Files
Valentin Rothberg aad29e759c health check: add on-failure actions
For systems that have extreme robustness requirements (edge devices,
particularly those in difficult to access environments), it is important
that applications continue running in all circumstances. When the
application fails, Podman must restart it automatically to provide this
robustness. Otherwise, these devices may require customer IT to
physically gain access to restart, which can be prohibitively difficult.

Add a new `--on-failure` flag that supports four actions:

- **none**: Take no action.

- **kill**: Kill the container.

- **restart**: Restart the container.  Do not combine the `restart`
               action with the `--restart` flag.  When running inside of
               a systemd unit, consider using the `kill` or `stop`
               action instead to make use of systemd's restart policy.

- **stop**: Stop the container.

To remain backwards compatible, **none** is the default action.

Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <vrothberg@redhat.com>
2022-09-09 13:02:05 +02:00
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Common Man Page Options

This subdirectory contains option (flag) names and descriptions common to multiple podman man pages. Each file is one option. The filename does not necessarily need to be identical to the option name: for instance, hostname.container.md and hostname.pod.md exist because the --hostname option is sufficiently different between podman-{create,run} and podman-pod-{create,run} to warrant living separately.

How

The files here are included in podman-*.md.in files using the @@option mechanism:

@@option foo           ! will include options/foo.md

The tool that does this is hack/markdown-preprocess. It is a python script because it needs to run on readthedocs.io. From a given .md.in file, this script will create a .md file that can then be read by go-md2man, sphinx, anything that groks markdown. This runs as part of make docs.

Special Substitutions

Some options are almost identical except for 'pod' vs 'container' differences. For those, use <<text for pods|text for containers>>. Order is immaterial: the important thing is the presence of the string "pod" in one half but not the other. The correct string will be chosen based on the filename: if the file contains -pod, such as podman-pod-create, the string with pod (case-insensitive) in it will be chosen.

The string <<subcommand>> will be replaced with the podman subcommand as determined from the filename, e.g., create for podman-create.1.md.in. This allows the shared use of examples in the option file:

    Example: podman <<subcommand>> --foo --bar

As a special case, podman-pod-X becomes just X (the "pod" is removed). This makes the pod-id-file man page more useful.