If the --health-cmd flag is not specified, other flags such as --health-interval, --health-timeout, --health-retries, and --health-start-period are ignored if the image contains a Healthcheck. This makes it impossible to modify these Healthcheck configuration when a container is created.
Fixes: https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/20212
Fixes: https://issues.redhat.com/browse/RUN-2629
Signed-off-by: Jan Rodák <hony.com@seznam.cz>
The --env is used to add new environment variable to container or
override the existing one. The --unsetenv is used to remove
the environment variable.
It is done by sharing "env" and "unsetenv" flags between both
"update" and "create" commands and later handling these flags
in the "update" command handler.
The list of environment variables to add/remove is stored
in newly added variables in the ContainerUpdateOptions.
The Container.Update API call is refactored to take
the ContainerUpdateOptions as an input to limit the number of its
arguments.
The Env and UnsetEnv lists are later handled using the envLib
package and the Container is updated.
The remote API is also extended to handle Env and EnvUnset.
Fixes: #24875
Signed-off-by: Jan Kaluza <jkaluza@redhat.com>
New flags in a `podman update` can change the configuration of HealthCheck when the container is started, without having to restart or recreate the container.
This can help determine why a given container suddenly started failing HealthCheck without interfering with the services it provides. For example, reconfigure HealthCheck to keep logs longer than the usual last X results, store logs to other destinations, etc.
Fixes: https://issues.redhat.com/browse/RHEL-60561
Signed-off-by: Jan Rodák <hony.com@seznam.cz>
Clarifies the behavior of --interactive in both attached and unattached
scenarios.
Adds a caveat and explanation for --interactive being hungry as
described in https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/24370.
Signed-off-by: Alicia Boya García <aboya@igalia.com>
These flags can affect the output of the HealtCheck log. Currently, when a container is configured with HealthCheck, the output from the HealthCheck command is only logged to the container status file, which is accessible via `podman inspect`.
It is also limited to the last five executions and the first 500 characters per execution.
This makes debugging past problems very difficult, since the only information available about the failure of the HealthCheck command is the generic `healthcheck service failed` record.
- The `--health-log-destination` flag sets the destination of the HealthCheck log.
- `none`: (default behavior) `HealthCheckResults` are stored in overlay containers. (For example: `$runroot/healthcheck.log`)
- `directory`: creates a log file named `<container-ID>-healthcheck.log` with JSON `HealthCheckResults` in the specified directory.
- `events_logger`: The log will be written with logging mechanism set by events_loggeri. It also saves the log to a default directory, for performance on a system with a large number of logs.
- The `--health-max-log-count` flag sets the maximum number of attempts in the HealthCheck log file.
- A value of `0` indicates an infinite number of attempts in the log file.
- The default value is `5` attempts in the log file.
- The `--health-max-log-size` flag sets the maximum length of the log stored.
- A value of `0` indicates an infinite log length.
- The default value is `500` log characters.
Add --health-max-log-count flag
Signed-off-by: Jan Rodák <hony.com@seznam.cz>
Add --health-max-log-size flag
Signed-off-by: Jan Rodák <hony.com@seznam.cz>
Add --health-log-destination flag
Signed-off-by: Jan Rodák <hony.com@seznam.cz>
The pod was set after we checked the namespace and the namespace code
only checked the --pod flag but didn't consider --pod-id-file option.
As such fix the check to first set the pod option on the spec then use
that for the namespace. Also make sure we always use an empty default
otherwise it would be impossible in the backend to know if a user
requested a specific userns or not, i.e. even in case of a set
PODMAN_USERNS env a container should still get the userns from the pod
and not use the var in this case. Therefore unset it from the default
cli value.
There are more issues here around --pod-id-file and cli validation that
does not consider the option as conflicting with --userns like --pod
does but I decided to fix the bug at hand and don't try to fix the
entire mess which most likely would take days.
Fixes#22931
Signed-off-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com>
This is something Docker does, and we did not do until now. Most
difficult/annoying part was the REST API, where I did not really
want to modify the struct being sent, so I made the new restart
policy parameters query parameters instead.
Testing was also a bit annoying, because testing restart policy
always is.
Signed-off-by: Matt Heon <mheon@redhat.com>
Moving from Go module v4 to v5 prepares us for public releases.
Move done using gomove [1] as with the v3 and v4 moves.
[1] https://github.com/KSubedi/gomove
Signed-off-by: Matt Heon <mheon@redhat.com>
As requested in containers/podman/issues/20000, add a `privileged` field
to the containers table in containers.conf. I was hesitant to add such
a field at first (for security reasons) but I understand that such a
field can come in handy when using modules - certain workloads require a
privileged container.
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <vrothberg@redhat.com>
Add --rdt-class=COS to the create and run command to enable the
assignment of a container to a Class of Service (COS). The COS
represents a part of the cache based on the Cache Allocation Technology
(CAT) feature that is part of Intel's Resource Director Technology
(Intel RDT) feature set. By assigning a container to a COS, all PID's of
the container have only access to the cache space defined for this COS.
The COS has to be pre-configured based on the resctrl kernel driver.
cat_l2 and cat_l3 flags in /proc/cpuinfo represent CAT support for cache
level 2 and 3 respectively.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Pross <wolfgang.pross@intel.com>
As found while working on #20000, the `--env-host` flag should use the
default from containers.conf. Add a new "supported fields" test to the
system tests to make sure we have a goto test for catching such
regressions. I suspect more flags to not use the defaults from
containers.conf.
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <vrothberg@redhat.com>
Add --restart flag to pod create to allow users to set the
restart policy for the pod, which applies to all the containers
in the pod. This reuses the restart policy already there for
containers and has the same restart policy options.
Add "never" to the restart policy options to match k8s syntax.
It is a synonym for "no" and does the exact same thing where the
containers are not restarted once exited.
Only the containers that have exited will be restarted based on the
restart policy, running containers will not be restarted when an exited
container is restarted in the same pod (same as is done in k8s).
Signed-off-by: Urvashi Mohnani <umohnani@redhat.com>
* add tests
* add documentation for --shm-size-systemd
* add support for both pod and standalone run
Signed-off-by: danishprakash <danish.prakash@suse.com>
Add test to verify that updates without a pids-limit specified no longer
overwrite the previous value.
Also fixes erroneous warning generated by remote clients:
"Resource limits are not supported and ignored on cgroups V1 rootless
systems"
Signed-off-by: Jason T. Greene <jason.greene@redhat.com>
Added the functionality for a user to update the PIDs limit for a
container.
Fixes: #16543
Signed-off-by: Jake Correnti <jakecorrenti+github@proton.me>
If you are running temporary containers within podman play kube
we should really be running these in read-only mode. For automotive
they plan on running all of their containers in read-only temporal
mode. Adding this option guarantees that the container image is not
being modified during the running of the container.
The containers can only write to tmpfs mounted directories.
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
The remote client should be allowed to specify if the container should
be run with the proxy env vars. It will still use the proxy vars from
the server process and not the client. This makes podman-remote more
consistent with the local version and easier to use in environments
where a proxy is required.
Fixes#16520
Signed-off-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com>
Startup healthchecks are similar to K8S startup probes, in that
they are a separate check from the regular healthcheck that runs
before it. If the startup healthcheck fails repeatedly, the
associated container is restarted.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Heon <matthew.heon@pm.me>
Use `Default()` instead of re-loading containers.conf.
Also rework how the containers.conf objects are handled for parsing the
CLI. Previously, we were conflating "loading the defaults" with
"storing values from the CLI" with "libpod may further change fields"
which ultimately led to various bugs and test failues.
To address the issue, separate the defaults from the values from the CLI
and properly name the fields to make the semantics less ambiguous.
[NO NEW TESTS NEEDED] as it's not a functional change.
Fixes: containers/common/issues/1200
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <vrothberg@redhat.com>
For systems that have extreme robustness requirements (edge devices,
particularly those in difficult to access environments), it is important
that applications continue running in all circumstances. When the
application fails, Podman must restart it automatically to provide this
robustness. Otherwise, these devices may require customer IT to
physically gain access to restart, which can be prohibitively difficult.
Add a new `--on-failure` flag that supports four actions:
- **none**: Take no action.
- **kill**: Kill the container.
- **restart**: Restart the container. Do not combine the `restart`
action with the `--restart` flag. When running inside of
a systemd unit, consider using the `kill` or `stop`
action instead to make use of systemd's restart policy.
- **stop**: Stop the container.
To remain backwards compatible, **none** is the default action.
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <vrothberg@redhat.com>
podman update allows users to change the cgroup configuration of an existing container using the already defined resource limits flags
from podman create/run. The supported flags in crun are:
this command is also now supported in the libpod api via the /libpod/containers/<CID>/update endpoint where
the resource limits are passed inthe request body and follow the OCI resource spec format
–memory
–cpus
–cpuset-cpus
–cpuset-mems
–memory-swap
–memory-reservation
–cpu-shares
–cpu-quota
–cpu-period
–blkio-weight
–cpu-rt-period
–cpu-rt-runtime
-device-read-bps
-device-write-bps
-device-read-iops
-device-write-iops
-memory-swappiness
-blkio-weight-device
resolves#15067
Signed-off-by: Charlie Doern <cdoern@redhat.com>
Allow end users to preprocess default environment variables before
injecting them into container using `--env-merge`
Usage
```
podman run -it --rm --env-merge some=${some}-edit --env-merge
some2=${some2}-edit2 myimage sh
```
Closes: https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/15288
Signed-off-by: Aditya R <arajan@redhat.com>
added the following flags and handling for podman pod create
--memory-swap
--cpuset-mems
--device-read-bps
--device-write-bps
--blkio-weight
--blkio-weight-device
--cpu-shares
given the new backend for systemd in c/common, all of these can now be exposed to pod create.
most of the heavy lifting (nearly all) is done within c/common. However, some rewiring needed to be done here
as well!
Signed-off-by: Charlie Doern <cdoern@redhat.com>
Make sure that the docs for pull policies is consistent with Buildah and
reflects the implementation.
Further improve the help messages and auto completions.
[NO NEW TESTS NEEDED]
Fixes: #14846
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <vrothberg@redhat.com>
add support for the --uts flag in pod create, allowing users to avoid
issues with default values in containers.conf.
uts follows the same format as other namespace flags:
--uts=private (default), --uts=host, --uts=ns:PATH
resolves#13714
Signed-off-by: Charlie Doern <cdoern@redhat.com>
using the new resource backend, implement podman pod create --memory which enables
users to modify memory.max inside of the parent cgroup (the pod), implicitly impacting all
children unless overriden
Signed-off-by: Charlie Doern <cdoern@redhat.com>
expose the --shm-size flag to podman pod create and add proper handling and inheritance
for the option.
resolves#14609
Signed-off-by: Charlie Doern <cdoern@redhat.com>