From 9f84d2ee27e4bb5376443b8854996f07eed08052 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: TomSweeneyRedHat Date: Thu, 19 Sep 2019 18:28:27 -0400 Subject: Move rootless and Mac to Tutorials page As the title says. Signed-off-by: TomSweeneyRedHat --- docs/tutorials/mac_client.md | 99 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 99 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/tutorials/mac_client.md (limited to 'docs/tutorials/mac_client.md') diff --git a/docs/tutorials/mac_client.md b/docs/tutorials/mac_client.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..bf08e8cc1 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/tutorials/mac_client.md @@ -0,0 +1,99 @@ +# Podman Mac Client tutorial + +## What is the Podman Mac Client + +First and foremost, the Mac Client is under heavy development. We are working on getting the +Mac client to be packaged and run for a native-like experience. This is the setup tutorial +for the Mac client at its current stage of development and packaging. + +The purpose of the Mac client for Podman is to allow users to run Podman on a Mac. Since Podman is a Linux +container engine, The Mac client is actually a version of the [Podman-remote client](remote_client.md), +edited to that the client side works on a Mac machine, and connects to a Podman "backend" on a Linux +machine, virtual or physical. The goal is to have a native-like experience when working with the Mac +client, so the command line interface of the remote client is exactly the same as the regular Podman +commands with the exception of some flags and commands that do not apply to the Mac client. + +## What you need + +To use the Mac client, you will need a binary built for MacOS and a Podman "backend" on a Linux machine; +hereafter referred to as the Podman node. In this context, a Podman node is a Linux system with Podman +installed on it and the varlink service activated. You will also need to be able to ssh into this +system as a user with privileges to the varlink socket (more on this later). + +For best results, use the most recent version of MacOS + +## Getting the Mac client +The Mac client is available through [Homebrew](https://brew.sh/). +``` +$ brew cask install podman +``` + +## Setting up the client and Podman node connection + +To use the Mac client, you must perform some setup on both the Mac and Podman nodes. In this case, +the Mac node refers to the Mac on which Podman is being run; and the Podman node refers to where +Podman and its storage reside. + +### Connection settings +Your Linux box must have ssh enabled, and you must copy your Mac's public key from `~/.sconf sh/id.pub` to +`/root/.ssh/authorized_keys` on your Linux box using `ssh-copy-id` This allows for the use of SSH keys +for remote access. + +You may need to edit your `/etc/ssh/sshd_config` in your Linux machine as follows: +``` +PermitRootLogin yes +``` + +Use of SSH keys are strongly encouraged to ensure a secure login. However, if you wish to avoid ‘logging in’ every +time you run a Podman command, you may edit your `/etc/ssh/sshd_config` on your Linux machine as follows: +``` +PasswordAuthentication no +PermitRootLogin without-password +``` + +### Podman node setup +The Podman node must be running a Linux distribution that supports Podman and must have Podman (not the Mac +client) installed. You must also have root access to the node. Check if your system uses systemd: +``` +$cat /proc/1/comm +systemd +``` +If it does, then simply start the Podman varlink socket: +``` +$ sudo systemctl start io.podman.socket +$ sudo systemctl enable io.podman.socket +``` + +If your system cannot use systemd, then you can manually establish the varlink socket with the Podman +command: +``` +$ sudo podman --log-level debug varlink --timeout 0 unix://run/podman/io.podman +``` + +### Required permissions +For now, the Mac client requires that you be able to run a privileged Podman and have privileged ssh +access to the remote system. This limitation is being worked on. + +#### Running the remote client +There are three different ways to pass connection information into the client: flags, conf file, and +environment variables. All three require information on username and a remote host ip address. Most often, +your username should be root and you can obtain your remote-host-ip using `ip addr` + +To connect using flags, you can use +``` +$ podman --remote-host remote-host-ip --username root images +REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE +quay.io/podman/stable latest 9c1e323be87f 10 days ago 414 MB +localhost/test latest 4b8c27c343e1 4 weeks ago 253 MB +k8s.gcr.io/pause 3.1 da86e6ba6ca1 20 months ago 747 kB +``` +If the conf file is set up, you may simply use Podman as you would on the linux machine. Take a look at +[podman-remote.conf.5.md](https://github.com/containers/libpod/blob/master/docs/podman-remote.conf.5.md) on how to use the conf file: + +``` +$ podman images +REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE +quay.io/podman/stable latest 9c1e323be87f 10 days ago 414 MB +localhost/test latest 4b8c27c343e1 4 weeks ago 253 MB +k8s.gcr.io/pause 3.1 da86e6ba6ca1 20 months ago 747 kB +``` -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf