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author | TomSweeneyRedHat <tsweeney@redhat.com> | 2018-03-06 11:05:17 -0500 |
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committer | Atomic Bot <atomic-devel@projectatomic.io> | 2018-03-06 23:55:46 +0000 |
commit | 042139673e68c4d99bc9cbdc33648d27940cd6a1 (patch) | |
tree | 3026aac8a63a145f498675ae8f8079af1a5d0b8a /docs/podman-build.1.md | |
parent | e8fbe93e29028aa6c140c5c42bfe58917860ed81 (diff) | |
download | podman-042139673e68c4d99bc9cbdc33648d27940cd6a1.tar.gz podman-042139673e68c4d99bc9cbdc33648d27940cd6a1.tar.bz2 podman-042139673e68c4d99bc9cbdc33648d27940cd6a1.zip |
Add buildah bud options from common.go
Signed-off-by: TomSweeneyRedHat <tsweeney@redhat.com>
Closes: #453
Approved by: rhatdan
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/podman-build.1.md')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/podman-build.1.md | 196 |
1 files changed, 193 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/docs/podman-build.1.md b/docs/podman-build.1.md index d4e9af175..84d0ca919 100644 --- a/docs/podman-build.1.md +++ b/docs/podman-build.1.md @@ -24,6 +24,12 @@ to do the actual building. ## OPTIONS +**--add-host**=[] + +Add a custom host-to-IP mapping (host:ip) + +Add a line to /etc/hosts. The format is hostname:ip. The **--add-host** option can be set multiple times. + **--authfile** *path* Path of the authentication file. Default is ${XDG_RUNTIME\_DIR}/containers/auth.json, which is set using `podman login`. @@ -41,6 +47,73 @@ resulting image's configuration. Use certificates at *path* (*.crt, *.cert, *.key) to connect to the registry. Default certificates directory is _/etc/containers/certs.d_. +**--cgroup-parent**="" + +Path to cgroups under which the cgroup for the container will be created. If the path is not absolute, the path is considered to be relative to the cgroups path of the init process. Cgroups will be created if they do not already exist. + +**--cpu-period**=*0* + +Limit the CPU CFS (Completely Fair Scheduler) period + +Limit the container's CPU usage. This flag tell the kernel to restrict the container's CPU usage to the period you specify. + +**--cpu-quota**=*0* + +Limit the CPU CFS (Completely Fair Scheduler) quota + +Limit the container's CPU usage. By default, containers run with the full +CPU resource. This flag tell the kernel to restrict the container's CPU usage +to the quota you specify. + +**--cpu-shares**=*0* + +CPU shares (relative weight) + +By default, all containers get the same proportion of CPU cycles. This proportion +can be modified by changing the container's CPU share weighting relative +to the weighting of all other running containers. + +To modify the proportion from the default of 1024, use the **--cpu-shares** +flag to set the weighting to 2 or higher. + +The proportion will only apply when CPU-intensive processes are running. +When tasks in one container are idle, other containers can use the +left-over CPU time. The actual amount of CPU time will vary depending on +the number of containers running on the system. + +For example, consider three containers, one has a cpu-share of 1024 and +two others have a cpu-share setting of 512. When processes in all three +containers attempt to use 100% of CPU, the first container would receive +50% of the total CPU time. If you add a fourth container with a cpu-share +of 1024, the first container only gets 33% of the CPU. The remaining containers +receive 16.5%, 16.5% and 33% of the CPU. + +On a multi-core system, the shares of CPU time are distributed over all CPU +cores. Even if a container is limited to less than 100% of CPU time, it can +use 100% of each individual CPU core. + +For example, consider a system with more than three cores. If you start one +container **{C0}** with **-c=512** running one process, and another container +**{C1}** with **-c=1024** running two processes, this can result in the following +division of CPU shares: + + PID container CPU CPU share + 100 {C0} 0 100% of CPU0 + 101 {C1} 1 100% of CPU1 + 102 {C1} 2 100% of CPU2 + +**--cpuset-cpus**="" + + CPUs in which to allow execution (0-3, 0,1) + +**--cpuset-mems**="" + +Memory nodes (MEMs) in which to allow execution (0-3, 0,1). Only effective on NUMA systems. + +If you have four memory nodes on your system (0-3), use `--cpuset-mems=0,1` +then processes in your container will only use memory from the first +two memory nodes. + **--creds** *creds* The [username[:password]] to use to authenticate with the registry if required. @@ -64,6 +137,26 @@ Control the format for the built image's manifest and configuration data. Recognized formats include *oci* (OCI image-spec v1.0, the default) and *docker* (version 2, using schema format 2 for the manifest). +**-m**, **--memory**="" + +Memory limit (format: <number>[<unit>], where unit = b, k, m or g) + +Allows you to constrain the memory available to a container. If the host +supports swap memory, then the **-m** memory setting can be larger than physical +RAM. If a limit of 0 is specified (not using **-m**), the container's memory is +not limited. The actual limit may be rounded up to a multiple of the operating +system's page size (the value would be very large, that's millions of trillions). + +**--memory-swap**="LIMIT" + +A limit value equal to memory plus swap. Must be used with the **-m** +(**--memory**) flag. The swap `LIMIT` should always be larger than **-m** +(**--memory**) value. By default, the swap `LIMIT` will be set to double +the value of --memory. + +The format of `LIMIT` is `<number>[<unit>]`. Unit can be `b` (bytes), +`k` (kilobytes), `m` (megabytes), or `g` (gigabytes). If you don't specify a +unit, `b` is used. Set LIMIT to `-1` to enable unlimited swap. **--pull-always** Pull the image even if a version of the image is already present. @@ -83,6 +176,28 @@ commands specified by the **RUN** instruction. Adds global flags for the container runtime. +**--security-opt**=[] + +Security Options + + "label=user:USER" : Set the label user for the container + "label=role:ROLE" : Set the label role for the container + "label=type:TYPE" : Set the label type for the container + "label=level:LEVEL" : Set the label level for the container + "label=disable" : Turn off label confinement for the container + "no-new-privileges" : Not supported + + "seccomp=unconfined" : Turn off seccomp confinement for the container + "seccomp=profile.json : White listed syscalls seccomp Json file to be used as a seccomp filter + + "apparmor=unconfined" : Turn off apparmor confinement for the container + "apparmor=your-profile" : Set the apparmor confinement profile for the container + +**--shm-size**="" + +Size of `/dev/shm`. The format is `<number><unit>`. `number` must be greater than `0`. +Unit is optional and can be `b` (bytes), `k` (kilobytes), `m`(megabytes), or `g` (gigabytes). +If you omit the unit, the system uses bytes. If you omit the size entirely, the system uses `64m`. **--signature-policy** *signature-policy-file* Path name of a signature policy file to use. It is not recommended that this @@ -98,6 +213,75 @@ process completes successfully. Require HTTPS and verify certificates when talking to container registries (defaults to true) +**--ulimit**=[] + +Ulimit options + +**-v**|**--volume**[=*[HOST-DIR:CONTAINER-DIR[:OPTIONS]]*] + + Create a bind mount. If you specify, ` -v /HOST-DIR:/CONTAINER-DIR`, podman + bind mounts `/HOST-DIR` in the host to `/CONTAINER-DIR` in the podman + container. The `OPTIONS` are a comma delimited list and can be: + + * [rw|ro] + * [z|Z] + * [`[r]shared`|`[r]slave`|`[r]private`] + +The `CONTAINER-DIR` must be an absolute path such as `/src/docs`. The `HOST-DIR` +must be an absolute path as well. podman bind-mounts the `HOST-DIR` to the +path you specify. For example, if you supply the `/foo` value, podman creates a bind-mount. + +You can specify multiple **-v** options to mount one or more mounts to a +container. + +You can add `:ro` or `:rw` suffix to a volume to mount it read-only or +read-write mode, respectively. By default, the volumes are mounted read-write. +See examples. + +Labeling systems like SELinux require that proper labels are placed on volume +content mounted into a container. Without a label, the security system might +prevent the processes running inside the container from using the content. By +default, podman does not change the labels set by the OS. + +To change a label in the container context, you can add either of two suffixes +`:z` or `:Z` to the volume mount. These suffixes tell podman to relabel file +objects on the shared volumes. The `z` option tells podman that two containers +share the volume content. As a result, podman labels the content with a shared +content label. Shared volume labels allow all containers to read/write content. +The `Z` option tells podman to label the content with a private unshared label. +Only the current container can use a private volume. + +By default bind mounted volumes are `private`. That means any mounts done +inside container will not be visible on the host and vice versa. This behavior can +be changed by specifying a volume mount propagation property. + +When the mount propagation policy is set to `shared`, any mounts completed inside +the container on that volume will be visible to both the host and container. When +the mount propagation policy is set to `slave`, one way mount propagation is enabled +and any mounts completed on the host for that volume will be visible only inside of the container. +To control the mount propagation property of volume use the `:[r]shared`, +`:[r]slave` or `:[r]private` propagation flag. The propagation property can +be specified only for bind mounted volumes and not for internal volumes or +named volumes. For mount propagation to work on the source mount point (mount point +where source dir is mounted on) has to have the right propagation properties. For +shared volumes, the source mount point has to be shared. And for slave volumes, +the source mount has to be either shared or slave. + +Use `df <source-dir>` to determine the source mount and then use +`findmnt -o TARGET,PROPAGATION <source-mount-dir>` to determine propagation +properties of source mount, if `findmnt` utility is not available, the source mount point +can be determined by looking at the mount entry in `/proc/self/mountinfo`. Look +at `optional fields` and see if any propagaion properties are specified. +`shared:X` means the mount is `shared`, `master:X` means the mount is `slave` and if +nothing is there that means the mount is `private`. + +To change propagation properties of a mount point use the `mount` command. For +example, to bind mount the source directory `/foo` do +`mount --bind /foo /foo` and `mount --make-private --make-shared /foo`. This +will convert /foo into a `shared` mount point. The propagation properties of the source +mount can be changed directly. For instance if `/` is the source mount for +`/foo`, then use `mount --make-shared /` to convert `/` into a `shared` mount. + ## EXAMPLES podman build . @@ -112,11 +296,17 @@ podman build --tls-verify=true -t imageName -f Dockerfile.simple podman build --tls-verify=false -t imageName . -podman bud --runtime-flag log-format=json . +podman build --runtime-flag log-format=json . + +podman build --runtime-flag debug . + +podman build --authfile /tmp/auths/myauths.json --cert-dir ~/auth --tls-verify=true --creds=username:password -t imageName -f Dockerfile.simple + +podman build --memory 40m --cpu-period 10000 --cpu-quota 50000 --ulimit nofile=1024:1028 -t imageName . -podman bud --runtime-flag debug . +podman build --security-opt label=level:s0:c100,c200 --cgroup-parent /path/to/cgroup/parent -t imageName . -podman bud --authfile /tmp/auths/myauths.json --cert-dir ~/auth --tls-verify=true --creds=username:password -t imageName -f Dockerfile.simple +podman build --volume /home/test:/myvol:ro,Z -t imageName . ## SEE ALSO podman(1), buildah(1) |