Files
Daniel J Walsh b765c91580 Add --replace option to podman artifact add command
This commit implements the --replace functionality for the artifact add command,
allowing users to replace existing artifacts without having to manually remove
them first.

Changes made:
- Add Replace field to ArtifactAddOptions entity types
- Add --replace CLI flag with validation to prevent conflicts with --append
- Implement replace logic in ABI backend to remove existing artifacts before adding
- Update API handlers and tunnel implementation for podman-remote support
- Add comprehensive documentation and examples to man page
- Add e2e and system BATS tests for --replace functionality
- Fix code formatting in pkg/bindings/artifacts/types_pull_options.go:
  * Reorder imports with proper spacing
  * Fix function declaration spacing
  * Convert spaces to proper tab indentation
  * Remove extraneous blank lines

The --replace option follows the same pattern as other podman replace options
like 'podman container create --replace' and 'podman pod create --replace'.
It gracefully handles cases where no existing artifact exists (no error thrown).

Usage examples:
  podman artifact add --replace quay.io/myimage/artifact:latest /path/to/file
  podman artifact add --replace localhost/test/artifact /tmp/newfile.txt

Fixes: Implements requested --replace functionality for artifact add command
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
2025-10-06 12:22:40 -04:00
..
2025-09-10 16:17:04 +02:00
2024-02-08 09:35:39 -05:00
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Podman CLI

The following is an example of how to add a new primary command (manifest) and a sub-command (inspect) to the Podman CLI. This is example code, the production code has additional error checking and the business logic provided.

See items below for details on building, installing, contributing to Podman:

Adding a new command podman manifest

$ mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/manifest

Create the file $GOPATH/src/github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/manifest/manifest.go

package manifest

import (
    "github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/registry"
    "github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/validate"
    "github.com/containers/podman/pkg/domain/entities"
    "github.com/spf13/cobra"
)

var (
    // podman _manifests_
    manifestCmd = &cobra.Command{
        Use:               "manifest",
        Short:             "Manage manifests",
        Args:              cobra.ExactArgs(1),
        Long:              "Manage manifests",
        Example:           "podman manifest IMAGE",
        TraverseChildren:  true,
        RunE:              validate.SubCommandExists, // Report error if there is no sub command given
    }
)
func init() {
    // Subscribe command to podman
    registry.Commands = append(registry.Commands, registry.CliCommand{
        Command: manifestCmd,
    })
}

To "wire" in the manifest command, edit the file $GOPATH/src/github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/main.go to add:

package main

import	_ "github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/manifest"

Adding a new sub command podman manifest list

Create the file $GOPATH/src/github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/manifest/inspect.go

package manifest

import (
    "github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/registry"
    "github.com/containers/podman/pkg/domain/entities"
    "github.com/spf13/cobra"
)

var (
    // podman manifests _inspect_
    inspectCmd = &cobra.Command{
        Use:     "inspect IMAGE",
        Short:   "Display manifest from image",
        Long:    "Displays the low-level information on a manifest identified by image name or ID",
        RunE:    inspect,
        Annotations: map[string]string{
            // Add this annotation if this command cannot be run rootless
            // registry.ParentNSRequired: "",
        },
        Example: "podman manifest inspect DEADBEEF",
    }
)

func init() {
    // Subscribe inspect sub command to manifest command
    registry.Commands = append(registry.Commands, registry.CliCommand{
        Command: inspectCmd,
        // The parent command to proceed this command on the CLI
        Parent:  manifestCmd,
    })

    // This is where you would configure the cobra flags using inspectCmd.Flags()
}

// Business logic: cmd is inspectCmd, args is the positional arguments from os.Args
func inspect(cmd *cobra.Command, args []string) error {
    // Business logic using registry.ImageEngine()
    // Do not pull from libpod directly use the domain objects and types
    return nil
}

Helper functions

The complete set can be found in the validate package, here are some examples:

  • cobra.Command{ Args: validate.NoArgs } used when the command does not accept errors
  • cobra.Command{ Args: validate.IdOrLatestArgs } used to ensure either a list of ids given or the --latest flag
  • cobra.Command{ RunE: validate.SubCommandExists } used to validate a subcommand given to a command
  • validate.ChoiceValue used to create a pflag.Value that validate user input against a provided slice of values. For example:
    flags := cobraCommand.Flags()
    created := validate.ChoiceValue(&opts.Sort, "command", "created", "id", "image", "names", "runningfor", "size", "status")
    flags.Var(created, "sort", "Sort output by: "+created.Choices())
    

Adding CLI flags

When adding adding a new cli option that accepts a string array, there are two options to choose from: StringSlice() and StringArray(). They differ slightly in their behavior: StringSlice() allows the values to be comma separated so --opt v1,v2 --opt v3 results in []string{"v1", "v2", "v3"}, while StringArray() would result in []string{"v1,v2", "v3"}. Thus it is impossible to use values with comma in StringSlice(), which makes it unsuitable for flags that accept arbitrary values such as file paths as example. Also, because StringSlice() uses the csv lib to parse the values, it has special escaping rules for things like quotes, see https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/20064 for an example of how complicated things can get because of this. Thus use StringSlice() only when the option accepts predefined values that do not contain special characters, for example --cap-add and --cap-drop are a good example for this. Using --cap-add NET_ADMIN,NET_RAW is equal to --cap-add NET_ADMIN --cap-add NET_RAW so it is better suited to save some typing for users. When in doubt always choose StringArray() over StringSlice().