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containers/podman-desktop-extension-bootc

BootC (Bootable Container) Extension for Podman Desktop

Want to create a bootable operating system from a Containerfile? Download this extension!

Easily go from container to VM / ISO-on-a-USB / RAW image!

Topics

Technology

The Bootable Container (bootc) extension uses bootc-image-builder in order to build bootable container disk images.

Once a machine is created from the disk image, it can apply transactional updates "in place" from newly pushed container images (without creating a new disk image). For more information, see bootc.

Bootable Container Images

There are many projects at work at creating "bootc" images. Below is a non-exhaustive list of compatible images which are known to work with bootc-image-builder.

CentOS:

Fedora:

RHEL:

The images can then be added to your Containerfile:

FROM quay.io/centos-bootc/centos-bootc:stream9

Learning more

Read Before Using

Some concepts to grasp before using.

Think of it as an OS provisioning tool!

You are "creating" an OS straight from a Containerfile, isn't that awesome?

FIRST realize that you are creating an OS with all your applications, developer tools, even games that you want.

SECONDLY ask yourself what applications you want to have running (perhaps on boot too!).

Creating your first bootable OS Containerfile

Want a quick straight-to-the-point Hello World Containerfile?

FROM quay.io/centos-bootc/centos-bootc:stream9
# Change your root password for a "test login" that
# allows to log in on a virtual/physical console
# NOTE: While some base images may set `PermitRootLogin prohibit-password`
# for OpenSSH, not all will.
# This is VERY dangerous and only meant for Hello World purposes.
RUN echo "root:root" | chpasswd

After creating your image you can now login and explore your bootable OS.

Example images

Want to view more example images Such as httpd and nvidia?

All of our maintained example images are on the gitlab.com/fedora/bootc/examples repo.

You can also pull our example image based on the httpd example:

After building, read our Virtual Machine Guide on how to launch your image and access your HTTP server.

Use Case

Go from a bootc compatible derived container build to a disk image format:

  • qcow2: QEMU Disk Images
  • ami: Amazon Machine Images
  • raw: RAW disk image an MBR or GPT partition table
  • iso: Unattended installation method (USB sticks / install-on-boot)
  • vmdk: Usable in vSphere

The list above is what is supported by the underlying bootc-image-builder technology. The list can be found here.

Requirements

Requirement 1. Software and hardware requirements

OS:

Compatible on Windows, macOS & Linux

Software:

Requirement 2. Rootful mode on Podman Machine

Podman Machine requirements:

  • Rootful mode enabled
  • At least 6GB of RAM allocated in order to build the disk image

Rootful mode can be enabled through the CLI to an already deployed VM:

podman machine stop
podman machine set --rootful
podman machine start

Or set when initially creating a Podman Machine via Podman Desktop:

rootful setup

Linux users:

On Linux, you are unable to create a Podman Machine through the GUI of Podman Desktop, to create a rootful Podman Machine you can run the following commands:

podman machine init --rootful
podman machine start

Installation

This extension can be installed through the Extensions section of Podman Desktop within the Catalog tab:

  1. Go to Extensions in the navbar.
  2. Click on the Catalog tab.
  3. Install the extension.

Nightly version

A version of the extension using the latest commit changes can be installed via the Install custom... button with the following link:

ghcr.io/containers/podman-desktop-extension-bootc:nightly

Usage

  1. Build your bootc-enabled Containerfile:

In the example below, we are going to change the root password for testing purposes when accessing the OS.

FROM quay.io/centos-bootc/centos-bootc:stream9

# Change the root password
# CAUTION: This is NOT recommended and is used only for testing / hello world purposes
RUN echo "root:root" | chpasswd

  1. Build the disk image:

Build the disk image, this takes approximatley 2-5 minutes depending on the performance of your machine.

  1. Launching the VM:

See our Virtual Machine Guide on how to launch the image!

Preferences

Preferences such as the default bootc-builder-image as well as timeouts can be adjusted within the Preferences section of Podman Desktop.

Contributing

Want to help develop and contribute to the bootc extension? View our CONTRIBUTING document.