| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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A fairly common mistake users are hitting is running rootless podman without
installing fuse-overlay. Then they want to reset storage. Sometimes they
modify storage.conf first and `podman system reset` fails.
This PR attempts to explain how to convert properly.
Fixes: https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/7446
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
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Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Konowitch <jeff.konowitch@onepeloton.com>
Update podman-system-reset.1.md
Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Konowitch <jeff.konowitch@onepeloton.com>
PR feedback
Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Konowitch <jeff.konowitch@onepeloton.com>
remove errant punctuation
Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Konowitch <jeff.konowitch@onepeloton.com>
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New functionality in hack/man-page-checker: start cross-
referencing the man page 'Synopsis' line against the
output of 'podman foo --help'. This is part 1, flag/option
consistency. Part 2 (arg consistency) is too big and will
have to wait for later.
flag/option consistency means: if 'podman foo --help'
includes the string '[flags]' in the Usage message,
make sure the man page includes '[*options*]' in its
Synopsis line, and vice-versa. This found several
inconsistencies, which I've fixed.
While doing this I realized that Cobra automatically
includes a 'Flags:' subsection in its --help output
for all subcommands that have defined flags. This
is great - it lets us cross-check against the
usage synopsis, and make sure that '[flags]' is
present or absent as needed, without fear of
human screwups. If a flag-less subcommand ever
gets extended with flags, but the developer forgets
to add '[flags]' and remove DisableFlagsInUseLine,
we now have a test that will catch that. (This,
too, caught two instances which I fixed).
I don't actually know if the new man-page-checker
functionality will work in CI: I vaguely recall that
it might run before 'make podman' does; and also
vaguely recall that some steps were taken to remedy
that.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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This command will destroy all data created via podman.
It will remove containers, images, volumes, pods.
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
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