![]() ![]() ![]() Or, more generally speaking, whenever we contact a container registry. The nf configuration is in play whenever we push or pull an image. I want to dedicate this blog post to the nf configuration file, explain its various options and knobs, and how we can use them in production. The image library also supports several configuration files where, without a doubt, the nf is the most important one for the vast majority of users. Dan Walsh wrote a great blog post on the various transports that I highly recommend reading. A transport can refer to a local container storage, a container registry, a tar archive, and much more. It allows us to pull and push images, manipulate images (e.g., change layer compression), inspect images along with their configuration and layers, and copy images between so-called image transports. As the name suggests, this library deals with container images and is incredibly powerful. Going one level higher, we find the containers/image library. The most basic building block for our container tools is the containers/storage library, which locally stores and manages containers and container images. Free course: Deploying containerized applications.
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