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Moby Project - a collaborative project for the container ecosystem to assemble container-based systems
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Ian Campbell a28d91349e Update to latest vndr c56e08229111
Changes are:

$ git log --no-merges --oneline 19220953c4a4..c56e08229111
4b76270 Keep "vendor.conf" for reference
ac8f766 travis: update to go 1.8.1
c196644 Better validation of duplicates
e684d5e check for unused packages at the end
3ed2513 detect default gopath($HOME/go)
c9052f3 fix backtick in readme
0e04f23 Missing installation section in README

Changes to moby are the inclusion of several upstream vendor.conf files and
switching to vendoring the toplevel golang.org/x/sync package rather than the
syncmap sub-package due to:

2017/05/02 11:21:06 WARNING: package golang.org/x/sync/syncmap is not root import, should be golang.org/x/sync

Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@docker.com>
2017-05-02 11:23:36 +01:00
.github
api Extract squash and tagging from the Dockerfile builder. 2017-05-01 12:07:32 -04:00
builder Extract squash and tagging from the Dockerfile builder. 2017-05-01 12:07:32 -04:00
cli Merge pull request #32828 from cyli/external-ca-cert 2017-04-28 10:30:57 -04:00
client Remove pkg/testutil/assert in favor of testify 2017-04-14 12:03:21 -07:00
cmd Extract squash and tagging from the Dockerfile builder. 2017-05-01 12:07:32 -04:00
container Switch to using opencontainers/selinux for selinux bindings 2017-04-24 21:29:47 +02:00
contrib Merge pull request #32882 from albers/completion-stack-ls--format 2017-04-27 15:13:05 -07:00
daemon Merge pull request #32687 from runcom/oci-selinux 2017-04-29 19:05:32 +02:00
distribution
dockerversion
docs Merge pull request #32908 from yuexiao-wang/fix-plugin-typos 2017-04-28 19:09:23 -07:00
experimental
hack Update to latest vndr c56e08229111 2017-05-02 11:23:36 +01:00
hooks
image image/spec: tags are 128 characters 2017-04-24 15:23:34 -07:00
integration-cli Fix cache miss when builtin build args are used. 2017-04-28 12:49:50 -04:00
keys
layer
libcontainerd
man Merge pull request #32470 from runcom/remove-init-client 2017-04-25 10:25:58 +02:00
migrate/v1
oci
opts Remove pkg/testutil/assert in favor of testify 2017-04-14 12:03:21 -07:00
pkg Merge pull request #31391 from cpuguy83/fix_volume_unmount_disconnected_fs 2017-04-27 16:22:58 -04:00
plugin Remove unnecessary line 2017-04-26 01:20:10 -06:00
profiles
project Merge pull request #31461 from jpetazzo/announce-all-the-rcs 2017-04-13 10:11:57 -07:00
reference
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restartmanager
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vendor Update to latest vndr c56e08229111 2017-05-02 11:23:36 +01:00
volume Merge pull request #32687 from runcom/oci-selinux 2017-04-29 19:05:32 +02:00
.dockerignore
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.mailmap
AUTHORS
CHANGELOG.md
CONTRIBUTING.md
Dockerfile
Dockerfile.aarch64
Dockerfile.armhf
Dockerfile.ppc64le
Dockerfile.s390x
Dockerfile.simple
Dockerfile.solaris
Dockerfile.windows
LICENSE
MAINTAINERS Use personal email address 2017-04-26 11:59:51 -07:00
Makefile
NOTICE
poule.yml Disable auto-assign for Anusha 2017-04-26 17:18:06 -07:00
README.md Clarify relationship between Moby and Docker. 2017-04-21 06:20:46 -05:00
ROADMAP.md
vendor.conf Update to latest vndr c56e08229111 2017-05-02 11:23:36 +01:00
VENDORING.md
VERSION bump API and version 2017-04-11 11:21:55 -07:00

Docker users, see Moby and Docker to clarify the relationship between the projects

Docker maintainers and contributors, see Transitioning to Moby for more details

The Moby Project

Moby Project logo

Moby is an open-source project created by Docker to advance the software containerization movement. It provides a “Lego set” of dozens of components, the framework for assembling them into custom container-based systems, and a place for all container enthusiasts to experiment and exchange ideas.

Moby

Overview

At the core of Moby is a framework to assemble specialized container systems. It provides:

  • A library of containerized components for all vital aspects of a container system: OS, container runtime, orchestration, infrastructure management, networking, storage, security, build, image distribution, etc.
  • Tools to assemble the components into runnable artifacts for a variety of platforms and architectures: bare metal (both x86 and Arm); executables for Linux, Mac and Windows; VM images for popular cloud and virtualization providers.
  • A set of reference assemblies which can be used as-is, modified, or used as inspiration to create your own.

All Moby components are containers, so creating new components is as easy as building a new OCI-compatible container.

Principles

Moby is an open project guided by strong principles, but modular, flexible and without too strong an opinion on user experience, so it is open to the community to help set its direction. The guiding principles are:

  • Batteries included but swappable: Moby includes enough components to build fully featured container system, but its modular architecture ensures that most of the components can be swapped by different implementations.
  • Usable security: Moby will provide secure defaults without compromising usability.
  • Container centric: Moby is built with containers, for running containers.

With Moby, you should be able to describe all the components of your distributed application, from the high-level configuration files down to the kernel you would like to use and build and deploy it easily.

Moby uses containerd as the default container runtime.

Audience

Moby is recommended for anyone who wants to assemble a container-based system. This includes:

  • Hackers who want to customize or patch their Docker build
  • System engineers or integrators building a container system
  • Infrastructure providers looking to adapt existing container systems to their environment
  • Container enthusiasts who want to experiment with the latest container tech
  • Open-source developers looking to test their project in a variety of different systems
  • Anyone curious about Docker internals and how its built

Moby is NOT recommended for:

  • Application developers looking for an easy way to run their applications in containers. We recommend Docker CE instead.
  • Enterprise IT and development teams looking for a ready-to-use, commercially supported container platform. We recommend Docker EE instead.
  • Anyone curious about containers and looking for an easy way to learn. We recommend the docker.com website instead.

Transitioning to Moby

Docker is transitioning all of its open source collaborations to the Moby project going forward. During the transition, all open source activity should continue as usual.

We are proposing the following list of changes:

  • splitting up the engine into more open components
  • removing the docker UI, SDK etc to keep them in the Docker org
  • clarifying that the project is not limited to the engine, but to the assembly of all the individual components of the Docker platform
  • open-source new tools & components which we currently use to assemble the Docker product, but could benefit the community
  • defining an open, community-centric governance inspired by the Fedora project (a very successful example of balancing the needs of the community with the constraints of the primary corporate sponsor)

Legal

Brought to you courtesy of our legal counsel. For more context, please see the NOTICE document in this repo.

Use and transfer of Moby may be subject to certain restrictions by the United States and other governments.

It is your responsibility to ensure that your use and/or transfer does not violate applicable laws.

For more information, please see https://www.bis.doc.gov

Licensing

Moby is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE for the full license text.