The purpose of this tutorial is to demonstrate how to include Buildah as a library in your build tool.
You can take advantage of all features provided by Buildah, like using Dockerfiles and building using rootless mode.
In this tutorial I'll show you how to create a simple CLI tool that creates an image containing NodeJS and a JS main file.
Bootstrap the installation of development dependencies of Buildah by following the Building from scratch instructions and in particular creating a directory for the Buildah project by completing the instructions in the Installation from GitHub section of that page.
Now let's bootstrap our project. Assuming you are in the directory of the project, run the following to initialize the go modules:
go mod init
Next, we should import Buildah as a dependency. However, make sure that you have the following developer packages installed:
dnf install btrfs-progs-devel gpgme-devel device-mapper-devel
Depending on your Linux distribution, the names of the packages can be slightly different. For instance, on OpenSUSE it would be
zypper in libbtrfs-devel libgpgme-devel device-mapper-devel
On Debian and Ubuntu, it would be
apt install libbtrfs-dev libgpgme-dev libdevmapper-dev
Now import Buildah as a dependency:
go get github.com/containers/buildah
Now you can develop your application. To access to the build features of Buildah, you need to instantiate buildah.Builder
. This struct has methods to configure the build, define the build steps and run it.
To instantiate a Builder
, you need a storage.Store
(the Store interface found in store.go) from github.com/containers/storage
, where the intermediate and result images will be stored:
buildStoreOptions, err := storage.DefaultStoreOptions(unshare.IsRootless(), unshare.GetRootlessUID())
buildStore, err := storage.GetStore(buildStoreOptions)
Define the builder options:
builderOpts := buildah.BuilderOptions{
FromImage: "node:12-alpine", // base image
}
Now instantiate the Builder
:
builder, err := buildah.NewBuilder(context.TODO(), buildStore, builderOpts)
Let's add our JS file (assuming is in your local directory with name script.js
):
err = builder.Add("/home/node/", false, buildah.AddAndCopyOptions{}, "script.js")
And configure the command to run:
builder.SetCmd([]string{"node", "/home/node/script.js"})
Before completing the build, create the image reference:
imageRef, err := is.Transport.ParseStoreReference(buildStore, "docker.io/myusername/my-image")
Now you can run commit the build:
imageId, _, _, err := builder.Commit(context.TODO(), imageRef, buildah.CommitOptions{})
To enable rootless mode, import github.com/containers/storage/pkg/unshare
and add this code at the beginning of your main method:
if buildah.InitReexec() {
return
}
unshare.MaybeReexecUsingUserNamespace(false)
This code ensures that your application is re-executed in a user namespace where it has root privileges.
package main
import (
"context"
"fmt"
"github.com/containers/buildah"
is "github.com/containers/image/v5/storage"
"github.com/containers/storage"
"github.com/containers/storage/pkg/unshare"
)
func main() {
if buildah.InitReexec() {
return
}
unshare.MaybeReexecUsingUserNamespace(false)
buildStoreOptions, err := storage.DefaultStoreOptions(unshare.IsRootless(), unshare.GetRootlessUID())
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
buildStore, err := storage.GetStore(buildStoreOptions)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
defer buildStore.Shutdown(false)
builderOpts := buildah.BuilderOptions{
FromImage: "node:12-alpine",
}
builder, err := buildah.NewBuilder(context.TODO(), buildStore, builderOpts)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
defer builder.Delete()
err = builder.Add("/home/node/", false, buildah.AddAndCopyOptions{}, "script.js")
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
builder.SetCmd([]string{"node", "/home/node/script.js"})
imageRef, err := is.Transport.ParseStoreReference(buildStore, "docker.io/myusername/my-image")
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
imageId, _, _, err := builder.Commit(context.TODO(), imageRef, buildah.CommitOptions{})
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
fmt.Printf("Image built! %s\n", imageId)
}