Provided by: podman_5.7.0+ds2-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       podman-run - Run a command in a new container

SYNOPSIS

       podman run [options] image [command [arg ...]]

       podman container run [options] image [command [arg ...]]

DESCRIPTION

       Run  a  process  in  a  new  container.  podman  run  starts  a process with its own file system, its own
       networking, and its own isolated process tree. The image which starts the  process  may  define  defaults
       related  to the process that will be run in the container, the networking to expose, and more, but podman
       run gives final control to the operator or administrator who starts the container  from  the  image.  For
       that reason podman run has more options than any other Podman command.

       If  the image is not already loaded then podman run will pull the image, and all image dependencies, from
       the repository in the same way running podman pull image, before it starts the container from that image.

       Several  files  will  be  automatically  created  within  the  container.   These   include   /etc/hosts,
       /etc/hostname,  and  /etc/resolv.conf to manage networking.  These will be based on the host's version of
       the files, though they can be customized with options (for example, --dns may  override  the  host's  DNS
       servers  in  the  created  resolv.conf).  Additionally,  a  container environment file is created in each
       container  to  indicate  to  programs  they  are  running  in  a  container.  This  file  is  located  at
       /run/.containerenv  (or  /var/run/.containerenv for FreeBSD containers). When using the --privileged flag
       the .containerenv contains name/value pairs indicating the container engine version, whether  the  engine
       is  running  in  rootless  mode,  the  container  name  and ID, as well as the image name and ID that the
       container is based on. Note: /run/.containerenv will not be created when a volume is mounted on /run.

       When running from a user defined network namespace, the /etc/netns/NSNAME/resolv.conf will be used if  it
       exists, otherwise /etc/resolv.conf will be used.

       Default  settings  are  defined  in containers.conf. Most settings for remote connections use the servers
       containers.conf, except when documented in man pages.

IMAGE

       The image is specified using transport:path format. If no transport is specified, the  docker  (container
       registry)  transport  is  used  by default. For remote Podman, including Mac and Windows (excluding WSL2)
       machines, docker is the only allowed transport.

       dir:path
         An existing local directory path storing the manifest, layer  tarballs  and  signatures  as  individual
       files.  This  is  a  non-standardized  format,  primarily  useful  for debugging or noninvasive container
       inspection.

       $ podman save --format docker-dir fedora -o /tmp/fedora
       $ podman run dir:/tmp/fedora echo hello

       docker://docker-reference (Default)
         An    image    reference    stored    in    a    remote    container    image    registry.     Example:
       "quay.io/podman/stable:latest".  The reference can include a path to a specific registry; if it does not,
       the  registries  listed in registries.conf are queried to find a matching image.  By default, credentials
       from podman login (stored at $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/containers/auth.json by default) are used to  authenticate;
       otherwise it falls back to using credentials in $HOME/.docker/config.json.

       $ podman run registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:latest echo hello

       docker-archive:path[:docker-reference]  An  image  stored  in  the  docker  save  formatted file. docker-
       reference is only used when creating such a file, and it must not contain a digest.

       $ podman save --format docker-archive fedora -o /tmp/fedora
       $ podman run docker-archive:/tmp/fedora echo hello

       Note: On remote clients, including Mac and Windows (excluding  WSL2)  machines,  this  transport  is  not
       supported.

       docker-daemon:docker-reference
         An  image in docker-reference format stored in the docker daemon internal storage. The docker-reference
       can also be an image ID (docker-daemon:algo:digest).

       $ sudo docker pull fedora
       $ sudo podman run docker-daemon:docker.io/library/fedora echo hello

       Note: On remote clients, including Mac and Windows (excluding  WSL2)  machines,  this  transport  is  not
       supported.

       oci-archive:path:tag
         An image in a directory compliant with the "Open Container Image Layout Specification" at the specified
       path and specified with a tag.

       $ podman save --format oci-archive fedora -o /tmp/fedora
       $ podman run oci-archive:/tmp/fedora echo hello

       Note:  On  remote  clients,  including  Mac  and Windows (excluding WSL2) machines, this transport is not
       supported.

OPTIONS

   --add-host=hostname[;hostname[;...]]:ip
       Add a custom host-to-IP mapping to the container's /etc/hosts file.

       The option takes one or multiple semicolon-separated hostnames to be mapped to  a  single  IPv4  or  IPv6
       address, separated by a colon. It can also be used to overwrite the IP addresses of hostnames Podman adds
       to  /etc/hosts  by  default  (also  see  the --name and --hostname options). This option can be specified
       multiple times to add additional mappings to /etc/hosts. It conflicts  with  the  --no-hosts  option  and
       conflicts with no_hosts=true in containers.conf.

       Instead  of an IP address, the special flag host-gateway can be given. This resolves to an IP address the
       container can use to connect to the host. The IP address chosen  depends  on  your  network  setup,  thus
       there's  no  guarantee  that Podman can determine the host-gateway address automatically, which will then
       cause  Podman  to  fail  with  an  error  message.  You  can  overwrite  this  IP   address   using   the
       host_containers_internal_ip option in containers.conf.

       The  host-gateway  address  is  also used by Podman to automatically add the host.containers.internal and
       host.docker.internal hostnames to /etc/hosts.  You can prevent  that  by  either  giving  the  --no-hosts
       option,  or  by setting host_containers_internal_ip="none" in containers.conf. If no host-gateway address
       was configured manually and Podman fails to determine the IP address automatically, Podman will  silently
       skip  adding  these  internal  hostnames  to  /etc/hosts. If Podman is running in a virtual machine using
       podman machine (this includes Mac and Windows hosts), Podman  will  silently  skip  adding  the  internal
       hostnames  to  /etc/hosts,  unless  an  IP  address  was  configured manually; the internal hostnames are
       resolved by the gvproxy DNS resolver instead.

       Podman will use the /etc/hosts file of the host as a basis by default, i.e.  any hostname present in this
       file will also be present in the /etc/hosts  file  of  the  container.  A  different  base  file  can  be
       configured using the base_hosts_file config in containers.conf.

   --annotation=key=value
       Add an annotation to the container. This option can be set multiple times.

   --arch=ARCH
       Override  the  architecture,  defaults  to  hosts,  of  the image to be pulled. For example, arm.  Unless
       overridden, subsequent lookups of the  same  image  in  the  local  storage  matches  this  architecture,
       regardless of the host.

   --attach, -a=stdin | stdout | stderr
       Attach to STDIN, STDOUT or STDERR.

       In  foreground  mode  (the  default  when  -d  is not specified), podman run can start the process in the
       container and attach the console to the process's standard input, output, and error. It can even  pretend
       to be a TTY (this is what most command-line executables expect) and pass along signals. The -a option can
       be set for each of stdin, stdout, and stderr.

   --authfile=path
       Path  of  the  authentication  file.  Default  is  ${XDG_RUNTIME_DIR}/containers/auth.json  on Linux, and
       $HOME/.config/containers/auth.json on Windows/macOS.  The  file  is  created  by  podman  login.  If  the
       authorization  state  is not found there, $HOME/.docker/config.json is checked, which is set using docker
       login.

       Note: There is also the option to override the default path of the authentication  file  by  setting  the
       REGISTRY_AUTH_FILE environment variable. This can be done with export REGISTRY_AUTH_FILE=path.

   --blkio-weight=weight
       Block IO relative weight. The weight is a value between 10 and 1000.

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --blkio-weight-device=device:weight
       Block IO relative device weight.

   --cap-add=capability
       Add Linux capabilities.

       Granting  additional  capabilities increases the privileges of the processes running inside the container
       and potentially allow it to break out of confinement.  Capabilities like  CAP_SYS_ADMIN,  CAP_SYS_PTRACE,
       CAP_MKNOD  and  CAP_SYS_MODULE are particularly dangerous when they are not used within a user namespace.
       Please refer to user_namespaces(7) for a more  detailed  explanation  of  the  interaction  between  user
       namespaces and capabilities.

       Before  adding any capability, review its security implications and ensure it is really necessary for the
       container’s functionality.  See capabilities(7) for more information.

   --cap-drop=capability
       Drop Linux capabilities.

   --cert-dir=path
       Use  certificates  at  path  (*.crt,   *.cert,   *.key)   to   connect   to   the   registry.   (Default:
       /etc/containers/certs.d)  For details, see containers-certs.d(5).  (This option is not available with the
       remote Podman client, including Mac and Windows (excluding WSL2) machines)

   --cgroup-conf=KEY=VALUE
       When running on cgroup v2, specify the cgroup file to write to  and  its  value.  For  example  --cgroup-
       conf=memory.high=1073741824 sets the memory.high limit to 1GB.

   --cgroup-parent=path
       Path  to  cgroups  under  which the cgroup for the container is created. If the path is not absolute, the
       path is considered to be relative to the cgroups path of the init process. Cgroups are created if they do
       not already exist.

   --cgroupns=mode
       Set the cgroup namespace mode for the container.

       • host: use the host's cgroup namespace inside the container.

       • container:id: join the namespace of the specified container.

       • private: create a new cgroup namespace.

       • ns:path: join the namespace at the specified path.

       If the host uses cgroups v1, the default is set to host. On cgroups v2, the default is private.

   --cgroups=how
       Determines whether the container creates cgroups.

       Default is enabled.

       The enabled option creates a new  cgroup  under  the  cgroup-parent.   The  disabled  option  forces  the
       container to not create cgroups, and thus conflicts with cgroup options (--cgroupns and --cgroup-parent).
       The  no-conmon  option  disables  a  new cgroup only for the conmon process.  The split option splits the
       current cgroup in two sub-cgroups: one for conmon and one for the container payload. It is  not  possible
       to set --cgroup-parent with split.

   --chrootdirs=path
       Path  to a directory inside the container that is treated as a chroot directory.  Any Podman managed file
       (e.g., /etc/resolv.conf, /etc/hosts, /etc/hostname) that is mounted into the root  directory  is  mounted
       into that location as well.  Multiple directories are separated with a comma.

   --cidfile=file
       Write  the  container  ID  to  file.  The file is removed along with the container, except when used with
       podman --remote run on detached containers.

   --conmon-pidfile=file
       Write the pid of the conmon process to a file. As conmon runs in a separate process than Podman, this  is
       necessary when using systemd to restart Podman containers.  (This option is not available with the remote
       Podman client, including Mac and Windows (excluding WSL2) machines)

   --cpu-period=limit
       Set the CPU period for the Completely Fair Scheduler (CFS), which is a duration in microseconds. Once the
       container's CPU quota is used up, it will not be scheduled to run until the current period ends. Defaults
       to 100000 microseconds.

       On  some  systems,  changing the resource limits may not be allowed for non-root users. For more details,
       see         https://github.com/containers/podman/blob/main/troubleshooting.md#26-running-containers-with-
       resource-limits-fails-with-a-permissions-error

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --cpu-quota=limit
       Limit the CPU Completely Fair Scheduler (CFS) quota.

       Limit  the  container's  CPU usage. By default, containers run with the full CPU resource. The limit is a
       number in microseconds. If a number is provided, the container is allowed to use that much CPU time until
       the CPU period ends (controllable via --cpu-period).

       On some systems, changing the resource limits may not be allowed for non-root users.  For  more  details,
       see         https://github.com/containers/podman/blob/main/troubleshooting.md#26-running-containers-with-
       resource-limits-fails-with-a-permissions-error

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --cpu-rt-period=microseconds
       Limit the CPU real-time period in microseconds.

       Limit the container's Real Time CPU usage. This option tells the kernel to restrict the container's  Real
       Time CPU usage to the period specified.

       This option is only supported on cgroups V1 rootful systems.

   --cpu-rt-runtime=microseconds
       Limit the CPU real-time runtime in microseconds.

       Limit  the  containers Real Time CPU usage. This option tells the kernel to limit the amount of time in a
       given CPU period Real Time tasks may consume. Ex: Period of 1,000,000us and Runtime  of  950,000us  means
       that this container can consume 95% of available CPU and leave the remaining 5% to normal priority tasks.

       The sum of all runtimes across containers cannot exceed the amount allotted to the parent cgroup.

       This option is only supported on cgroups V1 rootful systems.

   --cpu-shares, -c=shares
       CPU shares (relative weight).

       By  default,  all  containers  get  the same proportion of CPU cycles. This proportion can be modified by
       changing the container's CPU share  weighting  relative  to  the  combined  weight  of  all  the  running
       containers.  Default weight is 1024.

       The  proportion  only  applies when CPU-intensive processes are running.  When tasks in one container are
       idle, other containers can use the left-over CPU time. The actual amount of CPU time varies depending  on
       the number of containers running on the system.

       For  example,  consider  three  containers,  one  has a cpu-share of 1024 and two others have a cpu-share
       setting of 512. When processes in all three containers attempt to use 100% of CPU,  the  first  container
       receives  50%  of  the total CPU time. If a fourth container is added with a cpu-share of 1024, the first
       container only gets 33% of the CPU. The remaining containers receive 16.5%, 16.5% and 33% of the CPU.

       On a multi-core system, the shares of CPU time are distributed over all CPU cores. Even if a container is
       limited to less than 100% of CPU time, it can use 100% of each individual CPU core.

       For example, consider a system with more than three cores.  If the container C0 is  started  with  --cpu-
       shares=512  running  one  process, and another container C1 with --cpu-shares=1024 running two processes,
       this can result in the following division of CPU shares:

       ┌─────┬───────────┬─────┬──────────────┐
       │ PIDcontainerCPUCPU share    │
       ├─────┼───────────┼─────┼──────────────┤
       │ 100 │ C0        │ 0   │ 100% of CPU0 │
       ├─────┼───────────┼─────┼──────────────┤
       │ 101 │ C1        │ 1   │ 100% of CPU1 │
       ├─────┼───────────┼─────┼──────────────┤
       │ 102 │ C1        │ 2   │ 100% of CPU2 │
       └─────┴───────────┴─────┴──────────────┘

       On some systems, changing the resource limits may not be allowed for non-root users.  For  more  details,
       see         https://github.com/containers/podman/blob/main/troubleshooting.md#26-running-containers-with-
       resource-limits-fails-with-a-permissions-error

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --cpus=number
       Number of CPUs. The default is 0.0 which means no limit. This is shorthand for  --cpu-period  and  --cpu-
       quota, therefore the option cannot be specified with --cpu-period or --cpu-quota.

       On  some  systems,  changing  the CPU limits may not be allowed for non-root users. For more details, see
       https://github.com/containers/podman/blob/main/troubleshooting.md#26-running-containers-with-resource-
       limits-fails-with-a-permissions-error

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --cpuset-cpus=number
       CPUs in which to allow execution. Can be specified as a comma-separated list (e.g. 0,1), as a range (e.g.
       0-3), or any combination thereof (e.g. 0-3,7,11-15).

       On some systems, changing the resource limits may not be allowed for non-root users.  For  more  details,
       see         https://github.com/containers/podman/blob/main/troubleshooting.md#26-running-containers-with-
       resource-limits-fails-with-a-permissions-error

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --cpuset-mems=nodes
       Memory nodes (MEMs) in which to allow execution (0-3, 0,1). Only effective on NUMA systems.

       If there are four memory nodes on the system (0-3), use --cpuset-mems=0,1 then processes in the container
       only uses memory from the first two memory nodes.

       On some systems, changing the resource limits may not be allowed for non-root users.  For  more  details,
       see         https://github.com/containers/podman/blob/main/troubleshooting.md#26-running-containers-with-
       resource-limits-fails-with-a-permissions-error

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --creds=[username[:password]]
       The [username[:password]] to use to authenticate with the registry, if required.  If one or  both  values
       are  not  supplied,  a  command line prompt appears and the value can be entered. The password is entered
       without echo.

       Note that the specified credentials are only used to authenticate against target  registries.   They  are
       not  used  for  mirrors  or  when  the  registry  gets  rewritten (see containers-registries.conf(5)); to
       authenticate against those consider using a containers-auth.json(5) file.

   --decryption-key=key[:passphrase]
       The [key[:passphrase]] to be used for decryption of images. Key can point to  keys  and/or  certificates.
       Decryption  is  tried with all keys. If the key is protected by a passphrase, it is required to be passed
       in the argument and omitted otherwise.

   --detach, -d
       Detached mode: run the container in the background and print the new container ID. The default is false.

       At any time run podman ps in the other shell to view a list of the  running  containers.  Reattach  to  a
       detached container with podman attach command.

       When  attached  via  tty  mode, detach from the container (and leave it running) using a configurable key
       sequence. The default sequence is ctrl-p,ctrl-q.   Specify  the  key  sequence  using  the  --detach-keys
       option, or configure it in the containers.conf file: see containers.conf(5) for more information.

   --detach-keys=sequence
       Specify  the  key  sequence  for detaching a container. Format is a single character [a-Z] or one or more
       ctrl-<value> characters where <value> is one of: a-z, @, ^, [,  ,  or  _.  Specifying  ""  disables  this
       feature. The default is ctrl-p,ctrl-q.

       This option can also be set in containers.conf(5) file.

   --device=host-device[:container-device][:permissions]
       Add  a  host  device  to  the  container.  Optional  permissions  parameter can be used to specify device
       permissions by combining r for read, w for write, and m for mknod(2).

       Example: --device=/dev/sdc:/dev/xvdc:rwm.

       Note: if host-device is a symbolic link then it is resolved first.  The container only stores  the  major
       and minor numbers of the host device.

       Podman  may  load  kernel  modules required for using the specified device. The devices that Podman loads
       modules for when necessary are: /dev/fuse.

       In rootless mode, the new device is bind mounted in the  container  from  the  host  rather  than  Podman
       creating  it  within  the  container  space.  Because the bind mount retains its SELinux label on SELinux
       systems, the container can get permission denied  when  accessing  the  mounted  device.  Modify  SELinux
       settings to allow containers to use all device labels via the following command:

       $ sudo setsebool -P  container_use_devices=true

       Note:  if  the  user  only  has  access  rights  via a group, accessing the device from inside a rootless
       container fails. Use the --group-add keep-groups flag to pass the user's supplementary group access  into
       the container.

   --device-cgroup-rule="type major:minor mode"
       Add  a rule to the cgroup allowed devices list. The rule is expected to be in the format specified in the
       Linux kernel documentation admin-guide/cgroup-v1/devices: - type: a (all), c  (char),  or  b  (block);  -
       major  and  minor:  either  a  number,  or * for all; - mode: a composition of r (read), w (write), and m
       (mknod(2)).

   --device-read-bps=path:rate
       Limit read rate (in bytes per second) from a device (e.g. --device-read-bps=/dev/sda:1mb).

       On some systems, changing the resource limits may not be allowed for non-root users.  For  more  details,
       see         https://github.com/containers/podman/blob/main/troubleshooting.md#26-running-containers-with-
       resource-limits-fails-with-a-permissions-error

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --device-read-iops=path:rate
       Limit read rate (in IO operations per second) from a device (e.g. --device-read-iops=/dev/sda:1000).

       On some systems, changing the resource limits may not be allowed for non-root users.  For  more  details,
       see         https://github.com/containers/podman/blob/main/troubleshooting.md#26-running-containers-with-
       resource-limits-fails-with-a-permissions-error

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --device-write-bps=path:rate
       Limit write rate (in bytes per second) to a device (e.g. --device-write-bps=/dev/sda:1mb).

       On some systems, changing the resource limits may not be allowed for non-root users.  For  more  details,
       see         https://github.com/containers/podman/blob/main/troubleshooting.md#26-running-containers-with-
       resource-limits-fails-with-a-permissions-error

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --device-write-iops=path:rate
       Limit write rate (in IO operations per second) to a device (e.g. --device-write-iops=/dev/sda:1000).

       On some systems, changing the resource limits may not be allowed for non-root users.  For  more  details,
       see         https://github.com/containers/podman/blob/main/troubleshooting.md#26-running-containers-with-
       resource-limits-fails-with-a-permissions-error

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --disable-content-trust
       This is a Docker-specific option to disable image  verification  to  a  container  registry  and  is  not
       supported by Podman. This option is a NOOP and provided solely for scripting compatibility.

   --dns=ipaddr
       Set custom DNS servers.

       This  option  can  be  used  to override the DNS configuration passed to the container. Typically this is
       necessary when the host DNS configuration is invalid for the container (e.g., 127.0.0.1).  When  this  is
       the case the --dns flag is necessary for every run.

       The  special  value  none  can  be  specified to disable creation of /etc/resolv.conf in the container by
       Podman.  The /etc/resolv.conf file in the image is then used without changes.

       Note that ipaddr may be added directly to the  container's  /etc/resolv.conf.   This  is  not  guaranteed
       though.   For example, passing a custom network whose dns_enabled is set to true to --network will result
       in /etc/resolv.conf only referring to  the  aardvark-dns  server.   aardvark-dns  then  forwards  to  the
       supplied ipaddr for all non-container name queries.

       This option cannot be combined with --network that is set to none or container:id.

   --dns-option=option
       Set custom DNS options. Invalid if using --dns-option with --network that is set to none or container:id.

   --dns-search=domain
       Set  custom  DNS  search  domains.  Invalid  if  using --dns-search with --network that is set to none or
       container:id.  Use --dns-search=. to remove the search domain.

   --entrypoint="command" | '["command", arg1 , ...]'
       Override the default ENTRYPOINT from the image.

       The ENTRYPOINT of an image is similar to a COMMAND because it specifies what executable to run  when  the
       container  starts, but it is (purposely) more difficult to override. The ENTRYPOINT gives a container its
       default nature or behavior. When the ENTRYPOINT is set, the container runs as if  it  were  that  binary,
       complete with default options. More options can be passed in via the COMMAND. But, if a user wants to run
       something else inside the container, the --entrypoint option allows a new ENTRYPOINT to be specified.

       Specify multi option commands in the form of a JSON string.

   --env, -e=env
       Set environment variables.

       This  option  allows  arbitrary  environment  variables that are available for the process to be launched
       inside of the container. If an environment variable is specified without a value, Podman checks the  host
       environment  for  a  value  and  set the variable only if it is set on the host. As a special case, if an
       environment variable ending in * is specified without a value, Podman searches the host  environment  for
       variables starting with the prefix and adds those variables to the container.

       See ⟨#environment⟩ note below for precedence and examples.

   --env-file=file
       Read in a line-delimited file of environment variables.

       See ⟨#environment⟩ note below for precedence and examples.

   --env-host
       Use  host environment inside of the container. See Environment note below for precedence. (This option is
       not available with the remote Podman client, including Mac and Windows (excluding WSL2) machines)

   --env-merge=env
       Preprocess default environment variables for the containers. For example if  image  contains  environment
       variable  hello=world  user  can  preprocess  it  using  --env-merge  hello=${hello}-some so new value is
       hello=world-some.

       Please note that if the environment variable hello is not present in the image, then it'll be replaced by
       an empty string  and  so  using  --env-merge  hello=${hello}-some  would  result  in  the  new  value  of
       hello=-some, notice the leading - delimiter.

   --expose=port[/protocol]
       Expose a port or a range of ports (e.g. --expose=3300-3310).  The protocol can be tcp, udp or sctp and if
       not  given tcp is assumed.  This option matches the EXPOSE instruction for image builds and has no effect
       on the actual networking rules unless -P/--publish-all is used to  forward  to  all  exposed  ports  from
       random host ports. To forward specific ports from the host into the container use the -p/--publish option
       instead.

   --gidmap=[flags]container_uid:from_uid[:amount]
       Run  the container in a new user namespace using the supplied GID mapping. This option conflicts with the
       --userns and --subgidname options. This option provides a way to map host GIDs to container GIDs  in  the
       same way as --uidmap maps host UIDs to container UIDs. For details see --uidmap.

       Note: the --gidmap option cannot be called in conjunction with the --pod option as a gidmap cannot be set
       on the container level when in a pod.

   --gpus=ENTRY
       GPU devices to add to the container ('all' to pass all GPUs) Currently only Nvidia devices are supported.

   --group-add=group | keep-groups
       Assign additional groups to the primary user running within the container process.

       • keep-groups is a special flag that tells Podman to keep the supplementary group access.

       Allows  container  to  use  the  user's  supplementary  group access. If file systems or devices are only
       accessible by the rootless user's group, this flag tells the OCI runtime to pass the  group  access  into
       the  container. Currently only available with the crun OCI runtime. Note: keep-groups is exclusive, other
       groups cannot be specified with this flag. (Not available for remote commands, including Mac and  Windows
       (excluding WSL2) machines)

   --group-entry=ENTRY
       Customize the entry that is written to the /etc/group file within the container when --user is used.

       The  variables  $GROUPNAME, $GID, and $USERLIST are automatically replaced with their value at runtime if
       present.

   --health-cmd="command" | '["command", arg1 , ...]'
       Set or alter a healthcheck command for a container. The command is a command to be  executed  inside  the
       container  that determines the container health. The command is required for other healthcheck options to
       be applied. A value of none disables existing healthchecks.

       Multiple options can be passed in the form of a JSON array; otherwise, the command is interpreted  as  an
       argument to /bin/sh -c.

       Note: The default values are used even if healthcheck is configured in the image.

   --health-interval=interval
       Set  an  interval  for  the healthchecks. An interval of disable results in no automatic timer setup. The
       default is 30s.

       Note: This parameter will overwrite related healthcheck configuration from the image.

   --health-log-destination=directory_path
       Set the destination of the HealthCheck log. Directory path, local or events_logger (local  use  container
       state file) (Default: local)

       • local:    (default)    HealthCheck   logs   are   stored   in   overlay   containers.   (For   example:
         $runroot/healthcheck.log)

       • directory: creates a log  file  named  <container-ID>-healthcheck.log  with  HealthCheck  logs  in  the
         specified directory.

       • events_logger:  The  log will be written with logging mechanism set by events_logger. It also saves the
         log to a default directory, for performance on a system with a large number of logs.

   --health-max-log-count=number of stored logs
       Set maximum number of attempts in the HealthCheck log file.  ('0'  value  means  an  infinite  number  of
       attempts in the log file) (Default: 5 attempts)

   --health-max-log-size=size of stored logs
       Set  maximum  length  in  characters  of stored HealthCheck log. ("0" value means an infinite log length)
       (Default: 500 characters)

   --health-on-failure=action
       Action to take once the container transitions to an unhealthy state.  The default is none.

       • none: Take no action.

       • kill: Kill the container.

       • restart: Restart the container.  Do not combine the restart  action  with  the  --restart  flag.   When
         running  inside  of  a  systemd  unit,  consider  using  the kill or stop action instead to make use of
         systemd's restart policy.

       • stop: Stop the container.

   --health-retries=retries
       The number of retries allowed before a healthcheck is considered to be unhealthy. The default value is 3.

       Note: This parameter can overwrite the healthcheck configuration from the image.

   --health-start-period=period
       The initialization time needed for a container to bootstrap. The value can be expressed  in  time  format
       like 2m3s. The default value is 0s.

       Note:  The  health  check  command  is executed as soon as a container is started, if the health check is
       successful the container's health state will be updated to healthy. However, if the health  check  fails,
       the health state will stay as starting until either the health check is successful or until the --health-
       start-period  time  is  over.  If  the health check command fails after the --health-start-period time is
       over, the health state will be updated to unhealthy.  The health check command is  executed  periodically
       based on the value of --health-interval.

       Note: This parameter will overwrite related healthcheck configuration from the image.

   --health-startup-cmd="command" | '["command", arg1 , ...]'
       Set  a  startup healthcheck command for a container. This command is executed inside the container and is
       used to gate the regular healthcheck. When the startup command succeeds, the regular  healthcheck  begins
       and  the  startup  healthcheck ceases. Optionally, if the command fails for a set number of attempts, the
       container is restarted. A startup healthcheck can be used to ensure  that  containers  with  an  extended
       startup period are not marked as unhealthy until they are fully started. Startup healthchecks can only be
       used when a regular healthcheck (from the container's image or the --health-cmd option) is also set.

   --health-startup-interval=interval
       Set  an interval for the startup healthcheck. An interval of disable results in no automatic timer setup.
       The default is 30s.

   --health-startup-retries=retries
       The number of attempts allowed before the startup healthcheck restarts the container. If set  to  0,  the
       container is never restarted. The default is 0.

   --health-startup-success=retries
       The  number  of  successful  runs  required  before  the  startup  healthcheck  succeeds  and the regular
       healthcheck begins. A value of 0 means that any success begins the regular healthcheck. The default is 0.

   --health-startup-timeout=timeout
       The maximum time a startup healthcheck command has to complete before it is marked as failed.  The  value
       can be expressed in a time format like 2m3s. The default value is 30s.

   --health-timeout=timeout
       The maximum time allowed to complete the healthcheck before an interval is considered failed. Like start-
       period, the value can be expressed in a time format such as 1m22s. The default value is 30s.

       Note:  A  timeout marks the healthcheck as failed. If the healthcheck command itself runs longer than the
       specified timeout, it will be sent a SIGKILL signal.

       Note: This parameter will overwrite related healthcheck configuration from the image.

   --help
       Print usage statement

   --hostname, -h=name
       Set the container's hostname inside the container.

       This option can only be used with a private UTS namespace --uts=private (default). If --pod is given  and
       the  pod  shares the same UTS namespace (default), the pod's hostname is used. The given hostname is also
       added to the /etc/hosts file using the container's primary IP address (also see the --add-host option).

   --hosts-file=path | none | image
       Base file to create the /etc/hosts file inside the container. This must either be an absolute path  to  a
       file on the host system, or one of the following special flags:
         ""      Follow the base_hosts_file configuration in containers.conf (the default)
         none  Do not use a base file (i.e. start with an empty file)
         image Use the container image's /etc/hosts file as base file

   --hostuser=name
       Add  a  user account to /etc/passwd from the host to the container. The Username or UID must exist on the
       host system.

   --http-proxy
       By default proxy environment variables are passed into the container if set for the Podman process.  This
       can  be  disabled by setting the value to false.  The environment variables passed in include http_proxy,
       https_proxy, ftp_proxy, no_proxy, and also the upper case versions of those. This option is  only  needed
       when  the  host  system  must  use  a  proxy  but the container does not use any proxy. Proxy environment
       variables specified for the container in any other way overrides the values that have been passed through
       from the host. (Other ways to specify the proxy for the container include passing  the  values  with  the
       --env  flag,  or  hard  coding the proxy environment at container build time.)  When used with the remote
       client it uses the proxy environment variables that are set on the server process.

       Defaults to true.

   --image-volume=bind | tmpfs | ignore
       Tells Podman how to handle the builtin image volumes. Default is bind.

       • bind: An anonymous named volume is created and mounted into the container.

       • tmpfs: The volume is mounted onto the container as a tmpfs, which allows the users  to  create  content
         that disappears when the container is stopped.

       • ignore: All volumes are just ignored and no action is taken.

   --init
       Run an init inside the container that forwards signals and reaps processes.  The container-init binary is
       mounted at /run/podman-init.  Mounting over /run breaks container execution.

   --init-path=path
       Path to the container-init binary.

   --interactive, -i
       When  set  to  true,  make stdin available to the contained process. If false, the stdin of the contained
       process is empty and immediately closed.

       If attached, stdin is piped to the contained process. If detached, reading stdin will block  until  later
       attached.

       Caveat:  Podman  will  consume  input  from  stdin as soon as it becomes available, even if the contained
       process doesn't request it.

   --ip=ipv4
       Specify a static IPv4 address for the container, for example 10.88.64.128.  This option can only be  used
       if the container is joined to only a single network - i.e., --network=network-name is used at most once -
       and  if  the  container  is not joining another container's network namespace via --network=container:id.
       The address must be within the network's IP address pool (default 10.88.0.0/16).

       To specify multiple static IP addresses per container, set multiple networks using the  --network  option
       with a static IP address specified for each using the ip mode for that option.

   --ip6=ipv6
       Specify  a  static  IPv6 address for the container, for example fd46:db93:aa76:ac37::10.  This option can
       only be used if the container is joined to only a single network - i.e., --network=network-name  is  used
       at  most  once  -  and  if  the  container  is  not  joining  another  container's  network namespace via
       --network=container:id.  The address must be within the network's IPv6 address pool.

       To specify multiple static IPv6 addresses per container, set multiple networks using the --network option
       with a static IPv6 address specified for each using the ip6 mode for that option.

   --ipc=ipc
       Set the IPC namespace mode for a container. The default is to create a private IPC namespace.

       • "": Use Podman's default, defined in containers.conf.

       • container:id: reuses another container's shared memory, semaphores, and message queues

       • host: use the host's shared memory, semaphores, and message queues inside the container. Note: the host
         mode gives the container full access to local shared memory and is therefore considered insecure.

       • none:  private IPC namespace, with /dev/shm not mounted.

       • ns:path: path to an IPC namespace to join.

       • private: private IPC namespace.

       • shareable: private IPC namespace with a possibility to share it with other containers.

   --label, -l=key=value
       Add metadata to a container.

   --label-file=file
       Read in a line-delimited file of labels.

   --link-local-ip=ip
       Not implemented.

   --log-driver=driver
       Logging driver for the container. Currently available options are k8s-file, journald,  none,  passthrough
       and passthrough-tty, with json-file aliased to k8s-file for scripting compatibility. (Default journald).

       The podman info command below displays the default log-driver for the system.

       $ podman info --format '{{ .Host.LogDriver }}'
       journald

       The  passthrough driver passes down the standard streams (stdin, stdout, stderr) to the container.  It is
       not allowed with the remote Podman client, including Mac and Windows (excluding WSL2) machines, and on  a
       tty, since it is vulnerable to attacks via TIOCSTI.

       The  passthrough-tty  driver is the same as passthrough except that it also allows it to be used on a TTY
       if the user really wants it.

   --log-opt=name=value
       Logging driver specific options.

       Set custom logging configuration. The following *name*s are supported:

       path: specify a path to the log file
           (e.g. --log-opt path=/var/log/container/mycontainer.json);

       max-size: specify a max size of the log file
           (e.g. --log-opt max-size=10mb);

       tag: specify a custom log tag for the container
           (e.g. --log-opt tag="{{.ImageName}}".  It supports the same keys as podman  inspect  --format.   This
       option is currently supported only by the journald log driver.

   --mac-address=address
       Container  network  interface  MAC  address  (e.g. 92:d0:c6:0a:29:33) This option can only be used if the
       container is joined to only a single network - i.e., --network=network-name is used at most once - and if
       the container is not joining another container's network namespace via --network=container:id.

       Remember that the MAC address in an Ethernet network must be unique.   The  IPv6  link-local  address  is
       based on the device's MAC address according to RFC4862.

       To  specify multiple static MAC addresses per container, set multiple networks using the --network option
       with a static MAC address specified for each using the mac mode for that option.

   --memory, -m=number[unit]
       Memory limit. A unit can be b (bytes), k (kibibytes), m (mebibytes), or g (gibibytes).

       Allows the memory available to a container to be constrained. If the host supports swap memory, then  the
       -m  memory  setting  can  be  larger  than physical RAM. If a limit of 0 is specified (not using -m), the
       container's memory is not limited. The actual limit may be rounded up to  a  multiple  of  the  operating
       system's page size (the value is very large, that's millions of trillions).

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --memory-reservation=number[unit]
       Memory soft limit. A unit can be b (bytes), k (kibibytes), m (mebibytes), or g (gibibytes).

       After setting memory reservation, when the system detects memory contention or low memory, containers are
       forced  to  restrict  their  consumption  to  their  reservation. So always set the value below --memory,
       otherwise the hard limit takes precedence. By default, memory reservation is the same as memory limit.

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --memory-swap=number[unit]
       A limit value equal to memory plus swap.  A unit can be b (bytes), k (kibibytes),  m  (mebibytes),  or  g
       (gibibytes).

       Must be used with the -m (--memory) flag.  The argument value must be larger than that of
        -m (--memory) By default, it is set to double the value of --memory.

       Set number to -1 to enable unlimited swap.

       This option is not supported on cgroups V1 rootless systems.

   --memory-swappiness=number
       Tune a container's memory swappiness behavior. Accepts an integer between 0 and 100.

       This flag is only supported on cgroups V1 rootful systems.

   --mount=type=TYPE,TYPE-SPECIFIC-OPTION[,...]
       Attach a filesystem mount to the container.

       Current supported mount TYPEs are artifact, bind, devpts, glob, image, ramfs, tmpfs and volume.

       Options common to all mount types:

       • src,  source:  mount source spec for bind, glob, and volume.  Mandatory for artifact, bind, glob, image
         and volume.

       • dst, dest, destination, target: mount destination spec.

       When source globs are specified without the destination directory, the files and directories are  mounted
       with  their  complete  path  within  the  container.  When  the  destination  is specified, the files and
       directories matching the glob on the base file name on the destination directory are mounted. The  option
       type=glob,src=/foo*,destination=/tmp/bar  tells  container  engines to mount host files matching /foo* to
       the /tmp/bar/ directory in the container.

       Options specific to type=artifact:

       • digest: If the artifact source contains multiple blobs a digest can be specified to only mount the  one
         specific blob with the digest.

       • title:  If  the  artifact  source  contains multiple blobs a title can be set which is compared against
         org.opencontainers.image.title annotation.

       • name: This can be used to overwrite the filename we use inside the container for mounting. On a  single
         blob  artifact  the  name  is used as is if dst is a directory and otherwise ignored. With a multi blob
         artifact the name will be used with an index suffix <name>-x where x is the layer index in the artifact
         starting with 0.

       The src argument contains the name of the artifact, which must already exist locally.  The  dst  argument
       contains   the   target   path,   if   the   path  in  the  container  is  a  directory  the  blob  title
       (org.opencontainers.image.title annotation) will be used as filename and  joined  to  the  path.  If  the
       annotation  does  not exist the digest will be used as filename instead. This results in all blobs of the
       artifact mounted into the container at the given path.

       However, if the dst path is an existing file in the container, then the blob will be mounted directly  on
       it.  This  only  works  when  the  artifact  contains  a  single  blob or when either digest or title are
       specified.

       If the dst path does not already exist in the container then if the artifact contains a  single  blob  it
       behaves like existing file case and mounts directly to that path.  If the artifact has more than one blob
       it works like the existing directory case and mounts each blob as file within the dst path.

       Options specific to type=volume:

       • ro, readonly: true or false (default if unspecified: false).

       • U,  chown: true or false (default if unspecified: false). Recursively change the owner and group of the
         source volume based on the UID and GID of the container.

       • subpath: Mount only a specific subpath within the volume, instead of the whole volume.

       • idmap: If specified, create an idmapped mount to the target user namespace in the container.  The idmap
         option is only supported by Podman in rootful mode. The Linux kernel does not allow the use of idmapped
         file systems for unprivileged users.  The idmap option supports a custom mapping that can be  different
         than  the  user  namespace  used by the container.  The mapping can be specified after the idmap option
         like: idmap=uids=0-1-10#10-11-10;gids=0-100-10.  For each triplet, the first value is the start of  the
         backing file system IDs that are mapped to the second value on the host.  The length of this mapping is
         given in the third value.  Multiple ranges are separated with #.  If the specified mapping is prepended
         with  a  '@',  then the mapping is considered relative to the container user namespace. The host ID for
         the mapping is changed to account for the relative position of the container user in the container user
         namespace.

       Options specific to type=image:

       • rw, readwrite: true or false (default if unspecified: false).

       • subpath: Mount only a specific path within the image, instead of the whole image.

       Options specific to bind and glob:

       • ro, readonly: true or false (default if unspecified: false).

       • bind-propagation: shared,  slave,  private,  unbindable,  rshared,  rslave,  runbindable,  or  rprivate
         (default).[1] ⟨#Footnote1⟩ See also mount(2).

       • bind-nonrecursive: do not set up a recursive bind mount. By default it is recursive.

       • relabel: shared, private.

       • idmap:  true or false (default if unspecified: false).  If true, create an idmapped mount to the target
         user namespace in the container. The idmap option is only supported by Podman in rootful mode.

       • U, chown: true or false (default if unspecified: false). Recursively change the owner and group of  the
         source volume based on the UID and GID of the container.

       • no-dereference: do not dereference symlinks but copy the link source into the mount destination.

       Options specific to type=tmpfs and ramfs:

       • ro, readonly: true or false (default if unspecified: false).

       • tmpfs-size: Size of the tmpfs/ramfs mount, in bytes. Unlimited by default in Linux.

       • tmpfs-mode: Octal file mode of the tmpfs/ramfs (e.g. 700 or 0700.).

       • tmpcopyup:  Enable  copyup  from  the  image directory at the same location to the tmpfs/ramfs. Used by
         default.

       • noatime: Disable updating file access times when the file is read.

       • notmpcopyup: Disable copying files from the image to the tmpfs/ramfs.

       • U, chown: true or false (default if unspecified: false). Recursively change the owner and group of  the
         source volume based on the UID and GID of the container.

       Options specific to type=devpts:

       • uid: numeric UID of the file owner (default: 0).

       • gid: numeric GID of the file owner (default: 0).

       • mode: octal permission mask for the file (default: 600).

       • max: maximum number of PTYs (default: 1048576).

       Examples:

       • type=bind,source=/path/on/host,destination=/path/in/containertype=bind,src=/path/on/host,dst=/path/in/container,relabel=sharedtype=bind,src=/path/on/host,dst=/path/in/container,relabel=shared,U=truetype=devpts,destination=/dev/ptstype=glob,src=/usr/lib/libfoo*,destination=/usr/lib,ro=truetype=image,source=fedora,destination=/fedora-image,rw=truetype=ramfs,tmpfs-size=512M,destination=/path/in/containertype=tmpfs,tmpfs-size=512M,destination=/path/in/containertype=tmpfs,destination=/path/in/container,noswaptype=artifact,src=quay.io/libpod/testartifact:20250206-single,dst=/datatype=artifact,src=quay.io/libpod/testartifact:20250206-multi,dst=/data,title=test1type=volume,src=test_vol,dst=/data,subpath=/code/docs

   --name=name
       Assign a name to the container.

       The operator can identify a container in three ways:

       • UUID long identifier (“f78375b1c487e03c9438c729345e54db9d20cfa2ac1fc3494b6eb60872e74778”);

       • UUID short identifier (“f78375b1c487”);

       • Name (“jonah”).

       Podman  generates  a  UUID  for each container, and if no name is assigned to the container using --name,
       Podman generates a random string name. The name can be useful as a more human-friendly  way  to  identify
       containers.  This works for both background and foreground containers. The container's name is also added
       to the /etc/hosts file using the container's primary IP address (also see the --add-host option).

   --network=mode, --net
       Set the network mode for the container.

       Valid mode values are:

       • bridge[:OPTIONS,...]: Create a network stack on the default bridge. This is  the  default  for  rootful
         containers. It is possible to specify these additional options:

         • alias=name: Add network-scoped alias for the container.

         • ip=IPv4: Specify a static IPv4 address for this container.

         • ip6=IPv6: Specify a static IPv6 address for this container.

         • mac=MAC: Specify a static MAC address for this container.

         • interface_name=name: Specify a name for the created network interface inside the container.

         • host_interface_name=name: Specify a name for the created network interface outside the container.

         Any  other  options  will  be passed through to netavark without validation. This can be useful to pass
         arguments to netavark plugins.

         For  example,  to  set  a  static  ipv4   address   and   a   static   mac   address,   use   --network
         bridge:ip=10.88.0.10,mac=44:33:22:11:00:99.

       • <network  name  or ID>[:OPTIONS,...]: Connect to a user-defined network; this is the network name or ID
         from a network created by podman network create. It is possible to specify the same  options  described
         under the bridge mode above. Use the --network option multiple times to specify additional networks.
         For  backwards  compatibility  it  is  also  possible  to specify comma-separated networks on the first
         --network argument, however this prevents you from using the options described under the bridge section
         above.

       • none: Create a network namespace for the container but do not configure network interfaces for it, thus
         the container has no network connectivity.

       • container:id: Reuse another container's network stack.

       • host: Use the host's network namespace for the container instead of  creating  an  isolated  namespace.
         Warning:  This  gives  the container full access to abstract Unix domain sockets and to TCP/UDP sockets
         bound to localhost. Since these mechanisms are  often  used  to  prevent  access  to  sensitive  system
         services,  isolating  them  from  access  by  external entities, use of this option may be considered a
         security vulnerability.

       • ns:path: Path to a network namespace to join.

       • private: Create a new namespace for the container. This uses the bridge mode for rootful containers and
         slirp4netns for rootless ones.

       • slirp4netns[:OPTIONS,...]: use slirp4netns(1) to create a user network stack. It is possible to specify
         these additional options, they can also be set with network_cmd_options in containers.conf:

         • allow_host_loopback=true|false: Allow slirp4netns to reach the host loopback IP (default is  10.0.2.2
           or  the  second IP from slirp4netns cidr subnet when changed, see the cidr option below). The default
           is false.

         • mtu=MTU: Specify the MTU to use for this network. (Default is 65520).

         • cidr=CIDR: Specify ip range to use for this network. (Default is 10.0.2.0/24).

         • enable_ipv6=true|false: Enable IPv6. Default is true. (Required for outbound_addr6).

         • outbound_addr=INTERFACE: Specify the outbound interface slirp binds to (ipv4 traffic only).

         • outbound_addr=IPv4: Specify the outbound ipv4 address slirp binds to.

         • outbound_addr6=INTERFACE: Specify the outbound interface slirp binds to (ipv6 traffic only).

         • outbound_addr6=IPv6: Specify the outbound ipv6 address slirp binds to.

         • port_handler=rootlesskit: Use rootlesskit for port forwarding. Default.
           Note: Rootlesskit changes the source IP address of incoming packets to an IP address in the container
           network namespace, usually 10.0.2.100. If the application requires the real source IP  address,  e.g.
           web  server  logs,  use  the  slirp4netns port handler. The rootlesskit port handler is also used for
           rootless containers when connected to user-defined networks.

         • port_handler=slirp4netns: Use the slirp4netns port forwarding, it  is  slower  than  rootlesskit  but
           preserves the correct source IP address. This port handler cannot be used for user-defined networks.

       • pasta[:OPTIONS,...]: use pasta(1) to create a user-mode networking stack.
         This is the default for rootless containers and only supported in rootless mode.
         By  default, IPv4 and IPv6 addresses and routes, as well as the pod interface name, are copied from the
         host. Port forwarding preserves the original source IP address. Options described in  pasta(1)  can  be
         specified as comma-separated arguments.
         In  terms  of pasta(1) options, --config-net is given by default, in order to configure networking when
         the container is started, and --no-map-gw is also assumed by  default,  to  avoid  direct  access  from
         container  to  host  using the gateway address. The latter can be overridden by passing --map-gw in the
         pasta-specific options (despite not being an actual pasta(1) option).
         For better integration with DNS handling, --dns-forward 169.254.1.1 is  passed,  and  this  address  is
         added  to  resolv.conf(5)  as first resolver. It is possible to pass --dns-forward explicitly in case a
         different IP address should be used.  To make the host.containers.internal /etc/hosts  entry  work  and
         allow  connections to the host, --map-guest-addr 169.254.1.2 is passed. Again, it can be set explicitly
         to choose a different IP address.
         Also, -t none and -u none are passed if, respectively, no TCP or  UDP  port  forwarding  from  host  to
         container  is  configured  (via  Podman's --publish or by passing the pasta -t/-u options directly), to
         disable automatic port forwarding based on bound ports. Similarly, -T none and -U  none  are  given  to
         disable the same functionality from container to host.
         All  options can also be set in containers.conf(5); see the pasta_options key under the network section
         in that file.
         Some examples:

         • pasta:--map-gw: Allow the container to directly reach the host using the gateway address.

         • pasta:--mtu,1500: Specify a 1500 bytes MTU for the tap interface in the container.

         • pasta:--ipv4-only,-a,10.0.2.0,-n,24,-g,10.0.2.2,--dns-forward,10.0.2.3,-m,1500,--no-ndp,--no-
           dhcpv6,--no-dhcp, equivalent to default slirp4netns(1) options: disable IPv6, assign  10.0.2.0/24  to
           the  tap0  interface  in  the  container,  with  gateway  10.0.2.3, enable DNS forwarder reachable at
           10.0.2.3, set MTU to 1500 bytes, disable NDP, DHCPv6 and DHCP support.

         • pasta:-I,tap0,--ipv4-only,-a,10.0.2.0,-n,24,-g,10.0.2.2,--dns-forward,10.0.2.3,--no-ndp,--no-
           dhcpv6,--no-dhcp, equivalent to default slirp4netns(1) options with Podman overrides: same as  above,
           but leave the MTU to 65520 bytes

         • pasta:-t,auto,-u,auto,-T,auto,-U,auto: enable automatic port forwarding based on observed bound ports
           from both host and container sides

         • pasta:-T,5201:  enable  forwarding  of  TCP  port  5201  from  container  to host, using the loopback
           interface instead of the tap interface for improved performance

       Invalid if using --dns, --dns-option, or --dns-search with --network set to none or container:id.

       If used together with --pod, the container joins the pod's network namespace.

   --network-alias=alias
       Add a network-scoped alias for the container, setting the alias  for  all  networks  that  the  container
       joins.  To  set a name only for a specific network, use the alias option as described under the --network
       option.  If the network has DNS enabled (podman network inspect -f {{.DNSEnabled}} <name>), these aliases
       can be used for name resolution on the given network. This option can be specified multiple times.  NOTE:
       When using CNI a container only has access to aliases on the first network that it joins. This limitation
       does not exist with netavark/aardvark-dns.

   --no-healthcheck
       Disable any defined healthchecks for container.

   --no-hostname
       Do not create the /etc/hostname file in the containers.

       By default, Podman manages the /etc/hostname file, adding the container's own hostname.  When  the  --no-
       hostname option is set, the image's /etc/hostname will be preserved unmodified if it exists.

   --no-hosts
       Do not modify the /etc/hosts file in the container.

       Podman  assumes  control  over  the  container's  /etc/hosts  file  by  default  and adds entries for the
       container's  name  (see  --name  option)   and   hostname   (see   --hostname   option),   the   internal
       host.containers.internal  and  host.docker.internal hosts, as well as any hostname added using the --add-
       host option. Refer to the --add-host option for details. Passing --no-hosts disables this,  so  that  the
       image's /etc/hosts file is kept unmodified. The same can be achieved globally by setting no_hosts=true in
       containers.conf.

       This option conflicts with --add-host.

   --oom-kill-disable
       Whether to disable OOM Killer for the container or not.

       This flag is not supported on cgroups V2 systems.

   --oom-score-adj=num
       Tune the host's OOM preferences for containers (accepts values from -1000 to 1000).

       When  running in rootless mode, the specified value can't be lower than the oom_score_adj for the current
       process. In this case, the oom-score-adj is clamped to the current process value.

   --os=OS
       Override the OS, defaults to hosts, of the image to be pulled. For example, windows.  Unless  overridden,
       subsequent lookups of the same image in the local storage matches this OS, regardless of the host.

   --passwd
       Allow  Podman  to  add  entries  to  /etc/passwd  and /etc/group when used in conjunction with the --user
       option.  This is used to override the Podman provided user setup in favor  of  entrypoint  configurations
       such as libnss-extrausers.

   --passwd-entry=ENTRY
       Customize the entry that is written to the /etc/passwd file within the container when --passwd is used.

       The variables $USERNAME, $UID, $GID, $NAME, $HOME are automatically replaced with their value at runtime.

   --personality=persona
       Personality sets the execution domain via Linux personality(2).

   --pid=mode
       Set  the  PID namespace mode for the container.  The default is to create a private PID namespace for the
       container.

       • container:id: join another container's PID namespace;

       • host: use the host's PID namespace for the container. Note the  host  mode  gives  the  container  full
         access to local PID and is therefore considered insecure;

       • ns:path: join the specified PID namespace;

       • private: create a new namespace for the container (default).

   --pidfile=path
       When  the  pidfile  location  is  specified,  the container process' PID is written to the pidfile. (This
       option is not available with the remote  Podman  client,  including  Mac  and  Windows  (excluding  WSL2)
       machines)   If  the  pidfile  option  is  not  specified,  the  container  process'  PID  is  written  to
       /run/containers/storage/${storage-driver}-containers/$CID/userdata/pidfile.

       After the container is started, the location for the pidfile can be discovered with the following  podman
       inspect command:

       $ podman inspect --format '{{ .PidFile }}' $CID
       /run/containers/storage/${storage-driver}-containers/$CID/userdata/pidfile

   --pids-limit=limit
       Tune  the container's pids limit. Set to -1 to have unlimited pids for the container. The default is 2048
       on systems that support "pids" cgroup controller.

   --platform=OS/ARCH
       Specify the platform for selecting the image.  (Conflicts with --arch and --os) The --platform option can
       be used to override the current architecture and operating system.  Unless overridden, subsequent lookups
       of the same image in the local storage matches this platform, regardless of the host.

   --pod=name
       Run container in an existing pod. Podman makes the pod automatically if the pod  name  is  prefixed  with
       new:.   To  make  a  pod  with more granular options, use the podman pod create command before creating a
       container.  When a container is run with a pod with an infra-container, the  infra-container  is  started
       first.

   --pod-id-file=file
       Run  container in an existing pod and read the pod's ID from the specified file.  When a container is run
       within a pod which has an infra-container, the infra-container starts first.

   --preserve-fd=FD1[,FD2,...]
       Pass down to the process the additional file descriptors specified in the comma separated list.   It  can
       be  specified  multiple  times.   This option is only supported with the crun OCI runtime.  It might be a
       security risk to use this option with other OCI runtimes.

       (This option is not available with the remote Podman client, including Mac and Windows  (excluding  WSL2)
       machines)

   --preserve-fds=N
       Pass  down to the process N additional file descriptors (in addition to 0, 1, 2).  The total FDs are 3+N.
       (This option is not available with the remote Podman client, including Mac and Windows  (excluding  WSL2)
       machines)

   --privileged
       Give extended privileges to this container. The default is false.

       By  default,  Podman  containers  are  unprivileged (=false) and cannot, for example, modify parts of the
       operating system. This is because by default a container is only allowed limited  access  to  devices.  A
       "privileged"  container is given the same access to devices as the user launching the container, with the
       exception of virtual consoles (/dev/tty\d+) when running in systemd mode (--systemd=always).

       A privileged container turns off the security features that isolate the container from the host.  Dropped
       Capabilities,  limited  devices, read-only mount points, Apparmor/SELinux separation, and Seccomp filters
       are all disabled.  Due to the disabled security features, the privileged field should almost never be set
       as containers can easily break out of confinement.

       Containers running in a user namespace (e.g., rootless containers) cannot have more privileges  than  the
       user that launched them.

   --publish, -p=[[ip:][hostPort]:]containerPort[/protocol]
       Publish a container's port, or range of ports, to the host.

       Both  hostPort  and containerPort can be specified as a range of ports.  When specifying ranges for both,
       the number of container ports in the range must match the number of host ports in the range.

       If host IP is set to 0.0.0.0 or not set at all, the port is bound on all IPs on the host.

       By default, Podman publishes TCP ports. To publish a UDP port instead, give udp as protocol.  To  publish
       both  TCP  and  UDP  ports,  set  --publish  twice,  with tcp, and udp as protocols respectively. Rootful
       containers can also publish ports using the sctp protocol.

       Host port does not have to be specified (e.g. podman run -p 127.0.0.1::80).  If it is not, the  container
       port is randomly assigned a port on the host.

       Use podman port to see the actual mapping: podman port $CONTAINER $CONTAINERPORT.

       Port  publishing  is  only  supported for containers utilizing their own network namespace through bridge
       networks, or the pasta and slirp4netns network modes.

       Note: If a container runs within a pod, it is not necessary to publish the port for the containers in the
       pod. The port must only be published by the pod itself. Pod network stacks act like the network stack  on
       the  host  -  meaning a variety of containers in the pod and programs in the container all share a single
       interface, IP address, and associated ports. If one container binds to a port, no other container can use
       that port within the pod while it is in use. Containers in the pod can also communicate over localhost by
       having one container bind to localhost in the pod, and another connect to that port.

   --publish-all, -P
       Publish all exposed ports to random ports on the host interfaces. The default is false.

       When set to true, publish all exposed ports to the host interfaces.  If the operator uses -P (or -p) then
       Podman makes the exposed port accessible on the host and the ports are available to any client  that  can
       reach the host.

       When  using  this  option, Podman binds any exposed port to a random port on the host within an ephemeral
       port range defined by /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range.  To find the mapping between the host ports
       and the exposed ports, use podman port.

   --pull=policy
       Pull image policy. The default is missing.

       • always: Always pull the image and throw an error if the pull fails.

       • missing: Pull the image only when the image is not in the local containers storage.  Throw an error  if
         no image is found and the pull fails.

       • never:  Never  pull  the image but use the one from the local containers storage.  Throw an error if no
         image is found.

       • newer: Pull if the image on the registry is newer than the one in the  local  containers  storage.   An
         image  is considered to be newer when the digests are different.  Comparing the time stamps is prone to
         errors.  Pull errors are suppressed if a local image was found.

   --quiet, -q
       Suppress output information when pulling images

   --rdt-class=intel-rdt-class-of-service
       Rdt-class sets the class of service (CLOS or COS) for the  container  to  run  in.  Based  on  the  Cache
       Allocation  Technology  (CAT)  feature that is part of Intel's Resource Director Technology (RDT) feature
       set, all container processes will run within the pre-configured COS, representing a part  of  the  cache.
       The  COS has to be created and configured using a pseudo file system (usually mounted at /sys/fs/resctrl)
       that the resctrl kernel driver provides. Assigning the container to a COS requires  root  privileges  and
       thus  doesn't  work  in  a rootless environment. Currently, the feature is only supported using runc as a
       runtime. See ⟨https://docs.kernel.org/arch/x86/resctrl.html⟩ for more details on creating a COS before  a
       container can be assigned to it.

   --read-only
       Mount the container's root filesystem as read-only.

       By  default,  container  root  filesystems  are  writable, allowing processes to write files anywhere. By
       specifying the --read-only flag, the containers root filesystem are  mounted  read-only  prohibiting  any
       writes.

   --read-only-tmpfs
       When  running  --read-only  containers,  mount  a  read-write  tmpfs  on  /dev, /dev/shm, /run, /tmp, and
       /var/tmp. The default is true.

       ┌─────────────┬───────────────────┬─────┬──────────────────────┐
       │ --read-only--read-only-tmpfs//run, /tmp, /var/tmp │
       ├─────────────┼───────────────────┼─────┼──────────────────────┤
       │ true        │ true              │ r/o │ r/w                  │
       ├─────────────┼───────────────────┼─────┼──────────────────────┤
       │ true        │ false             │ r/o │ r/o                  │
       ├─────────────┼───────────────────┼─────┼──────────────────────┤
       │ false       │ false             │ r/w │ r/w                  │
       ├─────────────┼───────────────────┼─────┼──────────────────────┤
       │ false       │ true              │ r/w │ r/w                  │
       └─────────────┴───────────────────┴─────┴──────────────────────┘

       When --read-only=true and --read-only-tmpfs=true additional tmpfs are mounted  on  the  /tmp,  /run,  and
       /var/tmp directories.

       When --read-only=true and --read-only-tmpfs=false /dev and /dev/shm are marked Read/Only and no tmpfs are
       mounted  on  /tmp, /run and /var/tmp. The directories are exposed from the underlying image, meaning they
       are read-only by default.  This makes the container totally  read-only.  No  writable  directories  exist
       within the container. In this mode writable directories need to be added via external volumes or mounts.

       By  default,  when  --read-only=false,  the  /dev  and  /dev/shm  are read/write, and the /tmp, /run, and
       /var/tmp are read/write directories from the container image.

   --replace
       If another container with the same name already exists, replace and remove it. The default is false.

   --requires=container
       Specify one or more requirements.  A requirement is a dependency container that is  started  before  this
       container.   Containers  can  be  specified  by  name  or ID, with multiple containers being separated by
       commas.

   --restart=policy
       Restart policy to follow when containers exit.  Restart policy does not take effect  if  a  container  is
       stopped via the podman kill or podman stop commands.

       Valid policy values are:

       • no                       : Do not restart containers on exit

       • never                    : Synonym for no; do not restart containers on exit

       • on-failure[:max_retries]  :  Restart  containers  when  they  exit  with a non-zero exit code, retrying
         indefinitely or until the optional max_retries count is hit

       • always                    :  Restart  containers  when  they  exit,  regardless  of  status,   retrying
         indefinitely

       • unless-stopped           : Identical to always

       Podman  provides  a  systemd  unit file, podman-restart.service, which restarts containers after a system
       reboot.

       When running containers in systemd services, use the restart functionality provided by systemd.  In other
       words, do not use this option in a container unit, instead set the  Restart=  systemd  directive  in  the
       [Service] section.  See podman-systemd.unit(5) and systemd.service(5).

   --retry=attempts
       Number  of  times  to  retry  pulling or pushing images between the registry and local storage in case of
       failure. Default is 3.

   --retry-delay=duration
       Duration of delay between retry attempts when pulling or pushing images between the  registry  and  local
       storage  in  case of failure. The default is to start at two seconds and then exponentially back off. The
       delay is used when this value is set, and no exponential back off occurs.

   --rm
       Automatically remove the container and any anonymous unnamed volume associated with the container when it
       exits. The default is false.

   --rmi
       After exit of the container, remove the image unless another container is using it. Implies --rm  on  the
       new container. The default is false.

   --rootfs
       If specified, the first argument refers to an exploded container on the file system.

       This  is useful to run a container without requiring any image management, the rootfs of the container is
       assumed to be managed externally.

       Overlay Rootfs Mounts

       The :O flag tells Podman to mount the directory from the rootfs path as storage using  the  overlay  file
       system.  The  container  processes  can  modify  content  within  the  mount point which is stored in the
       container storage in a separate directory. In overlay terms, the source directory is the lower,  and  the
       container  storage  directory  is  the  upper.  Modifications  to  the mount point are destroyed when the
       container finishes executing, similar to a tmpfs mount point being unmounted.

       Note:  On  SELinux   systems,   the   rootfs   needs   the   correct   label,   which   is   by   default
       unconfined_u:object_r:container_file_t:s0.

       idmap

       If idmap is specified, create an idmapped mount to the target user namespace in the container.  The idmap
       option  supports  a  custom  mapping that can be different than the user namespace used by the container.
       The mapping can be specified after the idmap option like: idmap=uids=0-1-10#10-11-10;gids=0-100-10.   For
       each  triplet,  the first value is the start of the backing file system IDs that are mapped to the second
       value on the host.  The length of this mapping  is  given  in  the  third  value.   Multiple  ranges  are
       separated with #.

   --sdnotify=container | conmon | healthy | ignore
       Determines how to use the NOTIFY_SOCKET, as passed with systemd and Type=notify.

       Default is container, which means allow the OCI runtime to proxy the socket into the container to receive
       ready  notification. Podman sets the MAINPID to conmon's pid.  The conmon option sets MAINPID to conmon's
       pid, and sends READY when the container has started. The socket is never passed to  the  runtime  or  the
       container.   The  healthy  option  sets  MAINPID  to conmon's pid, and sends READY when the container has
       turned healthy; requires a healthcheck to be set. The socket is  never  passed  to  the  runtime  or  the
       container.   The ignore option removes NOTIFY_SOCKET from the environment for itself and child processes,
       for the case where some other process above Podman uses NOTIFY_SOCKET and Podman does not use it.

   --seccomp-policy=policy
       Specify  the  policy  to  select  the  seccomp  profile.  If  set  to   image,   Podman   looks   for   a
       "io.containers.seccomp.profile"  label  in  the  container-image  config  and  use its value as a seccomp
       profile. Otherwise, Podman follows the default policy by applying the default  profile  unless  specified
       otherwise via --security-opt seccomp as described below.

       Note that this feature is experimental and may change in the future.

   --secret=secret[,opt=opt ...]
       Give the container access to a secret. Can be specified multiple times.

       A secret is a blob of sensitive data which a container needs at runtime but is not stored in the image or
       in  source  control,  such  as  usernames  and  passwords,  TLS  certificates and keys, SSH keys or other
       important generic strings or binary content (up to 512 kB in size).

       When secrets are specified as type mount, the secrets are copied and mounted into the  container  when  a
       container  is  created.   When  secrets  are  specified  as type env, the secret is set as an environment
       variable within the container.  Secrets are written in the container at the time of  container  creation,
       and  modifying  the secret using podman secret commands after the container is created affects the secret
       inside the container.

       Secrets and its storage are managed using the podman secret command.

       Secret Options

       • type=mount|env    : How the secret is exposed to the container.
                             mount mounts the secret into the container as a file.
                             env exposes the secret as an environment variable.
                             Defaults to mount.

       • target=target     : Target of secret.
                             For mounted secrets, this is the path to the secret inside the container.
                             If a fully qualified path is provided, the secret is mounted at that location.
                             Otherwise, the secret is mounted to
                             /run/secrets/target for Linux containers or
                             /var/run/secrets/target for FreeBSD containers.
                             If the target is not set, the  secret  is  mounted  to  /run/secrets/secretname  by
         default.
                             For env secrets, this is the environment variable key. Defaults to secretname.

       • uid=0             : UID of secret. Defaults to 0. Mount secret type only.

       • gid=0             : GID of secret. Defaults to 0. Mount secret type only.

       • mode=0            : Mode of secret. Defaults to 0444. Mount secret type only.

       Examples

       Mount at /my/location/mysecret with UID 1:

       --secret mysecret,target=/my/location/mysecret,uid=1

       Mount at /run/secrets/customtarget with mode 0777:

       --secret mysecret,target=customtarget,mode=0777

       Create a secret environment variable called ENVSEC:

       --secret mysecret,type=env,target=ENVSEC

   --security-opt=option
       Security Options

       • apparmor=unconfined : Turn off apparmor confinement for the container

       • apparmor=alternate-profile : Set the apparmor confinement profile for the container

       • label=user:USER: Set the label user for the container processes

       • label=role:ROLE: Set the label role for the container processes

       • label=type:TYPE: Set the label process type for the container processes

       • label=level:LEVEL: Set the label level for the container processes

       • label=filetype:TYPE: Set the label file type for the container files

       • label=disable: Turn off label separation for the container

       Note:  Labeling  can  be  disabled  for  all  containers  by  setting  label=false in the containers.conf
       (/etc/containers/containers.conf or $HOME/.config/containers/containers.conf) file.

       • label=nested: Allows SELinux modifications within the  container.  Containers  are  allowed  to  modify
         SELinux  labels  on  files  and processes, as long as SELinux policy allows. Without nested, containers
         view SELinux as disabled, even when it is enabled on the host. Containers are  prevented  from  setting
         any labels.

       • mask=/path/1:/path/2:  The  paths to mask separated by a colon. A masked path cannot be accessed inside
         the container.

       • no-new-privileges: Disable container processes from gaining additional privileges through the execve(2)
         system call (e.g. via setuid or  setgid  bits,  or  via  file  capabilities).  Programs  that  rely  on
         setuid/setgid  bits  set on their executable to change user id or group id are no longer able to do so,
         and any file capabilities added to the executable (e.g. via setcap) are  not  added  to  the  permitted
         capability set. For more details, see: https://docs.kernel.org/userspace-api/no_new_privs.html.

       • seccomp=unconfined: Turn off seccomp confinement for the container.

       • seccomp=profile.json:    JSON    file   to   be   used   as   a   seccomp   filter.   Note   that   the
         io.podman.annotations.seccomp annotation is set with the specified value as shown in podman inspect.

       • proc-opts=OPTIONS : Comma-separated list of options to use for the /proc mount. More  details  for  the
         possible mount options are specified in the proc(5) man page.

       • unmask=ALL or /path/1:/path/2, or shell expanded paths (/proc/*): Paths to unmask separated by a colon.
         If  set  to  ALL,  it  unmasks all the paths that are masked or made read-only by default.  The default
         masked  paths  are  /proc/acpi,  /proc/kcore,   /proc/keys,   /proc/latency_stats,   /proc/sched_debug,
         /proc/scsi,     /proc/timer_list,     /proc/timer_stats,     /sys/firmware,     and    /sys/fs/selinux,
         /sys/devices/virtual/powercap.  The default paths  that  are  read-only  are  /proc/asound,  /proc/bus,
         /proc/fs, /proc/irq, /proc/sys, /proc/sysrq-trigger, /sys/fs/cgroup.

       Note: Labeling can be disabled for all containers by setting label=false in the containers.conf(5) file.

   --shm-size=number[unit]
       Size  of  /dev/shm. A unit can be b (bytes), k (kibibytes), m (mebibytes), or g (gibibytes).  If the unit
       is omitted, the system uses bytes. If the size is omitted, the default is 64m.  When size is 0, there  is
       no limit on the amount of memory used for IPC by the container.  This option conflicts with --ipc=host.

   --shm-size-systemd=number[unit]
       Size  of systemd-specific tmpfs mounts such as /run, /run/lock, /var/log/journal and /tmp.  A unit can be
       b (bytes), k (kibibytes), m (mebibytes), or g (gibibytes).  If the  unit  is  omitted,  the  system  uses
       bytes.  If  the  size is omitted, the default is 64m.  When size is 0, the usage is limited to 50% of the
       host's available memory.

   --sig-proxy
       Proxy received signals to the container process. SIGCHLD, SIGURG, SIGSTOP, and SIGKILL are not proxied.

       The default is true.

   --stop-signal=signal
       Signal to stop a container. Default is SIGTERM.

   --stop-timeout=seconds
       Timeout to stop a container. Default is 10.  Remote connections use local containers.conf for defaults.

   --subgidname=name
       Run the container in a new user namespace using the map with name in the /etc/subgid  file.   If  running
       rootless,  the  user needs to have the right to use the mapping. See subgid(5).  This flag conflicts with
       --userns and --gidmap.

   --subuidname=name
       Run the container in a new user namespace using the map with name in the /etc/subuid  file.   If  running
       rootless,  the  user needs to have the right to use the mapping. See subuid(5).  This flag conflicts with
       --userns and --uidmap.

   --sysctl=name=value
       Configure namespaced kernel parameters at runtime.

       For the IPC namespace, the following sysctls are allowed:

       • kernel.msgmax

       • kernel.msgmnb

       • kernel.msgmni

       • kernel.sem

       • kernel.shmall

       • kernel.shmmax

       • kernel.shmmni

       • kernel.shm_rmid_forced

       • Sysctls beginning with fs.mqueue.*

       Note: if using the --ipc=host option, the above sysctls are not allowed.

       For the network namespace, only sysctls beginning with net.* are allowed.

       Note: if using the --network=host option, the above sysctls are not allowed.

   --systemd=true | false | always
       Run container in systemd mode. The default is true.

       • true  enables  systemd  mode  only  when  the  command  executed  inside  the  container  is   systemd,
         /usr/sbin/init, /sbin/init or /usr/local/sbin/init.

       • false disables systemd mode.

       • always enforces the systemd mode to be enabled.

       Running the container in systemd mode causes the following changes:

       • Podman mounts tmpfs file systems on the following directories

         • /run/run/lock/tmp/sys/fs/cgroup/systemd (on a cgroup v1 system)

         • /var/lib/journal

       • Podman sets the default stop signal to SIGRTMIN+3.

       • Podman  sets  container_uuid  environment  variable  in the container to the first 32 characters of the
         container ID.

       • Podman does not mount virtual consoles (/dev/tty\d+) when running with --privileged.

       • On cgroup v2, /sys/fs/cgroup is mounted writable.

       This allows systemd to run in a confined container without any modifications.

       Note that on SELinux systems, systemd attempts to write to the cgroup file system. Containers writing  to
       the  cgroup  file  system are denied by default.  The container_manage_cgroup boolean must be enabled for
       this to be allowed on an SELinux separated system.

       setsebool -P container_manage_cgroup true

   --timeout=seconds
       Maximum time a container is allowed to run before conmon sends it the kill signal.  By default containers
       run until they exit or are stopped by podman stop.

   --tls-verify
       Require HTTPS and verify certificates when contacting registries (default: true).  If explicitly  set  to
       true,  TLS  verification  is used.  If set to false, TLS verification is not used.  If not specified, TLS
       verification is used unless the target  registry  is  listed  as  an  insecure  registry  in  containers-
       registries.conf(5)

   --tmpfs=fs
       Create a tmpfs mount.

       Mount a temporary filesystem (tmpfs) mount into a container, for example:

       $ podman run -d --tmpfs /tmp:rw,size=787448k,mode=1777 my_image

       This command mounts a tmpfs at /tmp within the container. The supported mount options are the same as the
       Linux  default  mount  flags.  If  no  options  are  specified,  the  system  uses the following options:
       rw,noexec,nosuid,nodev.

   --tty, -t
       Allocate a pseudo-TTY. The default is false.

       When set to true, Podman allocates a pseudo-tty and attach to the standard input of the  container.  This
       can be used, for example, to run a throwaway interactive shell.

       NOTE:  The  --tty  flag  prevents  redirection of standard output.  It combines STDOUT and STDERR, it can
       insert control characters, and it can hang pipes. This option is only used when run  interactively  in  a
       terminal. When feeding input to Podman, use -i only, not -it.

       echo "asdf" | podman run --rm -i someimage /bin/cat

   --tz=timezone
       Set  timezone  in container. This flag takes area-based timezones, GMT time, as well as local, which sets
       the timezone in the container to match the host machine. See /usr/share/zoneinfo/  for  valid  timezones.
       Remote connections use local containers.conf for defaults

   --uidmap=[flags]container_uid:from_uid[:amount]
       Run  the container in a new user namespace using the supplied UID mapping. This option conflicts with the
       --userns and --subuidname options. This option provides a way to map host UIDs to container UIDs. It  can
       be passed several times to map different ranges.

       The  possible  values of the optional flags are discussed further down on this page.  The amount value is
       optional and assumed to be 1 if not given.

       The from_uid value is based upon the user running the command, either rootful or rootless users.

       • rootful user:  [flags]container_uid:host_uid[:amount]

       • rootless user: [flags]container_uid:intermediate_uid[:amount]

       Rootful mappings

       When podman run is called by a privileged user, the option --uidmap works as  a  direct  mapping  between
       host UIDs and container UIDs.

       host UID -> container UID

       The  amount  specifies  the  number  of  consecutive UIDs that is mapped.  If for example amount is 4 the
       mapping looks like:

       ┌──────────────┬───────────────────┐
       │ host UIDcontainer UID     │
       ├──────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │ from_uidcontainer_uid     │
       ├──────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │ from_uid + 1 │ container_uid + 1 │
       ├──────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │ from_uid + 2 │ container_uid + 2 │
       ├──────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │ from_uid + 3 │ container_uid + 3 │
       └──────────────┴───────────────────┘

       Rootless mappings

       When podman run is called by an  unprivileged  user  (i.e.  running  rootless),  the  value  from_uid  is
       interpreted  as  an  "intermediate  UID".  In  the  rootless  case,  host UIDs are not mapped directly to
       container UIDs. Instead the mapping happens over two mapping steps:

       host UID -> intermediate UID -> container UID

       The --uidmap option only influences the second mapping step.

       The first mapping step is derived by Podman from the contents of the file /etc/subuid and the UID of  the
       user calling Podman.

       First mapping step:

       ┌─────────────────────┬──────────────────┐
       │ host UIDintermediate UID │
       ├─────────────────────┼──────────────────┤
       │ UID for Podman user │ 0                │
       ├─────────────────────┼──────────────────┤
       │ 1st subordinate UID │ 1                │
       ├─────────────────────┼──────────────────┤
       │ 2nd subordinate UID │ 2                │
       ├─────────────────────┼──────────────────┤
       │ 3rd subordinate UID │ 3                │
       ├─────────────────────┼──────────────────┤
       │ nth subordinate UID │ n                │
       └─────────────────────┴──────────────────┘

       To be able to use intermediate UIDs greater than zero, the user needs to have subordinate UIDs configured
       in /etc/subuid. See subuid(5).

       The second mapping step is configured with --uidmap.

       If for example amount is 5 the second mapping step looks like:

       ┌──────────────────┬───────────────────┐
       │ intermediate UIDcontainer UID     │
       ├──────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │ from_uidcontainer_uid     │
       ├──────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │ from_uid + 1     │ container_uid + 1 │
       ├──────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │ from_uid + 2     │ container_uid + 2 │
       ├──────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │ from_uid + 3     │ container_uid + 3 │
       ├──────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │ from_uid + 4     │ container_uid + 4 │
       └──────────────────┴───────────────────┘

       When running as rootless, Podman uses all the ranges configured in the /etc/subuid file.

       The  current  user ID is mapped to UID=0 in the rootless user namespace.  Every additional range is added
       sequentially afterward:

       ┌───────────────────────┬─────────────────────────┬──────────────────────┐
       │ hostrootless user namespacelength               │
       ├───────────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
       │ $UID                  │ 0                       │ 1                    │
       ├───────────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
       │ 1                     │ $FIRST_RANGE_ID         │ $FIRST_RANGE_LENGTH  │
       ├───────────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
       │ 1+$FIRST_RANGE_LENGTH │ $SECOND_RANGE_ID        │ $SECOND_RANGE_LENGTH │
       └───────────────────────┴─────────────────────────┴──────────────────────┘

       Referencing a host ID from the parent namespace

       As a rootless user, the given host ID in --uidmap or --gidmap is mapped from the  intermediate  namespace
       generated by Podman. Sometimes it is desirable to refer directly at the host namespace. It is possible to
       manually  do  so,  by  running  podman unshare cat /proc/self/gid_map, finding the desired host id at the
       second column of the output, and getting the corresponding intermediate id from the first column.

       Podman can perform all that by preceding the host id in the mapping with the @ symbol. For  instance,  by
       specifying --gidmap 100000:@2000:1, podman will look up the intermediate id corresponding to host id 2000
       and  it  will  map the found intermediate id to the container id 100000. The given host id must have been
       subordinated (otherwise it would not be mapped into the intermediate space in the first place).

       If the length is greater than one, for instance with --gidmap 100000:@2000:2, Podman will  map  host  ids
       2000 and 2001 to 100000 and 100001, respectively, regardless of how the intermediate mapping is defined.

       Extending previous mappings

       Some  mapping  modifications  may  be  cumbersome.  For  instance,  a  user starts with a mapping such as
       --gidmap="0:0:65000", that needs to be changed such as the parent id 1 is mapped to container  id  100000
       instead,  leaving  container  id  1  unassigned.  The  corresponding  --gidmap  becomes  --gidmap="0:0:1"
       --gidmap="2:2:65534" --gidmap="100000:1:1".

       This notation can be simplified using the + flag, that takes care of breaking previous mappings  removing
       any  conflicting assignment with the given mapping. The flag is given before the container id as follows:
       --gidmap="0:0:65000" --gidmap="+100000:1:1"

       ┌──────┬─────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │ FlagExampleDescription                 │
       ├──────┼─────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │ ++100000:1:1 │ Extend the previous mapping │
       └──────┴─────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

       This notation leads to gaps in the assignment, so it may be convenient to  fill  those  gaps  afterwards:
       --gidmap="0:0:65000" --gidmap="+100000:1:1" --gidmap="1:65001:1"

       One  specific  use  case  for  this flag is in the context of rootless users. A rootless user may specify
       mappings with the + flag as in --gidmap="+100000:1:1". Podman will then "fill  the  gaps"  starting  from
       zero  with  all  the  remaining  intermediate ids. This is convenient when a user wants to map a specific
       intermediate id to a container id, leaving the rest of subordinate ids to be mapped by Podman at will.

       Passing only one of --uidmap or --gidmap

       Usually, subordinated user and group ids are assigned simultaneously, and for any user  the  subordinated
       user  ids  match  the  subordinated  group  ids.  For convenience, if only one of --uidmap or --gidmap is
       given, podman assumes the mapping refers to both UIDs and GIDs and applies the given mapping to both.  If
       only  one  value  of  the  two  needs  to be changed, the mappings should include the u or the g flags to
       specify that they only apply to UIDs or GIDs and should not be copied over.

       ┌──────┬───────────────┬──────────────────────────────┐
       │ flagExampleDescription                  │
       ├──────┼───────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
       │ uu20000:2000:1 │ The mapping only applies  to │
       │      │               │ UIDs                         │
       ├──────┼───────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
       │ gg10000:1000:1 │ The  mapping only applies to │
       │      │               │ GIDs                         │
       └──────┴───────────────┴──────────────────────────────┘

       For instance given the command

       podman run --gidmap "0:0:1000" --gidmap "g2000:2000:1"

       Since no --uidmap is given, the --gidmap is copied to --uidmap, giving a command equivalent to

       podman run --gidmap "0:0:1000" --gidmap "2000:2000:1" --uidmap "0:0:1000"

       The --gidmap "g2000:2000:1" used the g flag and therefore it was not copied to --uidmap.

       Rootless mapping of additional host GIDs

       A rootless user may desire to map a specific  host  group  that  has  already  been  subordinated  within
       /etc/subgid without specifying the rest of the mapping.

       This can be done with --gidmap "+gcontainer_gid:@host_gid"

       Where:

       • The host GID is given through the @ symbol

       • The mapping of this GID is not copied over to --usermap thanks to the g flag.

       • The  rest of the container IDs will be mapped starting from 0 to n, with all the remaining subordinated
         GIDs, thanks to the + flag.

       For instance, if a user belongs to the group 2000 and that group  is  subordinated  to  that  user  (with
       usermod   --add-subgids  2000-2000  $USER),  the  user  can  map  the  group  into  the  container  with:
       --gidmap=+g100000:@2000.

       If this mapping is combined with the option, --group-add=keep-groups, the process in the  container  will
       belong to group 100000, and files belonging to group 2000 in the host will appear as being owned by group
       100000 inside the container.

       podman run --group-add=keep-groups --gidmap="+g100000:@2000" ...

       No subordinate UIDs

       Even if a user does not have any subordinate UIDs in  /etc/subuid, --uidmap can be used to map the normal
       UID  of  the  user  to  a  container  UID  by  running  podman  run  --uidmap  $container_uid:0:1  --user
       $container_uid ....

       Pods

       The --uidmap option cannot be called in conjunction with the --pod option as a uidmap cannot  be  set  on
       the container level when in a pod.

   --ulimit=option
       Ulimit options. Sets the ulimits values inside of the container.

       --ulimit with a soft and hard limit in the format =[:]. For example:

       $ podman run --ulimit nofile=1024:1024 --rm ubi9 ulimit -n 1024

       Set  -1  for  the  soft  or  hard  limit to set the limit to the maximum limit of the current process. In
       rootful mode this is often unlimited.

       If nofile and nproc  are  unset,  a  default  value  of  1048576  will  be  used,  unless  overridden  in
       containers.conf(5).   However, if the default value exceeds the hard limit for the current rootless user,
       the current hard limit will be applied instead.

       Use host to copy the current configuration from the host.

       Don't use nproc with the ulimit flag as Linux uses nproc to set the maximum number of processes available
       to a user, not to a container.

       Use the --pids-limit option to modify the cgroup control to  limit  the  number  of  processes  within  a
       container.

   --umask=umask
       Set  the  umask inside the container. Defaults to 0022.  Remote connections use the local containers.conf
       for defaults.

   --unsetenv=env
       Unset default environment variables for the container. Default environment  variables  include  variables
       provided  natively  by  Podman,  environment variables configured by the image, and environment variables
       from containers.conf.

   --unsetenv-all
       Unset all default  environment  variables  for  the  container.  Default  environment  variables  include
       variables  provided  natively  by  Podman, environment variables configured by the image, and environment
       variables from containers.conf.

   --user, -u=user[:group]
       Sets the username or UID used and, optionally, the groupname or GID for the specified command. Both  user
       and group may be symbolic or numeric.

       Without  this  argument, the command runs as the user specified in the container image. Unless overridden
       by a USER command in the Containerfile or by a value passed to this option, this user generally  defaults
       to root.

       When  a  user  namespace  is not in use, the UID and GID used within the container and on the host match.
       When user namespaces are in use, however, the UID and GID in the container may correspond to another  UID
       and  GID  on  the host. In rootless containers, for example, a user namespace is always used, and root in
       the container by default corresponds to the UID and GID of the user invoking Podman.

   --userns=mode
       Set the user namespace mode for the container.

       If --userns is not set, the default value is determined as follows.  -  If  --pod  is  set,  --userns  is
       ignored  and  the  user namespace of the pod is used.  - If the environment variable PODMAN_USERNS is set
       its value is used.  - If userns is specified  in  containers.conf  this  value  is  used.   -  Otherwise,
       --userns=host is assumed.

       --userns="" (i.e., an empty string) is an alias for --userns=host.

       This option is incompatible with --gidmap, --uidmap, --subuidname and --subgidname.

       Rootless user --userns=Key mappings:

       ┌─────────────────────────┬───────────┬──────────────────────────────┐
       │ KeyHost UserContainer User               │
       ├─────────────────────────┼───────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
       │ auto                    │ $UID      │ nil  (Host  User  UID is not │
       │                         │           │ mapped into container.)      │
       ├─────────────────────────┼───────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
       │ host                    │ $UID      │ 0  (Default   User   account │
       │                         │           │ mapped   to   root  user  in │
       │                         │           │ container.)                  │
       ├─────────────────────────┼───────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
       │ keep-id                 │ $UID      │ $UID (Map  user  account  to │
       │                         │           │ same UID within container.)  │
       ├─────────────────────────┼───────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
       │ keep-id:uid=200,gid=210 │ $UID      │ 200:210 (Map user account to │
       │                         │           │ specified   UID,  GID  value │
       │                         │           │ within container.)           │
       ├─────────────────────────┼───────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
       │ nomap                   │ $UID      │ nil (Host User  UID  is  not │
       │                         │           │ mapped into container.)      │
       └─────────────────────────┴───────────┴──────────────────────────────┘

       Valid mode values are:

       auto[:OPTIONS,...]: automatically create a unique user namespace.

       • rootful  mode:  The  --userns=auto  flag  requires  that  the  user name containers be specified in the
         /etc/subuid and /etc/subgid files, with an unused range of subordinate user IDs that Podman  containers
         are allowed to allocate.  Example: containers:2147483647:2147483648.

       • rootless  mode: The users range from the /etc/subuid and /etc/subgid files will be used. Note running a
         single container without using --userns=auto will use the entire range of UIDs and  not  allow  further
         subdividing. See subuid(5).

       Podman allocates unique ranges of UIDs and GIDs from the containers subordinate user IDs. The size of the
       ranges  is  based  on  the  number  of  UIDs  required  in  the image. The number of UIDs and GIDs can be
       overridden with the size option.

       The option --userns=keep-id uses all the subuids and subgids of the user.  The option --userns=nomap uses
       all the subuids and subgids of the user except the user's own ID.  Using --userns=auto when starting  new
       containers  does  not  work  as  long  as  any  containers exist that were started with --userns=nomap or
       --userns=keep-id without limiting the user namespace size.

       Valid auto options:

       • gidmapping=CONTAINER_GID:HOST_GID:SIZE: to force a GID mapping to be present in the user namespace.

       • size=SIZE: to specify an explicit size for the automatic user namespace. e.g.  --userns=auto:size=8192.
         If size is not specified, auto estimates a size for the user namespace.

       • uidmapping=CONTAINER_UID:HOST_UID:SIZE: to force a UID mapping to be present in the user namespace.

       The  host UID and GID in gidmapping and uidmapping can optionally be prefixed with the @ symbol.  In this
       case, podman will look up the intermediate ID corresponding  to  host  ID  and  it  will  map  the  found
       intermediate ID to the container id.  For details see --uidmap.

       container:id: join the user namespace of the specified container.

       host  or  ""  (empty  string):  run  in  the  user  namespace of the caller. The processes running in the
       container have the same privileges on the host as any other process launched by the calling user.

       keep-id: creates a user namespace where the current user's UID:GID are mapped to the same values  in  the
       container. For containers created by root, the current mapping is created into a new user namespace.

       In  addition,  the init process within the container will run under the current user's UID. This behavior
       overrides the image's USER instruction unless you explicitly set --user.

       Valid keep-id options:

       • uid=UID: override the UID inside the container that is used to map the current user to.

       • gid=GID: override the GID inside the container that is used to map the current user to.

       • size=SIZE: override the size of the configured user namespace.  It is useful to not  saturate  all  the
         available IDs.  Not supported when running as root.

       nomap:  creates  a  user  namespace  where  the  current  rootless user's UID:GID are not mapped into the
       container. This option is not allowed for containers created by the root user.

       ns:namespace: run the container in the given existing user namespace.

   --uts=mode
       Set the UTS namespace mode for the container. The following values are supported:

       • host: use the host's UTS namespace inside the container.

       • private: create a new namespace for the container (default).

       • ns:[path]: run the container in the given existing UTS namespace.

       • container:[container]: join the UTS namespace of the specified container.

   --variant=VARIANT
       Use VARIANT instead of the default architecture variant of the  container  image.  Some  images  can  use
       multiple variants of the arm architectures, such as arm/v5 and arm/v7.

   --volume, -v=[[SOURCE-VOLUME|HOST-DIR:]CONTAINER-DIR[:OPTIONS]]
       Create  a  bind mount. If -v /HOST-DIR:/CONTAINER-DIR is specified, Podman bind mounts /HOST-DIR from the
       host into /CONTAINER-DIR in the Podman container. Similarly, -v SOURCE-VOLUME:/CONTAINER-DIR  mounts  the
       named  volume from the host into the container. If no such named volume exists, Podman creates one. If no
       source is given, the volume is created as an anonymously named volume with a randomly generated name, and
       is removed when the container is removed via the --rm flag or the podman rm --volumes command.

       (Note when using the remote client, including Mac and Windows (excluding WSL2) machines, the volumes  are
       mounted from the remote server, not necessarily the client machine.)

       The OPTIONS is a comma-separated list and can be one or more of:

       • rw|roz|Z

       • [O]

       • [U]

       • [no]copy

       • [no]dev

       • [no]exec

       • [no]suid

       • [r]bind

       • [r]shared|[r]slave|[r]private[r]unbindable [1] ⟨#Footnote1⟩

       • idmap[=options]

       The CONTAINER-DIR must be an absolute path such as /src/docs. The volume is mounted into the container at
       this directory.

       If  a volume source is specified, it must be a path on the host or the name of a named volume. Host paths
       are allowed to be absolute or relative; relative paths are resolved relative to the directory  Podman  is
       run  in. If the source does not exist, Podman returns an error. Users must pre-create the source files or
       directories.

       Any source that does not begin with a . or / is treated as the name of a named volume. If a  volume  with
       that  name does not exist, it is created.  Volumes created with names are not anonymous, and they are not
       removed by the --rm option and the podman rm --volumes command.

       Specify multiple -v options to mount one or more volumes into a container.

       Write Protected Volume Mounts

       Add :ro or :rw option to mount a volume in read-only or read-write mode, respectively.  By  default,  the
       volumes are mounted read-write.  See examples.

       Chowning Volume Mounts

       When  a  named  volume is first mounted to a container, Podman automatically adjusts the ownership of the
       volume's mount point during container initialization. This chown operation  occurs  under  the  following
       conditions:

       • The volume was not used yet (has NeedsChown set to true)

       • The volume is empty or has not been copied up yet

       • The volume is not managed by an external volume driver

       • The volume driver is not "image"

       For  volumes  with  idmapped mounts (using the idmap option), the ownership change takes into account the
       container's user namespace mappings, but the idmapped volume retains proper UID/GID mapping. For  volumes
       without  idmapping, the mount point is chowned to match the container's process user and group, mapped to
       the host user namespace if user namespace remapping is enabled.

       If a container is created in a new user namespace, the UID and GID in the  container  may  correspond  to
       another UID and GID on the host.

       The  :U  suffix  tells  Podman  to  use  the correct host UID and GID based on the UID and GID within the
       container, to change recursively the owner and group of the source volume. Chowning walks the file system
       under the volume and changes the UID/GID on each file. If  the  volume  has  thousands  of  inodes,  this
       process takes a long time, delaying the start of the container.

       Warning use with caution since this modifies the host filesystem.

       Labeling Volume Mounts

       Labeling  systems  like  SELinux  require  that proper labels are placed on volume content mounted into a
       container. Without a label, the security system might prevent the processes running inside the  container
       from using the content. By default, Podman does not change the labels set by the OS.

       To  change  a  label  in  the container context, add either of two suffixes :z or :Z to the volume mount.
       These suffixes tell Podman to relabel file objects on the shared volumes. The z option tells Podman  that
       two  or  more  containers  share the volume content. As a result, Podman labels the content with a shared
       content label. Shared volume labels allow all containers to read/write content. The Z option tells Podman
       to label the content with a private unshared label. Only the current container can use a private volume.

       Note: all containers within a pod share the same SELinux label. This means all containers within said pod
       can read/write volumes shared into the container created with the  :Z  on  any  one  of  the  containers.
       Relabeling  walks  the file system under the volume and changes the label on each file; if the volume has
       thousands of inodes, this process takes a long time, delaying the start of the container. If  the  volume
       was  previously  relabeled  with the z option, Podman is optimized to not relabel a second time. If files
       are moved into the volume, then the labels can be manually changed with the  chcon  -Rt  container_file_t
       PATH command.

       Note:  Do  not relabel system files and directories. Relabeling system content might cause other confined
       services on the machine  to  fail.   For  these  types  of  containers  we  recommend  disabling  SELinux
       separation.   The option --security-opt label=disable disables SELinux separation for the container.  For
       example if a user wanted to volume mount their entire home directory  into  a  container,  they  need  to
       disable SELinux separation.

       $ podman run --security-opt label=disable -v $HOME:/home/user fedora touch /home/user/file

       Overlay Volume Mounts

       The  :O  flag  tells Podman to mount the directory from the host as a temporary storage using the overlay
       file system. The container processes can modify content within the mountpoint  which  is  stored  in  the
       container  storage  in a separate directory. In overlay terms, the source directory is the lower, and the
       container storage directory is the upper. Modifications  to  the  mount  point  are  destroyed  when  the
       container finishes executing, similar to a tmpfs mount point being unmounted.

       For  advanced  users,  the  overlay option also supports custom non-volatile upperdir and workdir for the
       overlay mount. Custom upperdir and workdir can be fully managed by the users themselves, and Podman  does
       not remove it on lifecycle completion.  Example :O,upperdir=/some/upper,workdir=/some/work

       Subsequent  executions  of  the  container  sees  the original source directory content, any changes from
       previous container executions no longer exist.

       One use case of the overlay mount is sharing the package cache from the host into the container to  allow
       speeding up builds.

       Note: The O flag conflicts with other options listed above.

       Content  mounted into the container is labeled with the private label.  On SELinux systems, labels in the
       source directory  must  be  readable  by  the   container  label.  Usually  containers  can  read/execute
       container_share_t and can read/write container_file_t. If unable to change the labels on a source volume,
       SELinux container separation must be disabled for the  container to work.

       Do  not  modify  the  source  directory  mounted  into  the container with an overlay mount, it can cause
       unexpected failures. Only modify the directory after the container finishes running.

       Mounts propagation

       By default, bind-mounted volumes are private. That means any mounts done inside  the  container  are  not
       visible  on  the  host  and  vice  versa.   One  can  change  this  behavior by specifying a volume mount
       propagation property.  When a volume is shared, mounts done under that volume inside  the  container  are
       visible  on  host  and  vice  versa.  Making  a  volume  slave[1] ⟨#Footnote1⟩ enables only one-way mount
       propagation: mounts done on the host under that volume are visible inside the container but not the other
       way around.

       To control mount propagation property of a volume one can use the [r]shared, [r]slave, [r]private or  the
       [r]unbindable  propagation flag.  Propagation property can be specified only for bind mounted volumes and
       not for internal volumes or named volumes. For mount propagation to work  the  source  mount  point  (the
       mount  point  where  source  dir  is mounted on) has to have the right propagation properties. For shared
       volumes, the source mount point has to be shared. And for slave volumes, the source mount point has to be
       either shared or slave.  [1] ⟨#Footnote1⟩

       To recursively mount a volume and all of its submounts into a container, use the rbind option. By default
       the bind option is used, and submounts of the source directory is not mounted into the container.

       Mounting the volume with a copy option tells podman to  copy  content  from  the  underlying  destination
       directory  onto  newly  created  internal  volumes.  The copy only happens on the initial creation of the
       volume. Content is not copied up when the volume is subsequently used on different containers.  The  copy
       option is ignored on bind mounts and has no effect.

       Mounting  volumes  with  the  nosuid options means that SUID executables on the volume can not be used by
       applications to change their privilege. By default volumes are mounted with nosuid.

       Mounting the volume with the noexec option means that no executables on the volume can be executed within
       the container.

       Mounting the volume with the nodev option means that no devices on the volume can be  used  by  processes
       within the container. By default volumes are mounted with nodev.

       If the HOST-DIR is a mount point, then dev, suid, and exec options are ignored by the kernel.

       Use  df  HOST-DIR to figure out the source mount, then use findmnt -o TARGET,PROPAGATION source-mount-dir
       to figure out propagation properties of source mount. If findmnt(1) utility is not  available,  then  one
       can  look  at  the  mount entry for the source mount point in /proc/self/mountinfo. Look at the "optional
       fields" and see if any propagation properties are specified.  In  there,  shared:N  means  the  mount  is
       shared, master:N means mount is slave, and if nothing is there, the mount is private. [1] ⟨#Footnote1⟩

       To  change  propagation  properties  of a mount point, use mount(8) command. For example, if one wants to
       bind mount source directory /foo, one can do mount --bind /foo  /foo  and  mount  --make-private  --make-
       shared  /foo.  This  converts  /foo  into  a  shared  mount point. Alternatively, one can directly change
       propagation properties of source mount. Say / is source mount for /foo, then use mount --make-shared / to
       convert / into a shared mount.

       Note: if the user only has access rights via a  group,  accessing  the  volume  from  inside  a  rootless
       container fails.

       Idmapped mount

       If  idmap is specified, create an idmapped mount to the target user namespace in the container. The idmap
       option supports a custom mapping that can be different than the user namespace used by the container. The
       mapping can be specified after the idmap option like: idmap=uids=0-1-10#10-11-10;gids=0-100-10.  For each
       triplet, the first value is the start of the backing file system IDs that are mapped to the second  value
       on the host.  The length of this mapping is given in the third value.  Multiple ranges are separated with
       #.

       Use the --group-add keep-groups option to pass the user's supplementary group access into the container.

   --volumes-from=CONTAINER[:OPTIONS]
       Mount volumes from the specified container(s). Used to share volumes between containers. The options is a
       comma-separated list with the following available elements:

       • rw|roz

       Mounts already mounted volumes from a source container onto another container. CONTAINER may be a name or
       ID.   To  share a volume, use the --volumes-from option when running the target container. Volumes can be
       shared even if the source container is not running.

       By default, Podman mounts the volumes in the same mode (read-write or read-only) as it is mounted in  the
       source container.  This can be changed by adding a ro or rw option.

       Labeling  systems  like  SELinux  require  that proper labels are placed on volume content mounted into a
       container. Without a label, the security system might prevent the processes running inside the  container
       from using the content. By default, Podman does not change the labels set by the OS.

       To  change  a  label  in  the  container context, add z to the volume mount.  This suffix tells Podman to
       relabel file objects on the shared volumes. The z option tells Podman that two entities share the  volume
       content.  As  a result, Podman labels the content with a shared content label. Shared volume labels allow
       all containers to read/write content.

       If the location of the volume from  the  source  container  overlaps  with  data  residing  on  a  target
       container, then the volume hides that data on the target.

   --workdir, -w=dir
       Working directory inside the container.

       The  default  working  directory  for running binaries within a container is the root directory (/).  The
       image developer can set a different default with the WORKDIR instruction. The operator can  override  the
       working directory by using the -w option.

Exit Status

       The  exit  code from podman run gives information about why the container failed to run or why it exited.
       When podman run exits with a non-zero code, the exit codes follow the chroot(1) standard, see below:

       125 The error is with Podman itself

       $ podman run --foo busybox; echo $?
       Error: unknown flag: --foo
       125

       126 The contained command cannot be invoked

       $ podman run busybox /etc; echo $?
       Error: container_linux.go:346: starting container process caused "exec: \"/etc\": permission denied": OCI runtime error
       126

       127 The contained command cannot be found

       $ podman run busybox foo; echo $?
       Error: container_linux.go:346: starting container process caused "exec: \"foo\": executable file not found in $PATH": OCI runtime error
       127

       Exit code contained command exit code

       $ podman run busybox /bin/sh -c 'exit 3'; echo $?
       3

EXAMPLES

   Running container in read-only mode
       During container image development, containers often need to  write  to  the  image  content.  Installing
       packages  into  /usr,  for  example.  In  production,  applications  seldom  need  to write to the image.
       Container applications write to volumes if they need to write to file systems at all. Applications can be
       made more secure by running them in read-only mode using  the  --read-only  switch.   This  protects  the
       container's  image from modification. By default read-only containers can write to temporary data. Podman
       mounts a tmpfs on /run and /tmp within the container.

       $ podman run --read-only -i -t fedora /bin/bash

       If the container does not write to any file system within the container,  including  tmpfs,  set  --read-
       only-tmpfs=false.

       $ podman run --read-only --read-only-tmpfs=false --tmpfs /run -i -t fedora /bin/bash

   Exposing shared libraries inside of container as read-only using a glob
       $ podman run --mount type=glob,src=/usr/lib64/libnvidia\*,ro=true -i -t fedora /bin/bash

   Exposing log messages from the container to the host's log
       Bind  mount  the  /dev/log  directory  to  have messages that are logged in the container  show up in the
       host's syslog/journal.

       $ podman run -v /dev/log:/dev/log -i -t fedora /bin/bash

       From inside the container test this by sending a message to the log.

       (bash)# logger "Hello from my container"

       Then exit and check the journal.

       (bash)# exit

       $ journalctl -b | grep Hello

       This lists the message sent to the logger.

   Attaching to one or more from STDIN, STDOUT, STDERR
       Without specifying the -a option, Podman attaches  everything  (stdin,  stdout,  stderr).   Override  the
       default by specifying -a (stdin, stdout, stderr), as in:

       $ podman run -a stdin -a stdout -i -t fedora /bin/bash

   Sharing IPC between containers
       Using shm_server.c available here: https://www.cs.cf.ac.uk/Dave/C/node27.html

       Testing --ipc=host mode:

       Host shows a shared memory segment with 7 pids attached, happens to be from httpd:

       $ sudo ipcs -m

       ------ Shared Memory Segments --------
       key        shmid      owner      perms      bytes      nattch     status
       0x01128e25 0          root       600        1000       7

       Now run a regular container, and it correctly does NOT see the shared memory segment from the host:

       $ podman run -it shm ipcs -m

       ------ Shared Memory Segments --------
       key        shmid      owner      perms      bytes      nattch     status

       Run  a  container with the new --ipc=host option, and it now sees the shared memory segment from the host
       httpd:

       $ podman run -it --ipc=host shm ipcs -m

       ------ Shared Memory Segments --------
       key        shmid      owner      perms      bytes      nattch     status
       0x01128e25 0          root       600        1000       7

       Testing --ipc=container:id mode:

       Start a container with a program to create a shared memory segment:

       $ podman run -it shm bash
       $ sudo shm/shm_server &
       $ sudo ipcs -m

       ------ Shared Memory Segments --------
       key        shmid      owner      perms      bytes      nattch     status
       0x0000162e 0          root       666        27         1

       Create a 2nd container correctly shows no shared memory segment from 1st container:

       $ podman run shm ipcs -m

       ------ Shared Memory Segments --------
       key        shmid      owner      perms      bytes      nattch     status

       Create a 3rd container using the --ipc=container:id option, now it shows the shared memory  segment  from
       the first:

       $ podman run -it --ipc=container:ed735b2264ac shm ipcs -m
       $ sudo ipcs -m

       ------ Shared Memory Segments --------
       key        shmid      owner      perms      bytes      nattch     status
       0x0000162e 0          root       666        27         1

   Mapping Ports for External Usage
       The  exposed port of an application can be mapped to a host port using the -p flag. For example, an httpd
       port 80 can be mapped to the host port 8080 using the following:

       $ podman run -p 8080:80 -d -i -t fedora/httpd

   Mounting External Volumes
       To mount a host directory as a container volume, specify the absolute  path  to  the  directory  and  the
       absolute  path  for  the  container  directory  separated  by  a  colon.  If the source is a named volume
       maintained by Podman, it is recommended to use its name rather than the path to the volume. Otherwise the
       volume is considered an orphan and wiped by the podman volume prune command:

       $ podman run -v /var/db:/data1 -i -t fedora bash

       $ podman run -v data:/data2 -i -t fedora bash

       $ podman run -v /var/cache/dnf:/var/cache/dnf:O -ti fedora dnf -y update

       If the container needs a writable mounted volume by a non root user  inside  the  container,  use  the  U
       option.  This option tells Podman to chown the source volume to match the default UID and GID used within
       the container.

       $ podman run -d -e MARIADB_ROOT_PASSWORD=root --user mysql --userns=keep-id -v ~/data:/var/lib/mysql:Z,U mariadb

       Alternatively if the container needs a writable volume by a non root user inside of  the  container,  the
       --userns=keep-id  option allows users to specify the UID and GID of the user executing Podman to specific
       UIDs and GIDs within the container. Since the processes running in the container run as the  user's  UID,
       they can read/write files owned by the user.

       $ podman run -d -e MARIADB_ROOT_PASSWORD=root --user mysql --userns=keep-id:uid=999,gid=999 -v ~/data:/var/lib/mysql:Z mariadb

       Using  --mount  flags  to  mount a host directory as a container folder, specify the absolute path to the
       directory or the volume name, and the absolute path within the container directory:

       $ podman run --mount type=bind,src=/var/db,target=/data1 busybox sh

       $ podman run --mount type=bind,src=volume-name,target=/data1 busybox sh

       When using SELinux, be aware that the host has no knowledge of container SELinux  policy.  Therefore,  in
       the above example, if SELinux policy is enforced, the /var/db directory is not writable to the container.
       A "Permission Denied" message occurs, and an avc: message is added to the host's syslog.

       To work around this, at time of writing this man page, the following command needs to be run in order for
       the proper SELinux policy type label to be attached to the host directory:

       $ chcon -Rt svirt_sandbox_file_t /var/db

       Now,  writing  to the /data1 volume in the container is allowed and the changes are reflected on the host
       in /var/db.

   Using alternative security labeling
       Override the default labeling scheme for each  container  by  specifying  the  --security-opt  flag.  For
       example,  specify the MCS/MLS level, a requirement for MLS systems. Specifying the level in the following
       command allows the same content to be shared between containers.

       podman run --security-opt label=level:s0:c100,c200 -i -t fedora bash

       An MLS example might be:

       $ podman run --security-opt label=level:TopSecret -i -t rhel7 bash

       To disable the security labeling for this container versus running with the

   --permissive flag, use the following command:
       $ podman run --security-opt label=disable -i -t fedora bash

       Tighten the security policy on the processes within a container by specifying an alternate type  for  the
       container.  For  example, run a container that is only allowed to listen on Apache ports by executing the
       following command:

       $ podman run --security-opt label=type:svirt_apache_t -i -t centos bash

       Note that an SELinux policy defining a svirt_apache_t type must be written.

       To mask additional specific paths in the container, specify the paths separated by a colon using the mask
       option with the --security-opt flag.

       $ podman run --security-opt mask=/foo/bar:/second/path fedora bash

       To unmask all the paths that are masked by default, set the unmask option  to  ALL.  Or  to  only  unmask
       specific paths, specify the paths as shown above with the mask option.

       $ podman run --security-opt unmask=ALL fedora bash

       To unmask all the paths that start with /proc, set the unmask option to /proc/*.

       $ podman run --security-opt unmask=/proc/* fedora bash

       $ podman run --security-opt unmask=/foo/bar:/sys/firmware fedora bash

   Setting device weight via --blkio-weight-device flag.
       $ podman run -it --blkio-weight-device "/dev/sda:200" ubuntu

   Using a podman container with input from a pipe
       $ echo "asdf" | podman run --rm -i --entrypoint /bin/cat someimage
       asdf

   Setting automatic user namespace separated containers
       # podman run --userns=auto:size=65536 ubi8-micro cat /proc/self/uid_map
       0 2147483647      65536
       # podman run --userns=auto:size=65536 ubi8-micro cat /proc/self/uid_map
       0 2147549183      65536

   Setting Namespaced Kernel Parameters (Sysctls)
       The  --sysctl  sets  namespaced  kernel parameters (sysctls) in the container. For example, to turn on IP
       forwarding in the containers network namespace, run this command:

       $ podman run --sysctl net.ipv4.ip_forward=1 someimage

       Note that not all sysctls are namespaced. Podman does not support changing sysctls inside of a  container
       that also modify the host system. As the kernel evolves we expect to see more sysctls become namespaced.

       See the definition of the --sysctl option above for the current list of supported sysctls.

   Set UID/GID mapping in a new user namespace
       Running a container in a new user namespace requires a mapping of the UIDs and GIDs from the host.

       $ podman run --uidmap 0:30000:7000 --gidmap 0:30000:7000 fedora echo hello

   Configuring Storage Options from the command line
       Podman  allows for the configuration of storage by changing the values in the /etc/container/storage.conf
       or by using global options. This shows how to use an additional image store for a one-time run of busybox
       using global options.

       podman --log-level=debug --storage-opt "additionalimagestore=/tmp/readonly-images" run busybox /bin/sh

   Configure timezone in a container
       $ podman run --tz=local alpine date
       $ podman run --tz=Asia/Shanghai alpine date
       $ podman run --tz=US/Eastern alpine date

   Adding dependency containers
       The first container, container1, is not started initially, but must be running before container2  starts.
       The podman run command starts the container automatically before starting container2.

       $ podman create --name container1 -t -i fedora bash
       $ podman run --name container2 --requires container1 -t -i fedora bash

       Multiple containers can be required.

       $ podman create --name container1 -t -i fedora bash
       $ podman create --name container2 -t -i fedora bash
       $ podman run --name container3 --requires container1,container2 -t -i fedora bash

   Configure keep supplemental groups for access to volume
       $ podman run -v /var/lib/design:/var/lib/design --group-add keep-groups ubi8

   Configure execution domain for containers using personality flag
       $ podman run --name container1 --personality=LINUX32 fedora bash

   Run a container with external rootfs mounted as an overlay
       $ podman run --name container1 --rootfs /path/to/rootfs:O bash

   Handling Timezones in java applications in a container.
       In  order  to  use  a  timezone other than UTC when running a Java application within a container, the TZ
       environment variable must be set within the container. Java applications ignores the value set  with  the
       --tz option.

       # Example run
       podman run -ti --rm  -e TZ=EST mytzimage
       lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 29 Nov  3 08:51 /etc/localtime -> ../usr/share/zoneinfo/Etc/UTC
       Now with default timezone:
       Fri Nov 19 18:10:55 EST 2021
       Java default sees the following timezone:
       2021-11-19T18:10:55.651130-05:00
       Forcing UTC:
       Fri Nov 19 23:10:55 UTC 2021

   Run a container connected to two networks (called net1 and net2) with a static ip
       $ podman run --network net1:ip=10.89.1.5 --network net2:ip=10.89.10.10 alpine ip addr

   Rootless Containers
       Podman  runs  as  a  non-root  user  on  most systems. This feature requires that a new enough version of
       shadow-utils be installed. The shadow-utils  package  must  include  the  newuidmap(1)  and  newgidmap(1)
       executables.

       In  order  for  users  to  run  rootless,  there  must  be an entry for their username in /etc/subuid and
       /etc/subgid which lists the UIDs for their user namespace.

       Rootless Podman works better if the fuse-overlayfs and slirp4netns packages  are  installed.   The  fuse-
       overlayfs  package  provides  a  userspace  overlay  storage  driver, otherwise users need to use the vfs
       storage driver, which can be disk space expensive and less performant than other drivers.

       To enable VPN on the container, slirp4netns or pasta needs to be specified;  without  either,  containers
       need to be run with the --network=host flag.

ENVIRONMENT

       Environment  variables  within  containers  can be set using multiple different options, in the following
       order of precedence (later entries override earlier entries):

       • Container image: Any environment variables specified in the container image.

       • --http-proxy: By default, several environment variables are passed in from the host, such as http_proxy
         and no_proxy. See --http-proxy for details.

       • --env-host: Host environment of the process executing Podman is added.

       • --env-file: Any environment variables specified via env-files. If multiple files  are  specified,  then
         they override each other in order of entry.

       • --env: Any environment variables specified overrides previous settings.

       Run containers and set the environment ending with a *.  The trailing * glob functionality is only active
       when no value is specified:

       $ export ENV1=a
       $ podman run --env 'ENV*' alpine env | grep ENV
       ENV1=a
       $ podman run --env 'ENV*=b' alpine env | grep ENV
       ENV*=b

CONMON

       When  Podman  starts  a  container  it  actually executes the conmon program, which then executes the OCI
       Runtime.  Conmon is the container monitor.  It is a small program whose  job  is  to  watch  the  primary
       process  of  the container, and if the container dies, save the exit code.  It also holds open the tty of
       the container, so that it can be attached to later. This is what allows Podman to run  in  detached  mode
       (backgrounded), so Podman can exit but conmon continues to run.  Each container has their own instance of
       conmon.  Conmon  waits  for  the  container to exit, gathers and saves the exit code, and then launches a
       Podman process to complete the container cleanup, by shutting down the network and  storage.    For  more
       information about conmon, see the conmon(8) man page.

FILES

       /etc/subuid

       /etc/subgid

       NOTE:  Use  the  environment  variable  TMPDIR  to  change  the  temporary storage location of downloaded
       container images. Podman defaults to use /var/tmp.

SEE ALSO

       podman(1), podman-save(1), podman-ps(1), podman-attach(1), podman-pod-create(1), podman-port(1),  podman-
       start(1), podman-kill(1), podman-stop(1), podman-generate-systemd(1), podman-rm(1), subgid(5), subuid(5),
       containers.conf(5),  systemd.unit(5), setsebool(8), slirp4netns(1), pasta(1), fuse-overlayfs(1), proc(5),
       conmon(8), personality(2)

   Troubleshooting
       See podman-troubleshooting(7) for solutions to common issues.

       See podman-rootless(7) for rootless issues.

HISTORY

       September 2018, updated by Kunal Kushwaha <kushwaha_kunal_v7@lab.ntt.co.jp>

       October 2017, converted from Docker documentation to Podman by Dan Walsh for Podman <dwalsh@redhat.com>

       November 2015, updated by Sally O'Malley <somalley@redhat.com>

       June 2014, updated by Sven Dowideit <SvenDowideit@home.org.au>

       April 2014, Originally compiled by William Henry <whenry@redhat.com> based on docker.com source  material
       and internal work.

FOOTNOTES

       1:  The  Podman  project  is  committed to inclusivity, a core value of open source. The master and slave
       mount propagation terminology used here is problematic and divisive, and needs to  be  changed.  However,
       these  terms  are  currently  used  within the Linux kernel and must be used as-is at this time. When the
       kernel maintainers rectify this usage, Podman will follow suit immediately.

                                                                                                   podman-run(1)