The availability domain to place the container instance.
The OCID of the compartment.
The number of containers on the container instance. Note: Numbers greater than Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER will result in rounding issues.
The container restart policy is applied for all containers in container instance.
The containers on the container instance.
Defined tags for this resource. Each key is predefined and scoped to a namespace. Example: {@code {"foo-namespace": {"bar-key": "value"}}}.
A user-friendly name. Does not have to be unique, and it's changeable. Avoid entering confidential information.
The fault domain to place the container instance.
Simple key-value pair that is applied without any predefined name, type or scope. Exists for cross-compatibility only. Example: {@code {"bar-key": "value"}}
The amount of time that processes in a container have to gracefully end when the container must be stopped. For example, when you delete a container instance. After the timeout is reached, the processes are sent a signal to be deleted. Note: Numbers greater than Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER will result in rounding issues.
An OCID that cannot be changed.
The image pulls secrets so you can access private registry to pull container images.
A message that describes the current state of the container in more detail. Can be used to provide actionable information.
The current state of the container instance.
The shape of the container instance. The shape determines the number of OCPUs, amount of memory, and other resources that are allocated to a container instance.
Usage of system tag keys. These predefined keys are scoped to namespaces. Example: {@code {"orcl-cloud": {"free-tier-retained": "true"}}}.
The time the container instance was created, in the format defined by RFC 3339.
The time the container instance was updated, in the format defined by RFC 3339.
The virtual networks available to the containers in the container instance.
The number of volumes that are attached to the container instance. Note: Numbers greater than Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER will result in rounding issues.
A volume is a directory with data that is accessible across multiple containers in a container instance.
A container instance to host containers.
If you delete a container instance, the record remains visible for a short period of time before being permanently removed.