Add a rootless section to "spec" man page and command help

Signed-off-by: Jonh Wendell <jonh.wendell@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Jonh Wendell 2017-04-27 10:52:31 -03:00
parent b6b70e5345
commit 184f094ac0
2 changed files with 10 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -45,5 +45,8 @@ 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

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@ -51,13 +51,18 @@ 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](https://github.com/opencontainers/runtime-tools)
customizations as you want, see runtime-tools (https://github.com/opencontainers/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.`,
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.`,
Flags: []cli.Flag{
cli.StringFlag{
Name: "bundle, b",