table of contents
- bookworm 4.3.1+ds1-8+deb12u1
- testing 5.2.5-1
- unstable 5.2.5-1
- experimental 5.3.0+ds1-1
podman-manifest(1) | General Commands Manual | podman-manifest(1) |
NAME¶
podman-manifest - Create and manipulate manifest lists and image indexes
SYNOPSIS¶
podman manifest subcommand
DESCRIPTION¶
The podman manifest command provides subcommands which can be used to:
* Create a working Docker manifest list or OCI image index.
SUBCOMMANDS¶
Command | Man Page | Description |
add | podman-manifest-add(1) | Add an image or artifact to a manifest list or image index. |
annotate | podman-manifest-annotate(1) | Add and update information about an image or artifact in a manifest list or image index. |
create | podman-manifest-create(1) | Create a manifest list or image index. |
exists | podman-manifest-exists(1) | Check if the given manifest list exists in local storage |
inspect | podman-manifest-inspect(1) | Display a manifest list or image index. |
push | podman-manifest-push(1) | Push a manifest list or image index to a registry. |
remove | podman-manifest-remove(1) | Remove an image from a manifest list or image index. |
rm | podman-manifest-rm(1) | Remove manifest list or image index from local storage. |
EXAMPLES¶
Building a multi-arch manifest list from a Containerfile¶
Assuming the Containerfile uses RUN instructions, the host needs a way to execute non-native binaries. Configuring this is beyond the scope of this example. Building a multi-arch manifest list shazam in parallel across 4-threads can be done like this:
$ platarch=linux/amd64,linux/ppc64le,linux/arm64,linux/s390x
$ podman build --jobs=4 --platform=$platarch --manifest shazam .
Note: The --jobs argument is optional. Do not use the podman build command's --tag (or -t) option when building a multi-arch manifest list.
Assembling a multi-arch manifest from separately built images¶
Assuming example.com/example/shazam:$arch images are built separately on other hosts and pushed to the example.com registry. They may be combined into a manifest list, and pushed using a simple loop:
$ REPO=example.com/example/shazam
$ podman manifest create $REPO:latest
$ for IMGTAG in amd64 s390x ppc64le arm64; do
podman manifest add $REPO:latest docker://$REPO:IMGTAG;
done
$ podman manifest push --all $REPO:latest
Note: The add instruction argument order is <manifest> then <image>. Also, the --all push option is required to ensure all contents are pushed, not just the native platform/arch.
Removing and tagging a manifest list before pushing¶
Special care is needed when removing and pushing manifest lists, as opposed to the contents. You almost always want to use the manifest rm and manifest push --all subcommands. For example, a rename and push can be performed like this:
$ podman tag localhost/shazam example.com/example/shazam
$ podman manifest rm localhost/shazam
$ podman manifest push --all example.com/example/shazam
SEE ALSO¶
podman(1), podman-manifest-add(1), podman-manifest-annotate(1), podman-manifest-create(1), podman-manifest-inspect(1), podman-manifest-push(1), podman-manifest-remove(1)