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authorLokesh Mandvekar <lsm5@fedoraproject.org>2020-08-19 21:21:05 -0400
committerLokesh Mandvekar <lsm5@fedoraproject.org>2020-08-19 21:22:53 -0400
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[CI:DOCS] Include Go bindings tutorial
Include the Go bindings blog post as a tutorial Signed-off-by: Lokesh Mandvekar <lsm5@fedoraproject.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/tutorials')
-rw-r--r--docs/tutorials/README.md4
-rw-r--r--docs/tutorials/podman-go-bindings.md546
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diff --git a/docs/tutorials/README.md b/docs/tutorials/README.md
index 191d7a4b5..4beb069ac 100644
--- a/docs/tutorials/README.md
+++ b/docs/tutorials/README.md
@@ -27,3 +27,7 @@ How the libpod API can be used within your own project.
**[Image Signing](image_signing.md)**
Learn how to setup and use image signing with Podman.
+
+**[Go Bindings](podman-go-bindings.md)**
+
+A brief how-to on using Podman's Go bindings in external applications.
diff --git a/docs/tutorials/podman-go-bindings.md b/docs/tutorials/podman-go-bindings.md
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..ddebf7e99
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/tutorials/podman-go-bindings.md
@@ -0,0 +1,546 @@
+![PODMAN logo](../../logo/podman-logo-source.svg)
+
+# Podman Go bindings
+
+## Introduction
+
+In the release of Podman 2.0, we removed the experimental tag
+from its recently introduced RESTful service. While it might
+be interesting to interact with a RESTFul server using curl,
+using a set of Go based bindings is probably a more direct
+route to a production ready application. Let’s take a look
+at how easily that can be accomplished.
+
+If you haven't yet, [install Go](https://golang.org/doc/install).
+
+Be careful to double-check that the version of golang is new
+enough (i.e. `go version`), version 1.13.x or higher is
+supported. If needed, Go sources and binaries can be fetched
+from the [official Go website](https://golang.org/dl/).
+
+The Podman Go bindings are a set of functions to allow
+developers to execute Podman operations from within their Go
+based application. The Go bindings connect to a Podman service
+which can run locally or on a remote machine. You can perform
+many operations including pulling and listing images, starting,
+stopping or inspecting containers. Currently, the Podman
+repository has bindings available for operations on images,
+containers, pods, networks and manifests among others. The
+bindings are available on the [v2.0 branch in the
+upstream Podman repository](https://github.com/containers/podman/tree/v2.0).
+You can fetch the bindings for your application using Go modules:
+
+```bash
+$ cd $HOME
+$ mkdir example && cd example
+$ go mod init example.com
+go: creating new go.mod: module example.com
+$ go get github.com/containers/podman/v2@v2.0.4
+go: downloading github.com/containers/podman/v2 v2.0.4
+go get: github.com/containers/podman/v2@v2.0.4: parsing go.mod:
+ module declares its path as: github.com/containers/libpod/v2
+ but was required as: github.com/containers/podman/v2
+```
+
+This creates a new `go.mod` file in the current directory that looks as follows:
+
+```bash
+module example.com
+
+go 1.14
+
+require github.com/containers/libpod/v2 v2.0.4 // indirect
+```
+
+You can also try a demo application with the Go modules created already:
+
+```bash
+$ git clone https://github.com/containers/Demos
+$ cd Demos/podman_go_bindings
+$ ls
+README.md go.mod go.sum main.go
+```
+
+
+## How do I use them
+
+In this tutorial, you will learn through basic examples how to:
+
+0. [Start the Podman system service](#start-service)
+1. [Connect to the Podman system service](#connect-service)
+2. [Pull images](#pull-images)
+3. [List images](#list-images)
+4. [Create and start a container from an image](#create-start-container)
+5. [List containers](#list-containers)
+6. [Inspect the container](#inspect-container)
+7. [Stop the container](#stop-container)
+8. [Debugging tips](#debugging-tips)
+
+
+### Start the Podman system service <a name="start-service"></a>
+The recommended way to start Podman system service in production mode
+is via systemd socket-activation:
+
+```bash
+$ systemctl --user start podman.socket
+```
+
+There’s no timeout specified when starting the system service via socket-activation.
+
+For purposes of this demo, we will start the service using the Podman
+command itself. If you prefer the system service to timeout after, say,
+5000 seconds, you can run it like so:
+
+```bash
+$ podman system service -t 5000
+```
+
+Note that the 5000 seconds uptime is refreshed after every command is received.
+If you want the service to stay up until the machine is shutdown or the process
+is terminated, use `0` (zero) instead of 5000. For this demo, we will use no timeout:
+
+```bash
+$ podman system service -t 0
+```
+
+
+Open another terminal window and check if the Podman socket exists:
+
+```bash
+$ ls /run/user/${UID}/podman
+podman.sock
+```
+
+If you’re running the system service as root, podman.sock will be found in /run/podman:
+```bash
+# ls /run/podman
+podman.sock
+```
+
+
+### Connect to the Podman system service <a name="connect-service"></a>
+First, you need to create a connection that connects to the system service.
+The critical piece of information for setting up a new connection is the endpoint.
+The endpoint comes in the form of an URI (method:/path/to/socket). For example,
+to connect to the local rootful socket the URI would be `unix:/run/podman/podman.sock`
+and for a rootless user it would be `unix:$(XDG_RUNTIME_DIR)/podman/podman.sock`,
+typically: `unix:/run/user/${UID}/podman/podman.sock`.
+
+
+The following Go example snippet shows how to set up a connection for a rootless user.
+```Go
+package main
+
+import (
+ "context"
+ "fmt"
+ "os"
+
+ "github.com/containers/libpod/v2/libpod/define"
+ "github.com/containers/libpod/v2/pkg/bindings"
+ "github.com/containers/libpod/v2/pkg/bindings/containers"
+ "github.com/containers/libpod/v2/pkg/bindings/images"
+ "github.com/containers/libpod/v2/pkg/domain/entities"
+ "github.com/containers/libpod/v2/pkg/specgen"
+)
+
+func main() {
+ fmt.Println("Welcome to the Podman Go bindings tutorial")
+
+ // Get Podman socket location
+ sock_dir := os.Getenv("XDG_RUNTIME_DIR")
+ socket := "unix:" + sock_dir + "/podman/podman.sock"
+
+ // Connect to Podman socket
+ connText, err := bindings.NewConnection(context.Background(), socket)
+ if err != nil {
+ fmt.Println(err)
+ os.Exit(1)
+ }
+}
+```
+
+The `connText` variable received from the NewConnection function is of type
+context.Context(). In subsequent uses of the bindings, you will use this context
+to direct the bindings to your connection. This can be seen in the examples below.
+
+### Pull an image <a name="pull-images"></a>
+
+Next, we will pull a couple of images using the images.Pull() binding.
+This binding takes three arguments:
+ - The context variable created by the bindings.NewConnection() call in the first example
+ - The image name
+ - Options for image pull
+
+**Append the following lines to your function:**
+
+```Go
+ // Pull Busybox image (Sample 1)
+ fmt.Println("Pulling Busybox image...")
+ _, err = images.Pull(connText, "docker.io/busybox", entities.ImagePullOptions{})
+ if err != nil {
+ fmt.Println(err)
+ os.Exit(1)
+ }
+
+ // Pull Fedora image (Sample 2)
+ rawImage := "registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:latest"
+ fmt.Println("Pulling Fedora image...")
+ _, err = images.Pull(connText, rawImage, entities.ImagePullOptions{})
+ if err != nil {
+ fmt.Println(err)
+ os.Exit(1)
+ }
+```
+
+**Run it:**
+
+```bash
+$ go run main.go
+Welcome to the Podman Go bindings tutorial
+Pulling Busybox image...
+Pulling Fedora image...
+$
+```
+
+The system service side should echo messages like so:
+
+```bash
+Trying to pull docker.io/busybox...
+Getting image source signatures
+Copying blob 61c5ed1cbdf8 [--------------------------------------] 0.0b / 0.0b
+Copying config 018c9d7b79 done
+Writing manifest to image destination
+Storing signatures
+Trying to pull registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:latest...
+Getting image source signatures
+Copying blob dd9f43919ba0 [--------------------------------------] 0.0b / 0.0b
+Copying config 00ff39a8bf done
+Writing manifest to image destination
+Storing signatures
+```
+
+
+### List images <a name="list-images"></a>
+Next, we will pull an image using the images.List() binding.
+This binding takes three arguments:
+ - The context variable created earlier
+ - An optional bool 'all'
+ - An optional map of filters
+
+**Append the following lines to your function:**
+
+```Go
+ // List images
+ imageSummary, err := images.List(connText, nil, nil)
+ if err != nil {
+ fmt.Println(err)
+ os.Exit(1)
+ }
+ var names []string
+ for _, i := range imageSummary {
+ names = append(names, i.RepoTags...)
+ }
+ fmt.Println("Listing images...")
+ fmt.Println(names)
+```
+
+**Run it:**
+
+```bash
+$ go run main.go
+Welcome to the Podman Go bindings tutorial
+Pulling Busybox image...
+Pulling Fedora image...
+Listing images...
+[docker.io/library/busybox:latest registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:latest]
+$
+```
+
+
+### Create and Start a Container from an Image <a name="create-start-container"></a>
+
+To create the container spec, we use specgen.NewSpecGenerator() followed by
+calling containers.CreateWithSpec() to actually create a new container.
+specgen.NewSpecGenerator() takes 2 arguments:
+ - name of the image
+ - whether it's a rootfs
+
+containers.CreateWithSpec() takes 2 arguments:
+ - the context created earlier
+ - the spec created by NewSpecGenerator
+
+Next, the container is actually started using the containers.Start() binding.
+containers.Start() takes three arguments:
+ - the context
+ - the name or ID of the container created
+ - an optional parameter for detach keys
+
+After the container is started, it's a good idea to ensure the container is
+in a running state before you proceed with further operations.
+The containers.Wait() takes care of that.
+containers.Wait() takes three arguments:
+ - the context
+ - the name or ID of the container created
+ - container state (running/paused/stopped)
+
+**Append the following lines to your function:**
+
+```Go
+ // Container create
+ s := specgen.NewSpecGenerator(rawImage, false)
+ s.Terminal = true
+ r, err := containers.CreateWithSpec(connText, s)
+ if err != nil {
+ fmt.Println(err)
+ os.Exit(1)
+ }
+
+ // Container start
+ fmt.Println("Starting Fedora container...")
+ err = containers.Start(connText, r.ID, nil)
+ if err != nil {
+ fmt.Println(err)
+ os.Exit(1)
+ }
+
+ running := define.ContainerStateRunning
+ _, err = containers.Wait(connText, r.ID, &running)
+ if err != nil {
+ fmt.Println(err)
+ os.Exit(1)
+ }
+```
+
+**Run it:**
+
+```bash
+$ go run main.go
+Welcome to the Podman Go bindings tutorial
+Pulling image...
+Starting Fedora container...
+$
+```
+
+Check if the container is running:
+
+```bash
+$ podman ps
+CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
+665831d31e90 registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:latest /bin/bash Less than a second ago Up Less than a second ago dazzling_mclean
+$
+```
+
+
+### List Containers <a name="list-containers"></a>
+
+Containers can be listed using the containers.List() binding.
+containers.List() takes seven arguments:
+ - the context
+ - output filters
+ - boolean to show all containers, by default only running containers are listed
+ - number of latest created containers, all states (running/paused/stopped)
+ - boolean to print pod information
+ - boolean to print rootfs size
+ - boolean to print oci runtime and container state
+
+**Append the following lines to your function:**
+
+```Go
+ // Container list
+ var latestContainers = 1
+ containerLatestList, err := containers.List(connText, nil, nil, &latestContainers, nil, nil, nil)
+ if err != nil {
+ fmt.Println(err)
+ os.Exit(1)
+ }
+ fmt.Printf("Latest container is %s\n", containerLatestList[0].Names[0])
+```
+
+**Run it:**
+
+```bash
+$ go run main.go
+Welcome to the Podman Go bindings tutorial
+Pulling Busybox image...
+Pulling Fedora image...
+Listing images...
+[docker.io/library/busybox:latest registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:latest]
+Starting Fedora container...
+Latest container is dazzling_mclean
+$
+```
+
+
+### Inspect Container <a name="inspect-container"></a>
+Containers can be inspected using the containers.Inspect() binding.
+containers.Inspect() takes 3 arguments:
+ - context
+ - image name or ID
+ - optional boolean to check for container size
+
+
+**Append the following lines to your function:**
+
+```Go
+ // Container inspect
+ ctrData, err := containers.Inspect(connText, r.ID, nil)
+ if err != nil {
+ fmt.Println(err)
+ os.Exit(1)
+ }
+ fmt.Printf("Container uses image %s\n", ctrData.ImageName)
+ fmt.Printf("Container running status is %s\n", ctrData.State.Status)
+```
+
+**Run it:**
+
+```bash
+$ go run main.go
+Welcome to the Podman Go bindings tutorial
+Pulling Busybox image...
+Pulling Fedora image...
+Listing images...
+[docker.io/library/busybox:latest registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:latest]
+Starting Fedora container...
+Latest container is peaceful_noether
+Fedora Container uses image registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:latest
+Fedora Container running status is running
+$
+```
+
+
+### Stop Container <a name="stop-container"></a>
+
+A container can be stopped by the containers.Stop() binding.
+containers.Stop() takes 3 arguments:
+ - context
+ - image name or ID
+ - optional timeout
+
+**Append the following lines to your function:**
+
+```Go
+ // Container stop
+ fmt.Println("Stopping the container...")
+ err = containers.Stop(connText, r.ID, nil)
+ if err != nil {
+ fmt.Println(err)
+ os.Exit(1)
+ }
+ ctrData, err = containers.Inspect(connText, r.ID, nil)
+ if err != nil {
+ fmt.Println(err)
+ os.Exit(1)
+ }
+ fmt.Printf("Container running status is now %s\n", ctrData.State.Status)
+```
+
+**Run it:**
+
+```bash
+$ go run main.go
+Welcome to the Podman Go bindings tutorial
+Pulling Busybox image...
+Pulling Fedora image...
+Listing images...
+[docker.io/library/busybox:latest registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:latest]
+Starting Fedora container...
+Latest container is peaceful_noether
+Fedora Container uses image registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:latest
+Fedora Container running status is running
+Stopping Fedora container...
+Container running status is now exited
+```
+
+
+### Debugging tips <a name="debugging-tips"></a>
+
+To debug in a development setup, you can start the Podman system service
+in debug mode like so:
+
+```bash
+$ podman --log-level=debug system service -t 0
+```
+
+The `--log-level=debug` echoes all the logged requests and is useful to
+trace the execution path at a finer granularity. A snippet of a sample run looks like:
+
+```bash
+INFO[0000] podman filtering at log level debug
+DEBU[0000] Called service.PersistentPreRunE(podman --log-level=debug system service -t0)
+DEBU[0000] Ignoring libpod.conf EventsLogger setting "/home/lsm5/.config/containers/containers.conf". Use "journald" if you want to change this setting and remove libpod.conf files.
+DEBU[0000] Reading configuration file "/usr/share/containers/containers.conf"
+DEBU[0000] Merged system config "/usr/share/containers/containers.conf": {Editors note: the remainder of this line was removed due to Jekyll formatting errors.}
+DEBU[0000] Using conmon: "/usr/bin/conmon"
+DEBU[0000] Initializing boltdb state at /home/lsm5/.local/share/containers/storage/libpod/bolt_state.db
+DEBU[0000] Overriding run root "/run/user/1000/containers" with "/run/user/1000" from database
+DEBU[0000] Using graph driver overlay
+DEBU[0000] Using graph root /home/lsm5/.local/share/containers/storage
+DEBU[0000] Using run root /run/user/1000
+DEBU[0000] Using static dir /home/lsm5/.local/share/containers/storage/libpod
+DEBU[0000] Using tmp dir /run/user/1000/libpod/tmp
+DEBU[0000] Using volume path /home/lsm5/.local/share/containers/storage/volumes
+DEBU[0000] Set libpod namespace to ""
+DEBU[0000] Not configuring container store
+DEBU[0000] Initializing event backend file
+DEBU[0000] using runtime "/usr/bin/runc"
+DEBU[0000] using runtime "/usr/bin/crun"
+WARN[0000] Error initializing configured OCI runtime kata: no valid executable found for OCI runtime kata: invalid argument
+DEBU[0000] using runtime "/usr/bin/crun"
+INFO[0000] Setting parallel job count to 25
+INFO[0000] podman filtering at log level debug
+DEBU[0000] Called service.PersistentPreRunE(podman --log-level=debug system service -t0)
+DEBU[0000] Ignoring libpod.conf EventsLogger setting "/home/lsm5/.config/containers/containers.conf". Use "journald" if you want to change this setting and remove libpod.conf files.
+DEBU[0000] Reading configuration file "/usr/share/containers/containers.conf"
+```
+
+If the Podman system service has been started via systemd socket activation,
+you can view the logs using journalctl. The logs after a sample run look like so:
+
+```bash
+$ journalctl --user --no-pager -u podman.socket
+-- Reboot --
+Jul 22 13:50:40 nagato.nanadai.me systemd[1048]: Listening on Podman API Socket.
+$
+```
+
+```bash
+$ journalctl --user --no-pager -u podman.service
+Jul 22 13:50:53 nagato.nanadai.me systemd[1048]: Starting Podman API Service...
+Jul 22 13:50:54 nagato.nanadai.me podman[1527]: time="2020-07-22T13:50:54-04:00" level=error msg="Error refreshing volume 38480630a8bdaa3e1a0ebd34c94038591b0d7ad994b37be5b4f2072bb6ef0879: error acquiring lock 0 for volume 38480630a8bdaa3e1a0ebd34c94038591b0d7ad994b37be5b4f2072bb6ef0879: file exists"
+Jul 22 13:50:54 nagato.nanadai.me podman[1527]: time="2020-07-22T13:50:54-04:00" level=error msg="Error refreshing volume 47d410af4d762a0cc456a89e58f759937146fa3be32b5e95a698a1d4069f4024: error acquiring lock 0 for volume 47d410af4d762a0cc456a89e58f759937146fa3be32b5e95a698a1d4069f4024: file exists"
+Jul 22 13:50:54 nagato.nanadai.me podman[1527]: time="2020-07-22T13:50:54-04:00" level=error msg="Error refreshing volume 86e73f082e344dad38c8792fb86b2017c4f133f2a8db87f239d1d28a78cf0868: error acquiring lock 0 for volume 86e73f082e344dad38c8792fb86b2017c4f133f2a8db87f239d1d28a78cf0868: file exists"
+Jul 22 13:50:54 nagato.nanadai.me podman[1527]: time="2020-07-22T13:50:54-04:00" level=error msg="Error refreshing volume 9a16ea764be490a5563e384d9074ab0495e4d9119be380c664037d6cf1215631: error acquiring lock 0 for volume 9a16ea764be490a5563e384d9074ab0495e4d9119be380c664037d6cf1215631: file exists"
+Jul 22 13:50:54 nagato.nanadai.me podman[1527]: time="2020-07-22T13:50:54-04:00" level=error msg="Error refreshing volume bfd6b2a97217f8655add13e0ad3f6b8e1c79bc1519b7a1e15361a107ccf57fc0: error acquiring lock 0 for volume bfd6b2a97217f8655add13e0ad3f6b8e1c79bc1519b7a1e15361a107ccf57fc0: file exists"
+Jul 22 13:50:54 nagato.nanadai.me podman[1527]: time="2020-07-22T13:50:54-04:00" level=error msg="Error refreshing volume f9b9f630982452ebcbed24bd229b142fbeecd5d4c85791fca440b21d56fef563: error acquiring lock 0 for volume f9b9f630982452ebcbed24bd229b142fbeecd5d4c85791fca440b21d56fef563: file exists"
+Jul 22 13:50:54 nagato.nanadai.me podman[1527]: Trying to pull registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:latest...
+Jul 22 13:50:55 nagato.nanadai.me podman[1527]: Getting image source signatures
+Jul 22 13:50:55 nagato.nanadai.me podman[1527]: Copying blob sha256:dd9f43919ba05f05d4f783c31e83e5e776c4f5d29dd72b9ec5056b9576c10053
+Jul 22 13:50:55 nagato.nanadai.me podman[1527]: Copying config sha256:00ff39a8bf19f810a7e641f7eb3ddc47635913a19c4996debd91fafb6b379069
+Jul 22 13:50:55 nagato.nanadai.me podman[1527]: Writing manifest to image destination
+Jul 22 13:50:55 nagato.nanadai.me podman[1527]: Storing signatures
+Jul 22 13:50:55 nagato.nanadai.me systemd[1048]: podman.service: unit configures an IP firewall, but not running as root.
+Jul 22 13:50:55 nagato.nanadai.me systemd[1048]: (This warning is only shown for the first unit using IP firewalling.)
+Jul 22 13:51:15 nagato.nanadai.me systemd[1048]: podman.service: Succeeded.
+Jul 22 13:51:15 nagato.nanadai.me systemd[1048]: Finished Podman API Service.
+Jul 22 13:51:15 nagato.nanadai.me systemd[1048]: podman.service: Consumed 1.339s CPU time.
+$
+```
+
+
+## Wrap Up
+Podman v2 provides a set of Go bindings to allow developers to integrate Podman
+functionality conveniently in their Go application. These Go bindings require
+the Podman system service to be running in the background and this can easily
+be achieved using systemd socket activation. Once set up, you are able to use a
+set of Go based bindings to create, maintain and monitor your container images,
+containers and pods in a way which fits very nicely in many production environments.
+
+
+## References
+- Podman v2 is available for most major distributions along with MacOS and Windows.
+Installation details are available on the [Podman official website](https://podman.io/getting-started/).
+
+- Documentation can be found at the [Podman Docs page](https://docs.podman.io).
+It also includes a section on the [RESTful API](https://docs.podman.io/en/latest/Reference.html).