Back in April, we provided an in-depth look into atomic updating and announced the first of many atomic updates. Since then, Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host has continued to evolve, along with the asynchronous kernel errata. What's changed in the last few months? Let's take a look.
We first introduced the atomic command-line interface with Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host 7.1.2:
- atomic run — allows a container to specify its run-time options via the RUN meta-data label. This is used primarily with privileges.
- atomic install and atomic uninstall — allow a container to specify install and uninstall scripts via the INSTALL and UNINSTALL meta-data labels.
- atomic supports container upgrade and checking for updated images.
With Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host 7.1.3, we took the the atomic command a step further:
- atomic upload — allows the user to upload a container image to a docker repository or to a Pulp/Crane instance.
- atomic version — displays the "Name Version Release" container label in the following format: ContainerID;Name-Version-Release;Image/Tag
- atomic verify — inspects an image to verify that the image layers are based on the latest image layers available. For example, if you have a MongoDB application based on rhel7-1.1.2 and a rhel7-1.1.3 base image is available, the command will inform you there is a later image.
Now with Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host 7.1.4, you can use the atomic command to pass three options (OPT1
, OPT2
, OPT3
) to the LABEL
command in a Dockerfile. Developers can add environment variables to the labels to allow users to pass additional commands using atomic
.
The following is an example from a Dockerfile:
LABEL docker run ${OPT1}${IMAGE}
This line means that running the following command:
atomic run --opt1="-ti" image_name
is identical to running
docker run -ti image_name
-
You can now use
${NAME}
and${IMAGE}
anywhere in your label, andatomic
will substitute it with an image and a name. -
The
${SUDO_UID}
and${SUDO_GID}
options are set and can be used in imageLABEL
. -
The
atomic mount
command attempts to mount the file system belonging to a given container/image ID or image to the given directory. Optionally, you can provide a registry and tag to use a specific version of an image.
Other updates:
- The iscsi-initiator-utils package was also added to Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host with 7.1. This allows the system to mount iSCSI volumes; Kubernetes gained a storage plugin to set up iSCSI mounts for containers.
- In 7.1.3, we enhanced rpm-OSTree to provide a unique machine ID for each machine provisioned. We added support for remote-specific GPG keyring, specifically to associate a particular GPG key with a particular OSTree remote. And, a dbus interface was added to verify and version commands.
- With 7.1.4 -
-
The iptables-service package has been added.
-
It is now possible to enable automatic "command forwarding" when commands that are not found on Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host, are seamlessly retried inside the RHEL Atomic Tools container. The feature is disabled by default (it requires a RHEL Atomic Tools pulled on the system). To enable it, uncomment the
export
line in the/etc/sysconfig/atomic
file so it looks like this:export TOOLSIMG=rhel7/rhel-tools
-
For more information on what's been added to Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host, view the release notes and other documentation on the Red Hat Customer Portal.
Sull'autore
Altri risultati simili a questo
Ricerca per canale
Automazione
Novità sull'automazione IT di tecnologie, team e ambienti
Intelligenza artificiale
Aggiornamenti sulle piattaforme che consentono alle aziende di eseguire carichi di lavoro IA ovunque
Hybrid cloud open source
Scopri come affrontare il futuro in modo più agile grazie al cloud ibrido
Sicurezza
Le ultime novità sulle nostre soluzioni per ridurre i rischi nelle tecnologie e negli ambienti
Edge computing
Aggiornamenti sulle piattaforme che semplificano l'operatività edge
Infrastruttura
Le ultime novità sulla piattaforma Linux aziendale leader a livello mondiale
Applicazioni
Approfondimenti sulle nostre soluzioni alle sfide applicative più difficili
Serie originali
Raccontiamo le interessanti storie di leader e creatori di tecnologie pensate per le aziende
Prodotti
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux
- Red Hat OpenShift
- Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform
- Servizi cloud
- Scopri tutti i prodotti
Strumenti
- Formazione e certificazioni
- Il mio account
- Supporto clienti
- Risorse per sviluppatori
- Trova un partner
- Red Hat Ecosystem Catalog
- Calcola il valore delle soluzioni Red Hat
- Documentazione
Prova, acquista, vendi
Comunica
- Contatta l'ufficio vendite
- Contatta l'assistenza clienti
- Contatta un esperto della formazione
- Social media
Informazioni su Red Hat
Red Hat è leader mondiale nella fornitura di soluzioni open source per le aziende, tra cui Linux, Kubernetes, container e soluzioni cloud. Le nostre soluzioni open source, rese sicure per un uso aziendale, consentono di operare su più piattaforme e ambienti, dal datacenter centrale all'edge della rete.
Seleziona la tua lingua
Red Hat legal and privacy links
- Informazioni su Red Hat
- Opportunità di lavoro
- Eventi
- Sedi
- Contattaci
- Blog di Red Hat
- Diversità, equità e inclusione
- Cool Stuff Store
- Red Hat Summit