yes of course. if kubernetes start the pods then it's not a question.
On 5/3/19 8:41 AM, Scott McCarty wrote: > I assume by "atomic host" you mean a standalone, non-clustered, aka > non-Kubernetes environment? > > On Thu, May 2, 2019, 4:12 PM Farkas Levente <lfar...@lfarkas.org > <mailto:lfar...@lfarkas.org>> wrote: > > Hi, > I'm just read the blog about healthchecks: > > > https://developers.redhat.com/blog/2019/04/18/monitoring-container-vitality-and-availability-with-podman/ > > What is the current recommended way of running a container on an atomic > host using podman? Assume I'd not like to use docker. > As I understand it now: > - Create a systemd service file on the host for the container, > - Create a systemd service file on the host for the healthcheck, > - Create a systemd timer file on the host for the healthcheck. > > Who should have to restart the container? ie. on the container's service > file what is the Restart line and the Type? > > Is there any recommended template for this? > > Yes I know there are several ways to do it in container systemd, on host > systemd manual healthcheck etc. But IMHO it'd be useful for everybody do > give a recommended way or template which is in your planed future way of > doing so. AFAIS (after read it) RHEL official container docs is a bit > outdated. > > Thanks in advance. > > -- > Levente "Si vis pacem para bellum!" > -- Levente "Si vis pacem para bellum!"