For more information about this image and its history, please see the relevant manifest file (library/mageia
). This image is updated via pull requests to the docker-library/official-images
GitHub repo.
For detailed information about the virtual/transfer sizes and individual layers of each of the above supported tags, please see the mageia/tag-details.md
file in the docker-library/docs
GitHub repo.
Mageia is a GNU/Linux-based, Free Software operating system.It is a community project, supported by a nonprofit organisation of elected contributors.
Our mission: to build great tools for people.
Further than just delivering a secure, stable and sustainable operating system, the goal is to set up a stable and trustable governance to direct collaborative projects.
To date, Mageia:
- started in September 2010 as a fork of Mandriva Linux;
- gathered hundreds of careful individuals and several companies worldwide,who coproduce the infrastructure, the distribution itself, documentation, delivery and support, using Free Software tools;
- released four major stable releases in June 2011, in May 2012, in May 2013 and in February 2014.
FROM mageia:4
MAINTAINER "Foo Bar" <foo@bar.com>
CMD [ "bash" ]
All images install the following packages:
- basesystem-minimal
- urpmi
- locales
- locales-en
This image is officially supported on Docker version 1.9.0.
Support for older versions (down to 1.6) is provided on a best-effort basis.
Please see the Docker installation documentation for details on how to upgrade your Docker daemon.
Documentation for this image is stored in the mageia/
directory of the docker-library/docs
GitHub repo. Be sure to familiarize yourself with the repository's README.md
file before attempting a pull request.
If you have any problems with or questions about this image, please contact us through a GitHub issue.
You can also reach many of the official image maintainers via the #docker-library
IRC channel on Freenode.
You are invited to contribute new features, fixes, or updates, large or small; we are always thrilled to receive pull requests, and do our best to process them as fast as we can.
Before you start to code, we recommend discussing your plans through a GitHub issue, especially for more ambitious contributions. This gives other contributors a chance to point you in the right direction, give you feedback on your design, and help you find out if someone else is working on the same thing.