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mirror of https://github.com/containers/bootc.git synced 2026-02-05 15:45:53 +01:00
Jonathan Lebon bcd318f8ae ostree-ext/store: don't include filtered files in metadata
Filtered files are only determined at the time we import a layer.
So if that layer is already imported, we won't have that information
available. That in turn means that the metadata is state-dependent,
which in turn means that the commit digest is not reproducible.

We still want to provide the filtered files warning though. Just make
this information part of the LayeredImageState object instead. The
obvious downside of that is that now we only get that warning the first
time the layer is imported and it's no longer part of the commit object
itself.

One way to make this more sticky is to attach it to the individual
layers' commits instead, and then the merge commit can coalesce them.

Related: https://github.com/bootc-dev/bootc/issues/1346
2025-07-17 10:42:10 -04:00
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2024-11-19 21:31:30 +00:00
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2024-05-17 14:35:13 +03:00

bootc logo

bootc

Transactional, in-place operating system updates using OCI/Docker container images.

Motivation

The original Docker container model of using "layers" to model applications has been extremely successful. This project aims to apply the same technique for bootable host systems - using standard OCI/Docker containers as a transport and delivery format for base operating system updates.

The container image includes a Linux kernel (in e.g. /usr/lib/modules), which is used to boot. At runtime on a target system, the base userspace is not itself running in a "container" by default. For example, assuming systemd is in use, systemd acts as pid1 as usual - there's no "outer" process. More about this in the docs; see below.

Status

The CLI and API are considered stable. We will ensure that every existing system can be upgraded in place seamlessly across any future changes.

Documentation

See the project documentation.

Versioning

Although bootc is not released to crates.io as a library, version numbers are expected to follow semantic versioning standards. This practice began with the release of version 1.2.0; versions prior may not adhere strictly to semver standards.

Adopters (base and end-user images)

The bootc CLI is just a client system; it is not tied to any particular operating system or Linux distribution. You very likely want to actually start by looking at ADOPTERS.md.

Community discussion

This project is also tightly related to the previously mentioned Fedora/CentOS bootc project, and many developers monitor the relevant discussion forums there. In particular there's a Matrix channel and a weekly video call meeting for example: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/bootc/community/.

Developing bootc

Are you interested in working on bootc? Great! See our CONTRIBUTING.md guide. There is also a list of MAINTAINERS.md.

Governance

See GOVERNANCE.md for project governance details.

Badges

OpenSSF Best Practices

Code of Conduct

The bootc project is a Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) Sandbox project and adheres to the CNCF Community Code of Conduct.


The Linux Foundation® (TLF) has registered trademarks and uses trademarks. For a list of TLF trademarks, see Trademark Usage.

Description
Boot and upgrade via container images
Readme 22 MiB
Languages
Rust 92.7%
Nushell 3%
Shell 2.2%
Just 0.6%
Dockerfile 0.5%
Other 1%