I suppose I can do this but what version of EAP (and RHEL) does each tag
map to?

https://registry.access.redhat.com/v1/repositories/jboss-eap-6/eap64-openshift/tags

On 19 October 2016 at 14:19, Lionel Orellana <lione...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Also, how do I see what tags are available for those images in the redhat
> registry?
>
> On 19 October 2016 at 12:15, Lionel Orellana <lione...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Thanks Jonathan. Should have tried that.
>>
>> At the risk of asking another silly question, is there a way to easily
>> know what version of RHEL is an EAP image built on?
>> e.g. jboss-eap-6/eap64-openshift
>>
>> On 19 October 2016 at 12:03, Jonathan Yu <jaw...@redhat.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Lionel,
>>>
>>> On Tue, Oct 18, 2016 at 5:49 PM, Lionel Orellana <lione...@gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi
>>>>
>>>> Is there an officially supported image of RHEL? I see all the xPaaS
>>>> images in the customer portal but nothing about a plain RHEL image like
>>>> there is for Centos.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Yes, there is: https://access.redhat.com/sear
>>> ch/#/container-images?q=rhel&p=1&sort=relevant&rows=12&srch=
>>> any&documentKind=ImageRepository
>>>
>>> On a RHEL system you should be able to do: "docker pull rhel7"
>>>
>>> This is the image that other Red Hat-supported images are built on.
>>>
>>> For example:
>>>
>>> official s2i-nodejs-container
>>> <https://github.com/sclorg/s2i-nodejs-container/blob/master/4/Dockerfile.rhel7>
>>> is FROM rhscl/s2i-base-rhel7
>>> <https://github.com/sclorg/s2i-base-container/blob/master/Dockerfile.rhel7>
>>> which is FROM rhel7.2 (see the access.redhat.com search above)
>>>
>>
>>
>
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