Man page - containerfile(5)
Packages contains this manual
apt-get install golang-github-containers-common
Manual
CONTAINERFILE
NAMEINTRODUCTION
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
USAGE
FORMAT
RUN --network=default
RUN --network=none
Example: isolating external effects
RUN --network=host
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
NAME
Containerfile(Dockerfile) - automate the steps of creating a container image
INTRODUCTION
The Containerfile is a configuration file that automates the steps of creating a container image. It is similar to a Makefile. Container engines (Podman, Buildah, Docker) read instructions from the Containerfile to automate the steps otherwise performed manually to create an image. To build an image, create a file called Containerfile .
The Containerfile describes the steps taken to assemble the image. When the Containerfile has been created, call the buildah build , podman build , docker build command, using the path of context directory that contains Containerfile as the argument. Podman and Buildah default to Containerfile and will fall back to Dockerfile . Docker only will search for Dockerfile in the context directory.
Dockerfile is an alternate name for the same object. Containerfile and Dockerfile support the same syntax.
SYNOPSIS
INSTRUCTION arguments
For example:
FROM image
DESCRIPTION
A Containerfile is a file that automates the steps of creating a container image. A Containerfile is similar to a Makefile.
USAGE
buildah build .
podman build .
-- Runs the
steps and commits them, building a final image.
The path to the source repository defines where to find the
context of the
build.
buildah build -t
repository/tag .
podman build -t repository/tag .
-- specifies a
repository and tag at which to save the new image if the
build
succeeds. The container engine runs the steps one-by-one,
committing the result
to a new image if necessary, before finally outputting the
ID of the new
image.
Container
engines reuse intermediate images whenever possible. This
significantly
accelerates the
build
process.
FORMAT
FROM image [AS <name>]
FROM image:tag [AS <name>]
FROM image@digest [AS <name>]
-- The
FROM
instruction sets the base image for subsequent
instructions. A
valid Containerfile must have either
ARG
or
FROM
as its first instruction.
If
FROM
is not the first instruction in the file, it
may only be preceded by
one or more ARG instructions, which declare arguments that
are used in the next FROM line in the Containerfile.
The image can be any valid image. It is easy to start by
pulling an image from the public
repositories.
-- FROM must appear at least once in the Containerfile.
--
FROM
The first
FROM
command must come before all other
instructions in
the Containerfile except
ARG
--
FROM
may appear multiple times within a single Containerfile in
order to create
multiple images. Make a note of the last image ID output by
the commit before
each new
FROM
command.
-- If no tag is
given to the
FROM
instruction, container engines
apply the
latest
tag. If the used tag does not exist, an error is
returned.
-- If no digest
is given to the
FROM
instruction, container engines
apply the
latest
tag. If the used tag does not exist, an error is
returned.
-- A name can be
assigned to a build stage by adding
AS name
to the
instruction.
The name can be referenced later in the Containerfile using
the
FROM
or
COPY --from=
instructions.
MAINTAINER
--
MAINTAINER
sets the Author field for the generated
images.
Useful for providing users with an email or url for
support.
RUN
--
RUN
has two forms:
# the command is
run in a shell - /bin/sh -c
RUN <command>
# Executable
form
RUN ["executable", "param1",
"param2"]
RUN mounts
--mount = type=TYPE,TYPE-SPECIFIC-OPTION[,...]
Attach a filesystem mount to the container
Current supported mount TYPES are bind, cache, secret and tmpfs.
e.g.
mount=type=bind,source=/path/on/host,destination=/path/in/container,relabel=shared
mount=type=tmpfs,tmpfs-size=512M,destination=/path/in/container
mount=type=secret,id=mysecret cat /run/secrets/mysecret
Common Options:
Ā· src, source: mount source spec for bind and volume. Mandatory for bind. If āfromā is specified, āsrcā is the subpath in the āfromā field.
Ā· dst, destination, target: mount destination spec.
Ā· ro, read-only: true (default) or false.
Options specific to bind:
Ā· bind-propagation: shared, slave, private, rshared, rslave, or rprivate(default). See also mount(2).
. bind-nonrecursive: do not setup a recursive bind mount. By default it is recursive.
Ā· from: stage or image name for the root of the source. Defaults to the build context.
Ā· relabel=shared, z: Relabels src content with a shared label.
. relabel=private, Z: Relabels src content with a private label.
Labeling systems like SELinux require proper labels on the bind mounted content mounted into a container. Without a label, the security system might prevent the processes running in side the container from using the content. By default, container engines do not change the labels set by the OS. The relabel flag tells the engine to relabel file objects on the shared mountz.
The relabel=shared and z options tell the engine that two or more containers will share the mount content. The engine labels the content with a shared content label.
The relabel=private and Z options tell the engine to label the content with a private unshared label. Only the current container can use a private mount.
Relabeling walks the file system under the mount and changes the label on each file, if the mount has thousands of inodes, this process takes a long time, delaying the start of the container.
Ā· rw, read-write: allows writes on the mount.
Options specific to tmpfs:
Ā· tmpfs-size: Size of the tmpfs mount in bytes. Unlimited by default in Linux.
Ā· tmpfs-mode: File mode of the tmpfs in octal. (e.g. 700 or 0700.) Defaults to 1777 in Linux.
Ā· tmpcopyup: Path that is shadowed by the tmpfs mount is recursively copied up to the tmpfs itself.
Options specific to cache:
Ā· id: Create a separate cache directory for a particular id.
Ā· mode: File mode for new cache directory in octal. Default 0755.
Ā· ro, readonly: read only cache if set.
Ā· uid: uid for cache directory.
Ā· gid: gid for cache directory.
Ā· from: stage name for the root of the source. Defaults to host cache directory.
Ā· rw, read-write: allows writes on the mount.
RUN --network
RUN --network allows control over which networking environment the command is run in.
Syntax: --network=<TYPE>
Network types
RUN --network=default
Equivalent to not supplying a flag at all, the command is run in the default network for the build.
RUN --network=none
The command is run with no network access ( lo is still available, but is isolated to this process).
Example: isolating external effects
FROM python:3.6
ADD mypackage.tgz wheels/
RUN --network=none pip install --find-links wheels
mypackage
pip will only be able to install the packages provided in the tarfile, which can be controlled by an earlier build stage.
RUN --network=host
The command is run in the hostās network environment (similar to buildah build --network=host , but on a per-instruction basis)
RUN Secrets
The RUN command has a feature to allow the passing of secret information into the image build. These secrets files can be used during the RUN command but are not committed to the final image. The RUN command supports the --mount option to identify the secret file. A secret file from the host is mounted into the container while the image is being built.
Container engines pass secret the secret file into the build using the --secret flag.
--mount = type=secret,TYPE-SPECIFIC-OPTION[,...]
|
⢠|
id is the identifier for the secret passed into the buildah build --secret or podman build --secret . This identifier is associated with the RUN --mount identifier to use in the Containerfile. |
||
|
⢠|
dst | target | destination rename the secret file to a specific file in the Containerfile RUN command to use. |
||
|
⢠|
type=secret tells the --mount command that it is mounting in a secret file |
# shows secret from default
secret location:
RUN --mount=type=secret,id=mysecret cat
/run/secrets/mysecret
# shows secret
from custom secret location:
RUN --mount=type=secret,id=mysecret,dst=/foobar cat
/foobar
The secret needs to be passed to the build using the --secret flag. The final image built does not container the secret file:
buildah build --no-cache --secret id=mysecret,src=mysecret.txt .
-- The
RUN
instruction executes any commands in a new layer
on top of the current
image and commits the results. The committed image is used
for the next step in
Containerfile.
-- Layering
RUN
instructions and generating commits conforms to
the core
concepts of container engines where commits are cheap and
containers can be created from
any point in the history of an image. This is similar to
source control. The
exec form makes it possible to avoid shell string munging.
The exec form makes
it possible to
RUN
commands using a base image that
does not contain
/bin/sh
.
Note that the
exec form is parsed as a JSON array, which means that you
must
use double-quotes (") around words, not single-quotes
(ā).
CMD
--
CMD
has three forms:
# Executable
form
CMD ["executable", "param1",
"param2"]ā
# Provide
default arguments to ENTRYPOINT
CMD ["param1", "param2"]ā
# the command is
run in a shell - /bin/sh -c
CMD command param1 param2
-- There should
be only one
CMD
in a Containerfile. If more than one
CMD
is listed, only
the last
CMD
takes effect.
The main purpose of a
CMD
is to provide defaults for
an executing container.
These defaults may include an executable, or they can omit
the executable. If
they omit the executable, an
ENTRYPOINT
must be
specified.
When used in the shell or exec formats, the
CMD
instruction sets the command to
be executed when running the image.
If you use the shell form of the
CMD
, the
<command>
executes in
/bin/sh -c
:
Note that the
exec form is parsed as a JSON array, which means that you
must
use double-quotes (") around words, not single-quotes
(ā).
FROM ubuntu
CMD echo "This is a test." | wc -
-- If you run
command
without a shell, then you must express the
command as a
JSON array and give the full path to the executable. This
array form is the
preferred form of
CMD
. All additional parameters must
be individually expressed
as strings in the array:
FROM ubuntu
CMD ["/usr/bin/wc","--help"]
-- To make the
container run the same executable every time, use
ENTRYPOINT
in
combination with
CMD
.
If the user specifies arguments to
podman run
or
docker run
, the specified commands
override the default in
CMD
.
Do not confuse
RUN
with
CMD
.
RUN
runs a
command and commits the result.
CMD
executes nothing at build time, but specifies the
intended command for
the image.
LABEL
--
LABEL <key>=<value>
[<key>=<value> ...]
or
LABEL
<key>[ <value>]
LABEL <key>[ <value>]
...
The
LABEL
instruction adds metadata to an image. A
LABEL
is a
key-value pair. To specify a
LABEL
without a value,
simply use an empty
string. To include spaces within a
LABEL
value, use
quotes and
backslashes as you would in command-line parsing.
LABEL
com.example.vendor="ACME Incorporated"
LABEL com.example.vendor "ACME Incorporated"
LABEL com.example.vendor.is-beta ""
LABEL com.example.vendor.is-beta=
LABEL com.example.vendor.is-beta=""
An image can
have more than one label. To specify multiple labels,
separate
each key-value pair by a space.
Labels are
additive including
LABEL
s in
FROM
images. As
the system
encounters and then applies a new label, new
key
s
override any previous
labels with identical keys.
To display an imageās labels, use the buildah inspect command.
EXPOSE
--
EXPOSE <port> [<port>...]
The
EXPOSE
instruction informs the container engine
that the container listens on the
specified network ports at runtime. The container engine
uses this information to
interconnect containers using links and to set up port
redirection on the host
system.
ENV
--
ENV <key> <value>
The
ENV
instruction sets the environment variable to
the value
<value>
. This value is passed to all
future
RUN
,
ENTRYPOINT
, and
CMD
instructions.
This is
functionally equivalent to prefixing the command with
<key>=<value>
. The
environment variables that are set with
ENV
persist
when a container is run
from the resulting image. Use
podman inspect
to
inspect these values, and
change them using
podman run --env
<key>=<value>
.
Note that
setting "
ENV
DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
" may cause
unintended consequences, because it will persist when the
container is run
interactively, as with the following command:
podman run
-t -i image bash
ADD
--
ADD
has two forms:
ADD <src> <dest>
# Required for
paths with whitespace
ADD ["<src>",...
"<dest>"]
The
ADD
instruction copies new files, directories
or remote file URLs to the filesystem of the container at
path
<dest>
.
Multiple
<src>
resources may be specified but
if they are files or directories
then they must be relative to the source directory that is
being built
(the context of the build). The
<dest>
is the
absolute path, or path relative
to
WORKDIR
, into which the source is copied inside
the target container.
If the
<src>
argument is a local file in a
recognized compression format
(tar, gzip, bzip2, etc) then it is unpacked at the specified
<dest>
in the
containerās filesystem. Note that only local
compressed files will be unpacked,
i.e., the URL download and archive unpacking features cannot
be used together.
All new directories are created with mode 0755 and with the
uid and gid of
0
.
COPY
--
COPY
has two forms:
COPY [--chown=<user>:<group>] [--chmod=<mode>] <src> <dest>
# Required for
paths with whitespace
COPY [--chown=<user>:<group>]
[--chmod=<mode>] ["<src>",...
"<dest>"]
The
COPY
instruction copies new files from
<src>
and
adds them to the filesystem of the container at path . The
<src>
must be
the path to a file or directory relative to the source
directory that is
being built (the context of the build) or a remote file URL.
The
<dest>
is an
absolute path, or a path relative to
WORKDIR
, into
which the source will
be copied inside the target container. If you
COPY
an
archive file it will
land in the container exactly as it appears in the build
context without any
attempt to unpack it. All new files and directories are
created with mode
0755
and with the uid and gid of
0
.
--chown=<user>:<group>
changes the ownership of new files and directories.
Supports names, if defined in the containers
/etc/passwd
and
/etc/groups
files, or using
uid and gid integers. The build will fail if a user or group
name canāt be mapped in the container.
Numeric idās are set without looking them up in the
container.
--chmod=<mode> changes the mode of new files and directories.
The optional
flag
--from=name
can be used to copy files from a
named previous build stage. It
changes the context of
<src>
from the build
context to the named build stage.
ENTRYPOINT
--
ENTRYPOINT
has two forms:
# executable
form
ENTRYPOINT ["executable", "param1",
"param2"]ā
# run command in
a shell - /bin/sh -c
ENTRYPOINT command param1 param2
-- An
ENTRYPOINT
helps you configure a
container that can be run as an executable. When you specify
an
ENTRYPOINT
,
the whole container runs as if it was only that executable.
The
ENTRYPOINT
instruction adds an entry command that is not overwritten
when arguments are
passed to
podman run
. This is different from the
behavior of
CMD
. This allows
arguments to be passed to the entrypoint, for instance
podman run <image> -d
passes the -d argument to the
ENTRYPOINT
. Specify
parameters either in the
ENTRYPOINT
JSON array (as in the preferred exec form
above), or by using a
CMD
statement. Parameters in the
ENTRYPOINT
are not
overwritten by the
podman run
arguments. Parameters
specified via
CMD
are overwritten by
podman
run
arguments. Specify a plain string for the
ENTRYPOINT
, and it will execute in
/bin/sh -c
, like a
CMD
instruction:
FROM ubuntu
ENTRYPOINT wc -l -
This means that
the Containerfileās image always takes stdin as input
(thatās
what "-" means), and prints the number of lines
(thatās what "-l" means). To
make this optional but default, use a
CMD
:
FROM ubuntu
CMD ["-l", "-"]
ENTRYPOINT ["/usr/bin/wc"]
VOLUME
--
VOLUME ["/data"]
The
VOLUME
instruction creates a mount point with the
specified name and marks
it as holding externally-mounted volumes from the native
host or from other
containers.
USER
--
USER daemon
Sets the username or UID used for running subsequent
commands.
The
USER
instruction can optionally be used to set the group or GID.
The
following examples are all valid:
USER [user | user:group | uid | uid:gid | user:gid |
uid:group ]
Until the
USER
instruction is set, instructions will be run as
root. The USER
instruction can be used any number of times in a
Containerfile, and will only affect
subsequent commands.
WORKDIR
--
WORKDIR /path/to/workdir
The
WORKDIR
instruction sets the working directory
for the
RUN
,
CMD
,
ENTRYPOINT
,
COPY
and
ADD
Containerfile
commands that follow it. It can
be used multiple times in a single Containerfile. Relative
paths are defined
relative to the path of the previous
WORKDIR
instruction. For example:
WORKDIR /a
WORKDIR b
WORKDIR c
RUN pwd
In the above example, the output of the pwd command is a/b/c .
ARG
--
ARG <name>[=<default value>]
The
ARG
instruction defines a variable that users can pass at
build-time to
the builder with the
podman build
and
buildah
build
commands using the
--build-arg <varname>=<value>
flag. If a
user specifies a build argument that
was not defined in the Containerfile, the build outputs a
warning.
Note that a
second FROM in a Containerfile sets the values associated
with an
Arg variable to nil and they must be reset if they are to be
used later in
the Containerfile
[Warning] One or more build-args [foo] were not consumed
The
Containerfile author can define a single variable by
specifying
ARG
once or many
variables by specifying
ARG
more than once. For
example, a valid Containerfile:
FROM busybox
ARG user1
ARG buildno
...
A Containerfile author may optionally specify a default value for an ARG instruction:
FROM busybox
ARG user1=someuser
ARG buildno=1
...
If an
ARG
value has a default and if there is no value passed at
build-time, the
builder uses the default.
An
ARG
variable definition comes into effect from the line on which
it is
defined in the
Containerfile
not from the
argumentās use on the command-line or
elsewhere. For example, consider this Containerfile:
1 FROM busybox
2 USER ${user:-some_user}
3 ARG user
4 USER $user
...
A user builds this file by calling:
$ podman build --build-arg user=what_user Containerfile
The
USER
at line 2 evaluates to
some_user
as the
user
variable is defined on the
subsequent line 3. The
USER
at line 4 evaluates to
what_user
as
user
is
defined and the
what_user
value was passed on the
command line. Prior to its definition by an
ARG
instruction, any use of a variable results in an
empty string.
Warning:
It is not recommended to use build-time variables for
passing secrets like github keys, user credentials etc.
Build-time variable
values are visible to any user of the image with the
podman history
command.
You can use an
ARG
or an
ENV
instruction to specify variables
that are
available to the
RUN
instruction. Environment
variables defined using the
ENV
instruction always override an
ARG
instruction of the same name. Consider
this Containerfile with an
ENV
and
ARG
instruction.
1 FROM ubuntu
2 ARG CONT_IMG_VER
3 ENV CONT_IMG_VER=v1.0.0
4 RUN echo $CONT_IMG_VER
Then, assume this image is built with this command:
$ podman build --build-arg CONT_IMG_VER=v2.0.1 Containerfile
In this case,
the
RUN
instruction uses
v1.0.0
instead of the
ARG
setting
passed by the user:
v2.0.1
This behavior is similar to
a shell
script where a locally scoped variable overrides the
variables passed as
arguments or inherited from environment, from its point of
definition.
Using the
example above but a different
ENV
specification you
can create more
useful interactions between
ARG
and
ENV
instructions:
1 FROM ubuntu
2 ARG CONT_IMG_VER
3 ENV CONT_IMG_VER=${CONT_IMG_VER:-v1.0.0}
4 RUN echo $CONT_IMG_VER
Unlike an
ARG
instruction,
ENV
values are always
persisted in the built
image. Consider a
podman build
without the
--build-arg flag:
$ podman build Containerfile
Using this
Containerfile example,
CONT_IMG_VER
is still
persisted in the image but
its value would be
v1.0.0
as it is the default set in
line 3 by the
ENV
instruction.
The variable
expansion technique in this example allows you to pass
arguments
from the command line and persist them in the final image by
leveraging the
ENV
instruction. Variable expansion is only supported
for a limited set of
Containerfile instructions. āØ
#environment-replacementā©
Container
engines have a set of predefined
ARG
variables that
you can use without a
corresponding
ARG
instruction in the
Containerfile.
|
⢠|
HTTP_PROXY |
|||
|
⢠|
http_proxy |
|||
|
⢠|
HTTPS_PROXY |
|||
|
⢠|
https_proxy |
|||
|
⢠|
FTP_PROXY |
|||
|
⢠|
ftp_proxy |
|||
|
⢠|
NO_PROXY |
|||
|
⢠|
no_proxy |
|||
|
⢠|
ALL_PROXY |
|||
|
⢠|
all_proxy |
To use these,
pass them on the command line using
--build-arg
flag,
for
example:
$ podman build --build-arg HTTPS_PROXY=https://my-proxy.example.com .
Platform/OS/Arch
ARG
--
ARG <name>
When building
multi-arch manifest-lists or images for a
foreign-architecture,
itās often helpful to have access to platform details
within the
Containerfile
.
For example, when using a
RUN curl ...
command to
install OS/Arch specific
binary into the image. Or, if certain
RUN
operations
are known incompatible
or non-performant when emulating a specific
architecture.
There are
several named
ARG
variables available. The purpose of
each should be
self-evident by its name.
However
, in all cases these
ARG values are
not
automatically populated. You must always declare them within
each
FROM
section
of the
Containerfile
.
The available ARG <name> variables are available with two prefixes:
|
⢠|
TARGET... variable names represent details about the currently running build context (i.e. "inside" the container). These are often the most useful: |
ā¢
|
TARGETOS : For example linux |
||||
|
⢠|
TARGETARCH : For example amd64 |
|||
|
⢠|
TARGETPLATFORM : For example linux/amd64 |
|||
|
⢠|
TARGETVARIANT : Uncommonly used, specific to TARGETARCH |
|||
|
⢠|
BUILD... variable names signify details about the host performing the build (i.e. "outside" the container):
|
⢠|
BUILDOS : OS of host performing the build |
||
|
⢠|
BUILDARCH : Arch of host performing the build |
||
|
⢠|
BUILDPLATFORM : Combined OS/Arch of host performing the build |
||
|
⢠|
BUILDVARIANT : Uncommonly used, specific to BUILDARCH |
An example Containerfile that uses TARGETARCH to fetch an arch-specific binary could be:
FROM busybox
ARG TARGETARCH
RUN curl -sSf -O
https://example.com/downloads/bin-${TARGETARCH}.zip
Assuming the
host platform is
linux/amd64
and foreign-architecture
emulation
enabled (e.g.
qemu-user-static
), then running the
command:
$ podman build --platform linux/s390x .
Would end up
running
curl
on
https://example.com/downloads/bin-s390x.zip
and
producing
a container image suited for the the
linux/s390x
platform.
Note:
Emulation isnāt
strictly required, these special build-args will also
function when building using
podman farm build
.
ONBUILD
--
ONBUILD [INSTRUCTION]
The
ONBUILD
instruction adds a trigger instruction to
an image. The
trigger is executed at a later time, when the image is used
as the base for
another build. Container engines execute the trigger in the
context of the downstream
build, as if the trigger existed immediately after the
FROM
instruction in
the downstream Containerfile.
You can register
any build instruction as a trigger. A trigger is useful if
you are defining an image to use as a base for building
other images. For
example, if you are defining an application build
environment or a daemon that
is customized with a user-specific configuration.
Consider an
image intended as a reusable python application builder. It
must
add application source code to a particular directory, and
might need a build
script called after that. You canāt just call
ADD
and
RUN
now, because
you donāt yet have access to the application source
code, and it is different
for each application build.
-- Providing
application developers with a boilerplate Containerfile to
copy-paste
into their application is inefficient, error-prone, and
difficult to update because it mixes with
application-specific code.
The solution is to use
ONBUILD
to register
instructions in advance, to
run later, during the next build stage.
SEE ALSO
buildah(1), podman(1), docker(1)
HISTORY
May 2014,
Compiled by Zac Dover (zdover at redhat dot com) based on
docker.com Dockerfile documentation.
Feb 2015, updated by Brian Goff (cpuguy83@gmail.com) for
readability
Sept 2015, updated by Sally OāMalley
(somalley@redhat.com)
Oct 2016, updated by Addam Hardy (addam.hardy@gmail.com)
Aug 2021, converted Dockerfile man page to Containerfile by
Dan Walsh (dwalsh@redhat.com)