Podman is a lot like Docker: a tool for running OCI containers. While it maintains backwards compatibility with Dockerfile and docker-compose syntax, it offers a lot of other benefits:

  • daemonless: it can run containers without a daemon process running in the background.
  • Rootless: can run containers without root privileges
  • pods: can group containers into secluded pods, which share resources and network namespace

Podman has other features I haven’t explored yet, like compatibility with Kubernetes yaml file, and being able to run containers as systemd units.

Have you used podman before? What are your thoughts on it?

  • shastaxc@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    In kubernetes, I often use multiple containers in a pod only to have init containers check certain status of other servers before running the main container. For example, making sure a database is online and I can query data from it. You can just add this to your main container’s start script though. Docker has a way to do this sort of thing too but it feels clunky.