docs: provide information to run Clair in README

The top level readme for Clair has no instructions on how-to run
Clair. Add a link pointing to the appropriate place.
This commit is contained in:
Abhilash Raj 2016-02-14 21:00:22 -08:00
parent 1866821a80
commit 9329172683

View File

@ -14,6 +14,10 @@ Clair is a single-binary server that exposes a JSON HTTP API. It does not requir
Whether you host a container registry, a continuous-integration system, or build anywhere from dozens to thousands of containers, you can benefit from Clair. More generally, if you consider that container security matters (and, honestly, you should), you should give it a try.
## How do I run Clair?
Refer to the documentation [here](docs/Run.md "How to run Clair") for a detailed overview of how to run Clair.
## How Clair Detects Vulnerabilities
Clair analyzes each container layer once, and does not execute the container to perform its examination. The scanning engine extracts all required data to detect known vulnerabilities, and caches layer data for examination against vulnerabilities discovered in the future.
@ -22,6 +26,7 @@ Detecting vulnerabilities can be achieved with several techniques. One option is
To detect vulnerabilities, Clair instead takes advantage of common package managers, which quickly and comprehensively provide lists of installed binary and source packages. Package lists are extracted for each layer that composes your container image: the difference between the layers package list and its parent one is stored. This method is efficient in its use of storage, and allows Clair to scan each layer only once, though that layer may be used in many container images. Coupled with vulnerability databases such as the Debians Security Bug Tracker, Clair is able to tell which vulnerabilities threaten a container, and which layer and package introduced them.
### Graph
Internally, Clair implements a [graph structure to store and query layer data](docs/Model.md). The non-exhaustive example graph below corresponds to the following `Dockerfile`.