Provided by: podman_3.4.4+ds1-1ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       podman-system-service - Run an API service

SYNOPSIS

       podman system service [options]

DESCRIPTION

       The  podman  system service command creates a listening service that will answer API calls
       for Podman.  You may optionally provide an endpoint for the API in URI form.  For example,
       unix:///tmp/foobar.sock  or tcp:localhost:8080.  If no endpoint is provided, defaults will
       be used.  The default endpoint for a rootfull  service  is  unix:///run/podman/podman.sock
       and     rootless     is     unix://$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/podman/podman.sock     (for    example
       unix:///run/user/1000/podman/podman.sock)

       To access the API service inside a container: - mount the socket as a  volume  -  run  the
       container with --security-opt label:disable

       The  REST  API  provided by podman system service is split into two parts: a compatibility
       layer offering support for the  Docker  v1.40  API,  and  a  Podman-native  Libpod  layer.
       Documentation         for         the         latter         is        available        at
       https://docs.podman.io/en/latest/_static/api.html.   Both  APIs  are  versioned,  but  the
       server will not reject requests with an unsupported version set.

       Note: The default systemd unit files (system and user) change the log-level option to info
       from error. This change provides additional information on each API call.

OPTIONS

   --time, -t
       The time until the session expires in seconds. The default is 5  seconds.  A  value  of  0
       means no timeout, therefore the session will not expire.

   --cors
       CORS  headers  to  inject  to  the  HTTP response. The default value is empty string which
       disables CORS headers.

   --help, -h
       Print usage statement.

EXAMPLES

       Run an API listening for 5 seconds using the default socket.

              podman system service --time 5

SEE ALSO

       podman(1), podman-system-service(1), podman-system-connection(1)

HISTORY

       January 2020, Originally  compiled  by  Brent  Baude  <bbaude@redhat.com>  November  2020,
       Updated by Jhon Honce (jhonce at redhat dot com)

                                                                              podman-service(1)()