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GitLab CI template for Docker

This project implements a generic GitLab CI template Docker based projects.

Usage

In order to include this template in your project, add the following to your .gitlab-ci.yml :

include:
  - project: 'Orange-OpenSource/tbc/docker'
    ref: '1.0.0'
    file: '/templates/gitlab-ci-docker.yml'

Understanding the Docker template

The template supports two ways of building your Docker images:

  1. The former Docker-in-Docker technique, that was widely used for years because of no other alternative, but that is now commonly recognized to have significant security issues (read this post for more info),
  2. Or using kaniko, an open-source tool from Google for building Docker images, and that solves Docker-in-Docker security issues (and also speeds-up build times).

By default, the template uses the kaniko way, but you may activate the Docker-in-Docker build at your own risks by setting DOCKER_DIND_BUILD to true (see below). ⚠️ In that case, make sure your runner has required privileges to run Docker-in-Docker (see GitLab doc).

Global variables

The Docker template uses some global configuration used throughout all jobs.

Name description default value
DOCKER_DIND_BUILD Set to enable Docker-in-Docker build (⚠️ unsecured, requires privileged runners). (none) (kaniko build by default)
DOCKER_KANIKO_IMAGE The Docker image used to run kaniko - for kaniko build only gcr.io/kaniko-project/executor:debug (use debug images for GitLab)
DOCKER_IMAGE The Docker image used to run the docker client (see full list) - for Docker-in-Docker build only docker:latest
DOCKER_DIND_IMAGE The Docker image used to run the Docker daemon (see full list) - for Docker-in-Docker build only docker:dind
DOCKER_FILE The path to your Dockerfile ./Dockerfile
DOCKER_CONTEXT_PATH The Docker context path (working directory) none only set if you want a context path different from the Dockerfile location

In addition to this, the template supports standard Linux proxy variables:

Name description default value
http_proxy Proxy used for http requests none
https_proxy Proxy used for https requests none
no_proxy List of comma-separated hosts/host suffixes none

Images

For each Dockerfile, the template builds an image that may be pushed as two distinct images, depending on a certain workflow:

  1. snapshot: the image is first built from the Dockerfile and then pushed to some Docker registry as the snapshot image. It can be seen as the raw result of the build, but still untested and unreliable.
  2. release: once the snapshot image has been thoroughly tested (both by package-test stage jobs and/or acceptance stage jobs after being deployed to some server), then the image is pushed one more time as the release image. This second push can be seen as the promotion of the snapshot image being now tested and reliable.

In practice:

  • the snapshot image is always pushed by the template (pipeline triggered by a Git tag or commit on any branch),
  • the release image is only pushed:
    • on a pipeline triggered by a Git tag,
    • on a pipeline triggered by a Git commit on master.

The snapshot and release images are defined by the following variables:

Name description default value
DOCKER_SNAPSHOT_IMAGE Docker snapshot image $CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE/snapshot:$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG
DOCKER_RELEASE_IMAGE Docker release image $CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE:$CI_COMMIT_REF_NAME

As you can see, the Docker template is configured by default to use the GitLab container registry. You may perfectly override this and use another Docker registry, but be aware of a few things:

  • the DOCKER_SNAPSHOT_IMAGE requires a Docker registry that allows tag overwrite,
  • the DOCKER_RELEASE_IMAGE may use a Docker registry that doesn't allow tag overwrite, but:
    1. you should avoid overwriting a Git tag (at it will obviously fail while trying to (re)push the Docker image),
    2. you have to deactivate publish on master branch by setting the $PUBLISH_ON_PROD variable to false (as it would lead to the master tag being overwritten).

Registries and credentials

As seen in the previous chapter, the Docker template uses by default the GitLab registry to push snapshot and release images. Thus it makes use of credentials provided by GitLab itself to login (CI_REGISTRY_USER / CI_REGISTRY_PASSWORD).

But when using other registry(ies), you'll have also to configure appropriate Docker credentials.

Using the same registry for snapshot and release

If you use the same registry for both snapshot and release images, you shall use the following configuration variables:

Name description
🔒 DOCKER_REGISTRY_USER Docker registry username for image registry
🔒 DOCKER_REGISTRY_PASSWORD Docker registry password for image registry

Using different registries for snapshot and release

If you use different registries for snapshot and release images, you shall use separate configuration variables:

Name description
🔒 DOCKER_REGISTRY_SNAPSHOT_USER Docker registry username for snapshot image registry
:lock DOCKER_REGISTRY_SNAPSHOT_PASSWORD Docker registry password for snapshot image registry
🔒 DOCKER_REGISTRY_RELEASE_USER Docker registry username for release image registry
🔒 DOCKER_REGISTRY_RELEASE_PASSWORD Docker registry password for release image registry

Multi Dockerfile support

This template supports building multiple Docker images from a single Git repository.

You can define the images to build using the parallel matrix jobs pattern inside the .docker-base job (this is the top parent job of all Docker template jobs).

Since each job in the template extends this base job, the pipeline will produce one job instance per image to build. You can independently configure each instance of these jobs by redefining the variables described throughout this documentation.

For example, if you want to build two Docker images, you must specify where the Dockerfiles are located and where the resulting images will be stored. You can do so by adding a patch to the .docker-base job in your .gitlab-ci.yml file so that it looks like this:

.docker-base:
  parallel:
    matrix:
    - DOCKER_FILE: "front/Dockerfile"
      DOCKER_SNAPSHOT_IMAGE: "$CI_REGISTRY/$CI_PROJECT_PATH/front:$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG"
      DOCKER_RELEASE_IMAGE: "$CI_REGISTRY/$CI_PROJECT_PATH/front:$CI_COMMIT_REF_NAME"
    - DOCKER_FILE: "back/Dockerfile"
      DOCKER_SNAPSHOT_IMAGE: "$CI_REGISTRY/$CI_PROJECT_PATH/back:$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG"
      DOCKER_RELEASE_IMAGE: "$CI_REGISTRY/$CI_PROJECT_PATH/back:$CI_COMMIT_REF_NAME"

If you need to redefine a variable with the same value for all your Dockerfiles, you can just declare this variable as a global variable. For example, if you want to build all your images using Docker-in-Docker, you can simply define the DOCKER_DIND_BUILD variable as a global variable:

variables:
  DOCKER_DIND_BUILD: "True"