On 12/2/21 13:49, Christopher.Miller(a)gd-ms.com wrote:
Okay, thanks for the info.
Hmmm….I’m running a Nexus container with the –restart=always flag (I’m
coming from a Docker background), launched from the CLI. Not really
sure if there are pros/cons of –restart Vs setting up a system file.
Like in the following URL below, it just talks about setting it system
file for a Podman container:
https://www.tutorialworks.com/podman-systemd/
thanks
Yup that works on newer Podmans, not on an old one.
*From:* Daniel Walsh <dwalsh(a)redhat.com>
*Sent:* Thursday, December 2, 2021 1:29 PM
*To:* podman(a)lists.podman.io
*Subject:* [Podman] Re: Restart Status for Containers running in Podman
*External E-mail *--- CAUTION: This email originated from outside
GDMS. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the
sender and know the content is safe.
On 12/2/21 11:09, Christopher.Miller(a)gd-ms.com wrote:
Dumb question. I looked thru the mail archive and couldn’t find
what I was looking for.
With Docker, if you inspect the container, you can see a
RestartPolicy. Lets you know if the container will restart if the
server reboots.
We have a container run Podman (version 1.4.2-stable2, yes its
older, however its what I have to work with for now), is there a
way to tell if restart has been set for a container?
Thanks
_______________________________________________
Podman mailing list --podman(a)lists.podman.io
To unsubscribe send an email topodman-leave(a)lists.podman.io
Best you can do with that old of Podman is to put the container start
and stop into a systemd unit file.
Podman 3.4 has much better support for this kind of thing.