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runc/man/runc-spec.8.md
Adrian Reber 1712af0e80 man: fix man-pages
The man-pages are using pre-formatted section to display the options for
all commands. The result on my system never looked correct:

OPTIONS
       --bundle value, -b value  path to the root [...]
          --console-socket value    path to an AF_UNIX [...]

The first line was always indented less than the other lines.

This commit makes the option block a pre-formatted block (as intended???) by
using 4 spaces instead of 3 spaces.

In addition the man-pages did not specify their name and section
correctly. This adds something like '% runc-run "8"' to all man-pages to
have correct title 'runc-run(8)' instead of 'NAME()' and it also adds
the section to the title: 'System Manager's Manual'.

This also fixes the use of '>' and '<' at multiple places. The markdown
source files were using "<container-id>" and similar which was (most of
the time) rendered as '""'. On some systems it was rendered correctly.

Signed-off-by: Adrian Reber <areber@redhat.com>
2019-08-06 21:29:31 +02:00

2.4 KiB

% runc-spec "8"

NAME

runc spec - create a new specification file

SYNOPSIS

runc spec [command options] [arguments...]

DESCRIPTION

The spec command creates the new specification file named "config.json" for the bundle.

The spec generated is just a starter file. Editing of the spec is required to achieve desired results. For example, the newly generated spec includes an args parameter that is initially set to call the "sh" command when the container is started. Calling "sh" may work for an ubuntu container or busybox, but will not work for containers that do not include the "sh" program.

EXAMPLE

To run docker's hello-world container one needs to set the args parameter in the spec to call hello. This can be done using the sed command or a text editor. The following commands create a bundle for hello-world, change the default args parameter in the spec from "sh" to "/hello", then run the hello command in a new hello-world container named container1:

mkdir hello
cd hello
docker pull hello-world
docker export $(docker create hello-world) > hello-world.tar
mkdir rootfs
tar -C rootfs -xf hello-world.tar
runc spec
sed -i 's;"sh";"/hello";' config.json
runc start container1

In the start command above, "container1" is the name for the instance of the container that you are starting. The name you provide for the container instance must be unique on your host.

An alternative for generating a customized spec config is to use "oci-runtime-tool", the sub-command "oci-runtime-tool generate" has lots of options that can be used to do any customizations as you want, see runtime-tools to get more information.

When starting a container through runc, runc needs root privilege. If not already running as root, you can use sudo to give runc root privilege. For example: "sudo runc start container1" will give runc root privilege to start the container on your host.

Alternatively, you can start a rootless container, which has the ability to run without root privileges. For this to work, the specification file needs to be adjusted accordingly. You can pass the parameter --rootless to this command to generate a proper rootless spec file.

OPTIONS

--bundle value, -b value     path to the root of the bundle directory
--rootless                   generate a configuration for a rootless container