On 08/09/2015 11:17 AM, Robert P. J. Day wrote: > On Sun, 9 Aug 2015, Pete Travis wrote: > >> >> >> On Aug 9, 2015 2:55 AM, "Robert P. J. Day" <rpjday@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>> >>> hi, i'm currently writing a course on docker (specifically, docker >>> on fedora, FWIW), and i'm looking for the current state of docker >>> documentation on fedora, whatever that might be. >>> >>> a quick google for "fedora" and "docker" brings one here: >>> >>> https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Getting_started_with_docker >>> >>> but that wiki page is clearly out of date as it refers to the fedora >>> package "docker-io", which doesn't exist anymore in fedora 22. >>> >>> in addition, i'm interested in the docker roadmap for fedora, as i >>> know there's some current renaming of other docker-related packages, >>> so i'd like to know what to expect in the near future. >>> >>> any pointers to online fedora/docker stuff greatly appreciated. >>> >>> rday >>> >>> -- >>> >> >> There has been some discussion about adding Docker content to the >> official Fedora Docs lineup recently. The idea hasn't gotten a lot >> of traction yet because a) the upstream documentation is already >> quite comprehensive, and b) It doesn't fit well into any existing >> Guide. > > oh, the upstream docker docs are good, but, as i mentioned, i'm more > interested in, i guess, the fedora-specific technology packaging or > roadmap or whatever you want to call it. > >> Eventually I think we'll end up producing a lot of container-focused >> content; Docker, systemd-nspawn, management tools ie kubernetes, use >> cases, etc. I don't anticipate that happening before the F23 >> release given other responsibilities of the team, but I've been >> surprised before :) >> >> If you would like to help that effort, I welcome you to subscribe to >> the Docs list and continue the conversation there. Anything from >> polished articles to simple requests will add value. > > apart from the docs, is there something like a wiki page or > something for fedora-specific docker stuff? again, more a roadmap than > finished docs. > > rday > Well, I did some searching of the wiki, and found a couple intro tutorials, and some Change pages around Docker features. The Change pages may be the closest to a 'roadmap' you'll discover. Again, standard disclaimers apply here. Someone could be quietly be working on a five year plan for docker packaging and have a complete comprehensive guide to container management stashed on the wiki, and we haven't discovered it. That's why I encourage those who are interested to help draft the Release Notes, or we can find a guide to put it in, so the content is discoverable and the applicable release is known. While I can't show you a prepared and curated place to discover the information you're looking for, I *can* help with the tools, methods, and infrastructure needed for you to share the research you're already doing or the content you've already written for your course. In a community project, these things come about because someone has an interest, and they are generous with the product of that interest. -- -- Pete -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org