1.1 What are Containers
1.2 Running Applications on an Operating System
1.3 Running Applications as Containers
1.4 Containers versus Virtual Machines
1.5 Why Podman Beats Docker
1.6 Containers and the Linux Kernel
2.1 Registry Access
2.2 Running Containers
2.3 Rootless versus Root Containers
2.4 Managing Containers
2.5 Container Networking
2.6 Accessing Containers
2.7 Restricting Containers
3.1 Using Image Registries
3.2 Pulling Images
3.3 Managing Images
3.4 Creating Custom Images from Running Containers
3.5 Using Tags
4.1 Using Containerfile
4.2 Applying Best Practices to Create a Containerfile
4.3 Advanced Containerfile Options
4.4 Containerfile ARG and ENV
4.5 Managing Container User IDs
4.6 Hosting a Private Registry
5.1 Overlay Union Filesystems
5.2 Using Persistent Host Storage
5.3 Managing Permissions
5.4 Managing SELinux Settings
5.5 Configuring Storage for Stateful Applications
6.1 Container Logging
6.2 Connecting to Running Containers
6.3 Troubleshooting Network Issues
7.1 Systemd User Units
7.2 Generating Systemd User Units
7.3 Automatically Updating Systemd Managed Containers
8.1 Understanding Microservices
8.2 Using Compose to Run and Manage Microservices
9.1 Kubernetes and OpenShift
9.2 Taking an OpenShift Testdrive
10.1 Running a Container
10.2 Building a Custom Image
10.3 Running a Microservice
10.4 Analyzing Running Containers
10.5 Running a Local Registry
10.6 Creating a Custom Image from a Running Container
10.7 Managing Container Users and Permissions
Learning objectives
Learning objectives (1)
Learning objectives (2)
Learning objectives (3)
Learning objectives (4)
Learning objectives (5)
Learning objectives (6)
Learning objectives (7)
Learning objectives (8)
Learning objectives (9)
Lesson 2 Lab Managing Containers
Lesson 3 Lab Managing Images
Lesson 4 Lab Creating Custom Container Images
Lesson 5 Lab Configuring Container Storage
Lesson 6 Lab Troubleshooting Containers
Lesson 7 Lab Starting Containers with Systemd
Lesson 8 Lab Using Compose
Lesson 9 Lab Running Applications in OpenShift
Red Hat Certified Specialist in Containers (EX188) Introduction
Red Hat Certified Specialist in Containers (EX188) Introduction (1)
Red Hat Certified Specialist in Containers (EX188) Summary