Book Image

Podman for DevOps

By : Alessandro Arrichiello, Gianni Salinetti
Book Image

Podman for DevOps

By: Alessandro Arrichiello, Gianni Salinetti

Overview of this book

As containers have become the new de facto standard for packaging applications and their dependencies, understanding how to implement, build, and manage them is now an essential skill for developers, system administrators, and SRE/operations teams. Podman and its companion tools Buildah and Skopeo make a great toolset to boost the development, execution, and management of containerized applications. Starting with the basic concepts of containerization and its underlying technology, this book will help you get your first container up and running with Podman. You'll explore the complete toolkit and go over the development of new containers, their lifecycle management, troubleshooting, and security aspects. Together with Podman, the book illustrates Buildah and Skopeo to complete the tools ecosystem and cover the complete workflow for building, releasing, and managing optimized container images. Podman for DevOps provides a comprehensive view of the full-stack container technology and its relationship with the operating system foundations, along with crucial topics such as networking, monitoring, and integration with systemd, docker-compose, and Kubernetes. By the end of this DevOps book, you'll have developed the skills needed to build and package your applications inside containers as well as to deploy, manage, and integrate them with system services.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Section 1: From Theory to Practice: Running Containers with Podman
7
Section 2: Building Containers from Scratch with Buildah
12
Section 3: Managing and Integrating Containers Securely

Containers' storage features

Before going into a real example and use cases, we should first dig into the main differences between container storage and a container storage interface (CSI).

Container storage, previously referred to as underlying container storage, is responsible for handling container images on Copy-on-Write (COW) filesystems. Container images need to be transferred and move around until a container engine is instructed to run them, so we need a way to store that image until it is run. That's the role of container storage.

Once we start using an orchestrator such as Kubernetes, CSI instead is responsible for providing container block or file storage that containers need to write data to.

In the next section of this chapter, we will concentrate on container storage and its configuration. Later, we will talk about external storage for containers and the options we have in Podman to expose the host local storage to the running containers.

A great...