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I'll make it short.
Ubuntu and CoreOS have official images (tags ubuntu and coreos). Arch should have one too.
FROM arch:latest
FROM arch:20140801
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I'll make it short.
Ubuntu and CoreOS have official images (tags ubuntu and coreos). Arch should have one too.FROM arch:latest
FROM arch:20140801
I see this from the WIki if that's what you're talking about. I don't know if I would want to maintain it myself, but someone else might.
A latest image might be a bit fun tricky because of the rolling nature of Arch.
Last edited by clfarron4 (2014-09-01 12:01:51)
Claire is fine.
Problems? I have dysgraphia, so clear and concise please.
My public GPG key for package signing
My x86_64 package repository
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Hi Claire,
yes, that's the docker in question.
A docker image is essentially
cat archive.tgz | docker import - archlinux:latest
but also
docker import http://example.com/exampleimage.tgz
http://docs.docker.com/reference/comman … li/#import
I could imagine a weekly automated build
a weekly cronjob that runs a shell script (pacstrap with modifications, if any (init gpg for automated updates, exempt kernel from updates?), `tar czpf /path/to/public/latest.tgz ./`)
import image, push to docker repo.
perhaps also a archlinux:latest_minimal (or just minimal or latest) tag for a minimal image since you don't need the kernel for instance and other packages might also be left out since you don't need to boot, just an idea.
I don't know who to contact regarding being official an email or issue on github could solve that
I could do it myself but it wouldn't be official.
edit:
oh I see what you mean base/archlinux is there but it's not "official" and the build script is also there.
Last edited by dalu (2014-09-01 12:54:00)
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