- Description
- Setup - Getting started with podman
- Usage - Configuration options and additional functionality
- Examples - Example configurations
- Limitations - OS compatibility, etc.
- Development - Guide for contributing to the module
Version 0.6.5 of the module slightly changes the way the container options are stored by Puppet. This will cause podman::container resources to detect a state change and re-deploy, interrupting any service running in those containers.
Podman enables running standard docker containers without the usual docker daemon. This has some benefits from a security perspective, with the key point of enabling containers to run as an unprivileged user. Podman also has the concept of a 'pod', which is a shared namespace where multiple containers can be deployed and communicate with each other over the loopback address of '127.0.0.1'. Be aware when running rootless containers that published ports are not automatically added to the host firewall. Use another module like firewalld to open ports on the host and the inbound traffic will reach the rootless container.
The defined types 'pod', 'image', 'volume', and 'container' are essentially wrappers around the respective podman "create"
commands (podman <type> create
). The defined types support all flags for the command, but require them to be expressed
using the long form (--env
instead of -e
). Flags that don't require values should set the value to undef (use ~
or
null
in YAML). Flags that are used more than once should be expressed as an array. The Jenkins example configuration
below demonstrates some of this in the flags
and service_flags
hashes.
The module installs packages including 'podman', 'skopeo', and optionally 'podman-docker'. The 'podman' package provides core functionality for running containers, while 'skopeo' is used to check for container image updates. The 'podman-docker' package provides a 'docker' command for those that are used to typing 'docker' instead of 'podman' (the 'podman' command is purposefully compatible with 'docker').
Simply including the module is enough to install the packages. There is no service associated with podman, so the module just installs the packages. Management of 'pods', 'images', 'volumes', and 'containers' is done using defined types. The module's defined types are all implemented in the main 'podman' class, allowing resources to be declared as hiera hashes. See the reference for usage of the defined types.
Assign the module to node(s):
include podman
With the module assigned you can manage podman resources using hiera data. When podman defined types are used with the user
parameter the resources will be owned by the defined user to support rootless containers. Using rootless containers this
way also enables 'loginctl enable-linger' on the user so rootless containers can start and run automatically under the assigned
user account when the system boots.
Be aware of how to work with podman and systemd user services when running rootless containers. The systemd and podman commands rely on the 'XDG_RUNTIME_DIR' environment variable that is normally set during login by pam_systemd. When you switch users this value will likely need to be set in the shell as follows:
su - <container_user>
export XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=/run/user/$(id -u)
Systemd user services use the same 'systemctl' commands, but with the --user
flag. As the container user with the environment
set, you an run podman and 'systemctl' commands.
podman container list [-a]
systemctl --user status podman-<container_name>
This module also contains minimal support for editing the containerd
configuration files that control some of the lower level
settings for how containers are created. Currently, the only supported configuration file is /etc/containers/storage.conf
. You
should be able to set any of the settings with that file using the $podman::storage_options
parameter. For example (if using Hiera):
podman::storage_options:
storage:
rootless_storage_path: '"/tmp/containers-user-$UID/storage"'
Note the use of double quotes inside single quotes above. This is due to the way the puppetlabs/inifile module works currently.
The following example is a hiera-based role that leverages the types module to manage some dependent resources, then uses this module to deploy a rootless Jenkins container. Note that the environment here is using hiera lookup for class assignments. The example will perform the following configuration:
- Create the
jenkins
user, group, and home directory using the types module - Manage the
/etc/subuid
and/etc/subgid
files, creating entries for thejenkins
user - Use
loginctl
toenable-linger
on the 'jenkins' user so the user's containers can run as a systemd user service - Creates volume
jenkins
owned by userjenkins
- Creates container
jenkins
from the defined image source owned by userjenkins
- Sets container flags to label the container, publish ports, and attach the previously created
jenkins
volume - Set service flags for the systemd service to timeout at 60 seconds
- A systemd service
podman-<container_name>
is created, enabled, and started that runs as a user service - The container will be re-deployed any time the image source digest does not match the running container image
because the default defined type parameter
podman::container::update
defaults totrue
- Creates a firewall rule on the host to allow connections to port 8080, which is published by the container. The rule
is created with the
firewalld_port
type from the firewalld module, using the types module again so it can be defined entirely in hiera.
---
# Hiera based role for Jenkins container deployment
classes:
- types
- podman
- firewalld
types::types:
- firewalld_port
types::user:
jenkins:
ensure: present
forcelocal: true
uid: 222001
gid: 222001
password: '!!'
home: /home/jenkins
types::group:
jenkins:
ensure: present
forcelocal: true
gid: 222001
types::file:
/home/jenkins:
ensure: directory
owner: 222001
group: 222001
mode: '0700'
require: 'User[jenkins]'
podman::manage_subuid: true
podman::subid:
'222001':
subuid: 12300000
count: 65535
podman::volumes:
jenkins:
user: jenkins
podman::containers:
jenkins:
user: jenkins
image: 'docker.io/jenkins/jenkins:lts'
flags:
label:
- purpose=dev
publish:
- '8080:8080'
- '50000:50000'
volume: 'jenkins:/var/jenkins_home'
service_flags:
timeout: '60'
require:
- Podman::Volume[jenkins]
types::firewalld_port:
podman_jenkins:
ensure: present
zone: public
port: 8080
protocol: tcp
Several additional examples are in a separate github project, including a Traefik container configuration that enables SSL termination and proxy access to other containers running on the host, with a dynamic configuration directory enabling updates to proxy rules as new containers are added and/or removed.
The module was written and tested with RedHat/CentOS, but should work with any distribution that uses systemd and includes the podman and skopeo packages
I'd appreciate any feedback. To contribute to development, fork the source and submit a pull request.