This plugin for Gradle adds the capability to build und publish Docker images from the build script.
See the change log for information about the latest changes.
The gradle-docker plugin adds a task distDocker
if the project already has the application plugin applied:
apply plugin: 'application'
apply plugin: 'docker'
Executing the distDocker
task builds a docker image containing all application files (libs, scripts, etc.) created by the distTar
task from the application plugin. If you already use the application plugin to package your project then the docker plugin will add simple docker image building to your project.
By default distDocker
uses a base image with a Java runtime according to the project's targetCompatibility
property. The docker image entry point is set to the start script created by the application plugin. Checkout the example project.
Note: The creation of the convention task distDocker
is currently only supported for JVM based application projects. If you are not using a JVM based application, use the task type Docker
directly to create a task to build Docker images of your application.
The docker plugin introduces the task type Docker
. A task of this type can be used to build and publish Docker images. See the Dockerfile documentation for information about how Docker images are built.
In the following example we build a Docker image in our Gradle build script for the popular reverse proxy nginx. The image will be tagged with the name foo/nginx
. The example is taken from the official Dockerfile examples:
apply plugin: 'docker'
buildscript {
repositories { jcenter() }
dependencies {
classpath 'se.transmode.gradle:gradle-docker:1.2'
}
}
group = "foo"
docker {
baseImage "ubuntu"
maintainer 'Guillaume J. Charmes "[email protected]"'
}
task nginxDocker(type: Docker) {
applicationName = "nginx"
runCommand 'echo "deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu precise main universe" > /etc/apt/sources.list'
runCommand "apt-get update"
runCommand "apt-get install -y inotify-tools nginx apache2 openssh-server"
}
In the example above the instructions on how to build the nginx Docker image are configured inline using methods of the Docker Gradle task. During task execution the plugin first creates a Dockerfile which it then passes to Docker to build the image.
However instead of defining the build instructions inline in the task it is possible to supply an external Dockerfile. If the task property dockerfile
is set to the path of an existing Dockerfile the plugin will this instead of build the image.
You can even combine these two methods: Supplying an external Dockerfile and extending it by defining instructions in the task. The build instructions from the external Dockerfile are read first and the instructions defined in the task appended. If an external Dockerfile is supplied, the baseImage
property is ignored.
The plugin exposes configuration options on 2 levels: globally through a plugin extension and on a per task basis. The plugin tries to always set sensible defaults for all properties.
Configuration properties in the plugin extension docker
are applied to all Docker tasks. Available properties are:
dockerBinary
- The path to the docker binary.baseImage
- The base docker image used when building images (i.e. the name afterFROM
in the Dockerfile).maintainer
- The name and email address of the image maintainer.registry
- The hostname and port of the Docker image registry unless the official Docker index is used.useApi
- Use the Docker Remote API instead of a locally installeddocker
binary. See below
Example to set the base docker image and maintainer name for all tasks:
docker {
maintainer = 'John Doe <[email protected]>'
baseImage = 'johndoe/nextgenjdk:9.0'
}
All properties that are exposed through the plugin extension can be overridden in each task. The image tag is constructed according to:
tag = "${project.group}/${applicationName}:${tagVersion}"
Where:
project.group
- This is a standard Gradle project property. If not defined, the{project.group}/
is omitted.applicationName
- The name of the application being "dockerized".tagVersion
- Optional version name added to the image tag name. Defaults toproject.version
or "latest" ifproject.version
is unspecified.
The following example task will tag the docker image as org.acme/bar:13.0
:
...
group = 'org.acme'
...
task fooDocker(type: Docker) {
applicationName = 'foobar'
tagVersion = '13.0'
}
If no base image is configured through the extension or task property a suitable image is chosen based on the project's targetCompatibility
. A project targeting Java 7 will for instance get a default base image with a Java 7 runtime.
By default the plug-in will use the docker
command line tool to execute any docker commands (such as build
and push
). However, it can be configured to use the Docker Remote API instead via the useApi
extension property:
docker {
useApi true
}
Use of the remote API requires that the Docker server be configured to listen over HTTP and that it have support for version 1.11 of the API (connecting over Unix Domain sockets is not supported yet). The following configuration options are available:
hostUrl
- set the URL used to contact the Docker server. Defaults tohttp://localhost:2375
apiUsername
- set the username used to authenticate the user with the Docker server. Defaults tonil
which means no authentication is performed.apiPassword
- set the password used to authenticate the user with the Docker server.apiEmail
- set the user's email used to authenticate the user with the Docker server.
For example:
docker {
useApi true
hostUrl 'http://myserver:4243`
apiUsername 'user'
apiPassword 'password'
apiEmail 'me@mycompany.com'
}
- Gradle 2.x
- Docker 0.11+
The plugin is built with Gradle 2.x and thus needs version 2.0 or higher to work due to a newer version of Groovy version included in Gradle 2.x (2.3 vs. 1.8.6). To use the plugin with Gradle 1.x you have to add Groovy's upward compatibility patch by adding the following line to your build file:
buildscript {
// ...
dependencies {
classpath 'se.transmode.gradle:gradle-docker:1.2'
classpath 'org.codehaus.groovy:groovy-backports-compat23:2.3.5'
}
}
If you are not using Docker's remote API (useApi = false
, i.e. the default behaviour) you need to have Docker installed locally in order to build images. However if the dryRun
task property is set to true
all calls to Docker are disabled. In that case only the Dockerfile and its context directory will be created.