Undocker -------- Converts a Docker image (a bunch of layers) to a flattened "rootfs" tarball. Why? ---- Docker images became a popular way to distribute applications with their dependencies. However, Docker itself is not the best runtime environment. At least not for everyone. Undocker bridges the gap between application images (in docker image format) and container runtimes: now you can run a Docker image with old-fashioned tools: lxc, systemd-nspawn or systemd itself. Usage -- extract docker image ----------------------------- Download `nginx` docker image from docker hub and convert it to a rootfs: ``` skopeo copy docker://docker.io/busybox:latest docker-archive:busybox.tar undocker rootfs busybox.tar - | tar -xv ``` Almost the same can be done with a combination of `docker pull` and `docker save`. Usage -- systemd-nspawn example ------------------------------- Start with systemd-nspawn: ``` systemd-nspawn -D $PWD busybox httpd -vfp 8080 ``` Usage -- plain old systemd -------------------------- ``` systemd-run \ --wait --pty --collect --service-type=exec \ -p PrivateUsers=true \ -p DynamicUser=yes \ -p ProtectProc=invisible \ -p RootDirectory=$PWD \ -- busybox httpd -vfp 8080 ``` Good things like `PrivateUsers`, `DynamicUser`, `ProtectProc` and other [systemd protections][1] are available, just like to any systemd unit. Notes & gotchas --------------- `unocker` does not magically enable you to run containers from the internet. In fact, many will need significant tuning or not work at all. Thus you will still need to understand what are you running. Contributions ------------- I will accept pull request for code (including tests) and documentation. I am unlikely to react to issue reports without a patch. [1]: https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.exec.html