Remove atomic transport description.

Miloslav informs me that the docker transport talking to an OpenShift
registry will handle signatures properly, so no need for the atomic transport
any longer.  We want to stop documenting it.

Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Daniel J Walsh 2017-08-01 11:40:41 -04:00
parent d574177c2a
commit 910064bf74
2 changed files with 0 additions and 11 deletions

View file

@ -28,9 +28,6 @@ Image stored in local container/storage
Multiple transports are supported: Multiple transports are supported:
**atomic:**_hostname_**/**_namespace_**/**_stream_**:**_tag_
An image served by an OpenShift(Atomic) Registry server. The current OpenShift project and OpenShift Registry instance are by default read from `$HOME/.kube/config`, which is set e.g. using `(oc login)`.
**dir:**_path_ **dir:**_path_
An existing local directory _path_ storing the manifest, layer tarballs and signatures as individual files. This is a non-standardized format, primarily useful for debugging or noninvasive container inspection. An existing local directory _path_ storing the manifest, layer tarballs and signatures as individual files. This is a non-standardized format, primarily useful for debugging or noninvasive container inspection.

View file

@ -22,9 +22,6 @@ Image stored in local container/storage
Multiple transports are supported: Multiple transports are supported:
**atomic:**_hostname_**/**_namespace_**/**_stream_**:**_tag_
An image served by an OpenShift(Atomic) Registry server. The current OpenShift project and OpenShift Registry instance are by default read from `$HOME/.kube/config`, which is set e.g. using `(oc login)`.
**dir:**_path_ **dir:**_path_
An existing local directory _path_ storing the manifest, layer tarballs and signatures as individual files. This is a non-standardized format, primarily useful for debugging or noninvasive container inspection. An existing local directory _path_ storing the manifest, layer tarballs and signatures as individual files. This is a non-standardized format, primarily useful for debugging or noninvasive container inspection.
@ -97,10 +94,5 @@ This example extracts the imageID image and puts into the local docker container
`# kpod push imageID docker-daemon:image:tag` `# kpod push imageID docker-daemon:image:tag`
This example extracts the imageID image and pushes it to an OpenShift(Atomic) registry
`# kpod push imageID atomic:registry.example.com/company/image:tag`
## SEE ALSO ## SEE ALSO
kpod(1) kpod(1)