podman-container-systemd ======================== Role sets up container(s) to be run on host with help of systemd. [Podman](https://podman.io/) implements container events but does not control or keep track of the life-cycle. That's job of external tool as [Kubernetes](https://kubernetes.io/) in clusters, and [systemd](https://freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/) in local installs. I wrote this role in order to help managing podman containers life-cycle on my personal server which is not a cluster. Thus I want to use systemd for keeping them enabled and running over reboots. What role does: * installs Podman * pulls required images * on consecutive runs it pulls image again, and restarts container if image changed (not for pod yet) * creates systemd file for container or pod * set's container or pod to be always automatically restarted if container dies. * makes container or pod enter run state at system boot * adds or removes containers exposed ports to firewall. * It takes parameter for running rootless containers under given user (I didn't test this with pod mode yet) For reference, see these two blogs about the role: * [Automate Podman Containers with Ansible 1/2](https://redhatnordicssa.github.io/ansible-podman-containers-1) * [Automate Podman Containers with Ansible 2/2](https://redhatnordicssa.github.io/ansible-podman-containers-2) Blogs describe how you can single container, or several containers as one pod using this module. ## Note for running rootless containers: * You need to have the user created prior running this role. * The user should have entries in /etc/sub[gu]id files for namespace range. If not, this role adds some variables there in order to get something going, but preferrably you check them. * I only tested the single container mode, not the pod mode with several containers. Please report back how that part works! :) * Some control things like memory or other resource limit's won't work as user. * You want to increase ```systemd_TimeoutStartSec``` heavily, as we can not prefetch the images before systemd unit start. So systemd needs to wait for podman to pull images prior it starts container. Might take minutes depending on your network connection, and container image size. Requirements ------------ Requires system which is capable of running podman, and that podman is found from package repositories. Role installs podman. Role also installs firewalld if user has defined ```container_firewall_ports``` -variable. Role Variables -------------- Role uses variables that are required to be passed while including it. As there is option to run one container separately or multiple containers in pod, note that some options apply only to other method. - ```container_image``` - container image and tag, e.g. nextcloud:latest This is used only if you run single container - ```container_image_list``` - list of container images to run within a pod. This is used only if you run containers in pod. - ```container_name``` - Identify the container in systemd and podman commands. Systemd service file be named container_name--container-pod.service. - ```container_run_args``` - Anything you pass to podman, except for the name and image while running single container. Not used for pod. - ```container_cmd_args``` - Any command and arguments passed to podman-run after specifying the image name. Not used for pod. - ```container_run_as_user``` - Which user should systemd run container as. Defaults to root. - ```container_run_as_group``` - Which grou should systemd run container as. Defaults to root. - ```container_state``` - container is installed and run if state is ```running```, and stopped and systemd file removed if ```absent``` - ```container_firewall_ports``` - list of ports you have exposed from container and want to open firewall for. When container_state is absent, firewall ports get closed. If you don't want firewalld installed, don't define this. - ```systemd_TimeoutStartSec``` - how long does systemd wait for container to start? - ```systemd_tempdir``` - Where to store conmon-pidfile and cidfile for single containers. Defaults to ``%T`` on systems supporting this specifier (see man 5 systemd.unit) ``/tmp`` otherwise. This playbook doesn't have python module to parse parameters for podman command. Until that you just need to pass all parameters as you would use podman from command line. See ```man podman``` or [podman tutorials](https://github.com/containers/libpod/tree/master/docs/tutorials) for info. Dependencies ------------ No dependencies. Example Playbook ---------------- See the tests/main.yml for sample. In short, include role with vars. Root container: ``` - name: tests container vars: container_image: sebp/lighttpd:latest container_name: lighttpd container_run_args: >- --rm -v /tmp/podman-container-systemd:/var/www/localhost/htdocs:Z -p 8080:80 #container_state: absent container_state: running container_firewall_ports: - 8080/tcp - 8443/tcp import_role: name: podman-container-systemd ``` Rootless container: ``` - name: ensure user user: name: rootless_user comment: I run sample container - name: ensure directory file: name: /tmp/podman-container-systemd owner: rootless_user group: rootless_user state: directory - name: tests container vars: container_run_as_user: rootless_user container_run_as_group: rootless_user container_image: sebp/lighttpd:latest container_name: lighttpd container_run_args: >- --rm -v /tmp/podman-container-systemd:/var/www/localhost/htdocs:Z -p 8080:80 #container_state: absent container_state: running container_firewall_ports: - 8080/tcp - 8443/tcp import_role: name: podman-container-systemd ``` License ------- GPLv3 Author Information ------------------ Ilkka Tengvall