
We added the concept of image volumes in 2.2.0, to support inspecting an image from within a container. However, this is a strictly read-only mount, with no modification allowed. By contrast, the new `image` volume driver creates a c/storage container as its underlying storage, so we have a read/write layer. This, in and of itself, is not especially interesting, but what it will enable in the future is. If we add a new command to allow these image volumes to be committed, we can now distribute volumes - and changes to them - via a standard OCI image registry (which is rather new and quite exciting). Future work in this area: - Add support for `podman volume push` (commit volume changes and push resulting image to OCI registry). - Add support for `podman volume pull` (currently, we require that the image a volume is created from be already pulled; it would be simpler if we had a dedicated command that did the pull and made a volume from it) - Add support for scratch images (make an empty image on demand to use as the base of the volume) - Add UOR support to `podman volume push` and `podman volume pull` to enable both with non-image volume drivers 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/ |
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 |
docs/use-pagetitle.lua | pandoc filter to set html document title |
Manpage Syntax
The syntax for the formatting of all man pages can be found here.
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.
Local Testing
To build standard man pages, run make docs
. Results will be in docs/build/man
.
To build HTMLized man pages: Assuming that you have the dependencies installed, then also install (showing Fedora in the example):
$ sudo dnf install python3-sphinx python3-recommonmark
$ pip install sphinx-markdown-tables myst_parser
(The above dependencies are current as of 2022-09-15. If you experience problems, please see requirements.txt in this directory, it will almost certainly be more up-to-date than this README.)
After that completes, cd to the docs
directory in your Podman sandbox and then do make html
.
You can then preview the html files in docs/build/html
with:
python -m http.server 8000 --directory build/html
...and point your web browser at http://localhost:8000/