev \
libc6-dev \
libgpgme11-dev \
libgpg-error-dev \
libprotobuf-dev \
libprotobuf-c0-dev \
libseccomp-dev \
libselinux1-dev \
pkg-config
Debian, Ubuntu, and related distributions will also need to do the following setup:
- A copy of the development libraries for
ostree
, either in the form of thelibostree-dev
package from the flatpak PPA, or built from source (more on that here). As of Ubuntu 18.04,libostree-dev
is available in the main repositories, and the PPA is no longer required. - Add required configuration files
- Install conmon, CNI plugins and runc
- Install conmon
- Install CNI plugins
- runc Installation - Although installable, the latest runc is not available in the Ubuntu repos. Version 1.0.0-rc4 is the minimal requirement.
NOTE
If using an older release or a long-term support release, be careful to double-check that the version of runc
is new enough (running runc --version
should produce spec: 1.0.0
), or else build your own.
Be careful to double-check that the version of golang is new enough, version 1.10.x or higher is required. If needed, golang kits are available at https://golang.org/dl/
Optional
Fedora, CentOS, RHEL, and related distributions:
(no optional packages)
Debian, Ubuntu, and related distributions:
apt-get install -y \
libapparmor-dev
As with other Go projects, PODMAN must be cloned into a directory structure like:
GOPATH
└── src
└── github.com
└── containers
└── libpod
First, configure a GOPATH
(if you are using go1.8 or later, this defaults to ~/go
)
and then add $GOPATH/bin to your $PATH environment variable.
export GOPATH=~/go
mkdir -p $GOPATH
export PATH=$PATH:$GOPATH/bin
Next, clone the source code using:
mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/containers
cd $_ # or cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/containers
git clone https://github.com/containers/libpod # or your fork
cd libpod
make install.tools
make
sudo make install
Otherwise, if you do not want to build podman
with seccomp support you can add BUILDTAGS=""
when running make.
make BUILDTAGS=""
sudo make install
podman
supports optional build tags for compiling support of various features.
To add build tags to the make option the BUILDTAGS
variable must be set.
make BUILDTAGS='seccomp apparmor'
Build Tag | Feature | Dependency |
---|---|---|
seccomp | syscall filtering | libseccomp |
selinux | selinux process and mount labeling | libselinux |
apparmor | apparmor profile support | libapparmor |
This project is using vndr for managing dependencies, which is a tedious and error-prone task. Doing it manually is likely to cause inconsistencies between the ./vendor
directory (i.e., the downloaded dependencies), the source code that imports those dependencies and the vendor.conf
configuration file that describes which packages in which version (e.g., a release or git commit) are a dependency.
To ease updating dependencies, we provide the make vendor
target, which fetches all dependencies mentioned in vendor.conf
. make vendor
whitelists certain packages to prevent the vndr
tool from removing packages that the test suite (see ./test
) imports.
The CI of this project makes sure that each pull request leaves a clean vendor state behind by first running the aforementioned make vendor
followed by running ./hack/tree_status.sh
which checks if any file in the git tree has changed.
If the CI is complaining about a pull request leaving behind an unclean state, it is very likely right about it. Make sure to run make vendor
and add all the changes to the commit. Also make sure that your local git tree does not include files not under version control that may reference other go packages. If some dependencies are removed but they should not, for instance, because the CI is needing them, then whitelist those dependencies in the make vendor
target of the Makefile. Whitelisting a package will instruct vndr
to not remove if during its cleanup phase.
Man Page: registries.conf.5
/etc/containers/registries.conf
registries.conf is the configuration file which specifies which container registries should be consulted when completing image names which do not include a registry or domain portion.
cat /etc/containers/registries.conf
# This is a system-wide configuration file used to
# keep track of registries for various container backends.
# It adheres to TOML format and does not support recursive
# lists of registries.
# The default location for this configuration file is /etc/containers/registries.conf.
# The only valid categories are: 'registries.search', 'registries.insecure',
# and 'registries.block'.
[registries.search]
registries = ['docker.io', 'registry.fedoraproject.org', 'quay.io', 'registry.access.redhat.com', 'registry.centos.org']
# If you need to access insecure registries, add the registry's fully-qualified name.
# An insecure registry is one that does not have a valid SSL certificate or only does HTTP.
[registries.insecure]
registries = []
# If you need to block pull access from a registry, uncomment the section below
# and add the registries fully-qualified name.
#
# Docker only
[registries.block]
registries = []
/usr/share/containers/mounts.conf
and optionally /etc/containers/mounts.conf
The mounts.conf files specify volume mount directories that are automatically mounted inside containers when executing the podman run
or podman build
commands. Container process can then use this content. The volume mount content does not get committed to the final image.
Usually these directories are used for passing secrets or credentials required by the package software to access remote package repositories.
For example, a mounts.conf with the line "/usr/share/rhel/secrets:/run/secrets
", the content of /usr/share/rhel/secrets
directory is mounted on /run/secrets
inside the container. This mountpoint allows Red Hat Enterprise Linux subscriptions from the host to be used within the container.
Note this is not a volume mount. The content of the volumes is copied into container storage, not bind mounted directly from the host.
cat /usr/share/containers/mounts.conf
/usr/share/rhel/secrets:/run/secrets
/usr/share/containers/seccomp.json
seccomp.json contains the whitelist of seccomp rules to be allowed inside of containers. This file is usually provided by the containers-common package.
The link above takes you to the seccomp.json
/etc/containers/policy.json
Man Page: policy.json.5
cat /etc/containers/policy.json
{
"default": [
{
"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"
}
],
"transports":
{
"docker-daemon":
{
"": [{"type":"insecureAcceptAnything"}]
}
}
}