
Podman has, for a long time, had an internal concept of dependency management, used mainly to ensure that pod infra containers are started before any other container in the pod. We also have the ability to recursively start these dependencies, which we use to ensure that `podman start` on a container in a pod will not fail because the infra container is stopped. We have not, however, exposed these via the command line until now. Add a `--requires` flag to `podman run` and `podman create` to allow users to manually specify dependency containers. These containers must be running before the container will start. Also, make recursive starting with `podman start` default so we can start these containers and their dependencies easily. Fixes #9250 Signed-off-by: Matthew Heon <matthew.heon@pm.me>
Podman Documentation
The online man pages and other documents regarding Podman can be found at Read The Docs. The man pages can be found under the Commands link on that page.
Build the Docs
Directory Structure
Directory | |
---|---|
Markdown source for man pages | docs/source/markdown/ |
man pages aliases as .so files | docs/source/markdown/links/ |
restructured text for readthedocs.io | docs/rst/ |
target for output | docs/build |
man pages | docs/build/man |
remote linux man pages | docs/build/remote/linux |
remote darwin man pages | docs/build/remote/darwin |
remote windows html pages | docs/build/remote/windows |
Support files
docs/remote-docs.sh | Read the docs/source/markdown files and format for each platform |
docs/links-to-html.lua | pandoc filter to do aliases for html files |
API Reference
The latest online documentation is
automatically generated by two cooperating automation systems based on committed upstream
source code. Firstly, the Cirrus-CI docs task builds
pkg/api/swagger.yaml
and uploads it to a public-facing location (Google Storage Bucket -
an online service for storing unstructured data). Second, Read The Docs
reacts to the github.com repository change, building the content for the libpod documentation
site. This site includes for the API section,
some javascript which consumes the uploaded swagger.yaml
file directly from the Google
Storage Bucket.
Since there are multiple systems and local cache is involved, it's possible that updates to documentation (especially the swagger/API docs) will lag by 10-or-so minutes. However, because the client (i.e. your web browser) is fetching content from multiple locations that do not share a common domain, accessing the API section may show a stack-trace similar to the following:
If reloading the page, or clearing your local cache does not fix the problem, it is
likely caused by broken metadata needed to protect clients from cross-site-scripting
style attacks. Please notify a maintainer
so they may investigate how/why the swagger.yaml
file's CORS-metadata is
incorrect, or the file isn't accessible for some other reason.