Files
Daniel J Walsh 7665bbc127 Remove 'you' from man pages
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
2022-12-07 09:29:29 -05:00

1.1 KiB

####> This option file is used in: ####> podman create, pod create, run ####> If file is edited, make sure the changes ####> are applicable to all of those.

--publish, -p=[[ip:][hostPort]:]containerPort[/protocol]

Publish a container's port, or range of ports,<<| within this pod>> to the host.

Both hostPort and containerPort can be specified as a range of ports. When specifying ranges for both, the number of container ports in the range must match the number of host ports in the range.

If host IP is set to 0.0.0.0 or not set at all, the port will be bound on all IPs on the host.

By default, Podman will publish TCP ports. To publish a UDP port instead, give udp as protocol. To publish both TCP and UDP ports, set --publish twice, with tcp, and udp as protocols respectively. Rootful containers can also publish ports using the sctp protocol.

Host port does not have to be specified (e.g. podman run -p 127.0.0.1::80). If it is not, the container port will be randomly assigned a port on the host.

Use podman port to see the actual mapping: podman port $CONTAINER $CONTAINERPORT.