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classnotes:rh134:containers:deploy:resources

Manage Container Storage and Network Resources

You can use containers to run a simple process and exit.

You can also configure a container to run a service continuously, such as a database server. If you run a service continuously, you might eventually need to add more resources to the container, such as persistent storage or access to more networks.

When a container, such as a web server or database server, serves content for clients outside the container host, you must set up a communication channel for those clients to access the content of the container. You can configure port mapping to enable communication to a container. With port mapping, the requests that are destined for a port on the container host are forwarded to a port inside the container.

Directory that is mounted inside the container has tyo have container_file_t for selinux

forwarding ports uses the option -p for example

 podman run -d --name web 8080:8080 quay.io/rdacosta/my_http:lattest

the first 8080 is from the host and it will be mapped to the second 8080 on the container

to use volume mounting you use -v option and similar consept first is local host location then its container address for example

podman run -d --name web1 -p 8081:8080 -v /home/kiosk/web1:/var/www/html:Z quay.io/rdacosta/my_http:lattest

the capital Z ensure selinux context are correct

podman unshare chown 27:27 apps.db

podman run -d --name apps_db -p 13306:3306 -v /home/kiosk/apps_db:/var/lib/mysql/data:Z -e USER=ricardo \
-e MYSQL_PASSWORD=redhat123 \
-e MYSQL_DATABASE=apps  \
-e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=redhat321 \
 quay.io/rdacosta/my_http:lattest
-p does port forwarding
-v does volume forwarding
Z set selinux context for container
-e specifying container variable
classnotes/rh134/containers/deploy/resources.txt · Last modified: by 127.0.0.1