(image-servers)= # Default image server The [`incus`](incus.md) CLI command comes pre-configured with the following default remote image server: `images:` : This server provides unofficial images for a variety of Linux distributions. The images are maintained by the [Linux Containers](https://linuxcontainers.org/) team and are built to be compact and minimal. See [`images.linuxcontainers.org`](https://images.linuxcontainers.org) for an overview of available images. Additional image servers can be added through `incus remote add`. (image-server-types)= ## Image server types Incus supports the following types of remote image servers: Simple streams servers : Pure image servers that use the [simple streams format](https://git.launchpad.net/simplestreams/tree/). No special software is required to run such a server as it's only made of static files. The default `images:` server uses simplestreams. Public Incus servers : Incus servers that are used solely to serve images and do not run instances themselves. To make an Incus server publicly available over the network on port 8443, set the {config:option}`server-core:core.https_address` configuration option to `:8443` and do not configure any authentication methods (see {ref}`server-expose` for more information). Then set the images that you want to share to `public`. Incus servers : Regular Incus servers that you can manage over a network, and that can also be used as image servers. For security reasons, you should restrict the access to the remote API and configure an authentication method to control access. See {ref}`server-expose` and {ref}`authentication` for more information. (image-server-tooling)= ## Tooling to manage a simplestreams server Incus includes a tool called `incus-simplestreams` which can be used to manage a file system tree using the Simple streams format. It supports importing either a container (`squashfs`) or virtual-machine (`qcow2`) image with `incus-simplestreams add`, list all images available as well as their fingerprints with `incus-simplestreams list` and remove images from the server with `incus-simplestreams remove`. That file system tree must then be placed on a regular web server which supports HTTPS with a valid certificate. When importing an image that doesn't come with an Incus metadata tarball, the `incus-simplestreams generate-metadata` command can be used to generate a new basic metadata tarball from a few questions.