Fixes#4648
Make it easier to specify IPv6 addresses in the '--add-host' option by
permitting 'host=ip' in addition to 'host:ip', and allowing square
brackets around the address.
For example:
--add-host=my-hostname:127.0.0.1
--add-host=my-hostname:::1
--add-host=my-hostname=::1
--add-host=my-hostname:[::1]
To avoid compatibility problems, the CLI will replace an '=' separator
with ':', and strip brackets, before sending the request to the API.
Signed-off-by: Rob Murray <rob.murray@docker.com>
This is synonymous with `docker run --cidfile=FILE` and writes the digest of
the newly built image to the named file. This is intended to be used by build
systems which want to avoid tagging (perhaps because they are in CI or
otherwise want to avoid fixed names which can clash) by enabling e.g. Makefile
constructs like:
image.id: Dockerfile
docker build --iidfile=image.id .
do-some-more-stuff: image.id
do-stuff-with <image.id
Currently the only way to achieve this is to use `docker build -q` and capture
the stdout, but at the expense of losing the build output.
In non-silent mode (without `-q`) with API >= v1.29 the caller will now see a
`JSONMessage` with the `Aux` field containing a `types.BuildResult` in the
output stream for each image/layer produced during the build, with the final
one being the end product. Having all of the intermediate images might be
interesting in some cases.
In silent mode (with `-q`) there is no change, on success the only output will
be the resulting image digest as it was previosuly.
There was no wrapper to just output an Aux section without enclosing it in a
Progress, so add one here.
Added some tests to integration cli tests.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@docker.com>
Allow built images to be squash to scratch.
Squashing does not destroy any images or layers, and preserves the
build cache.
Introduce a new CLI argument --squash to docker build
Introduce a new param to the build API endpoint `squash`
Once the build is complete, docker creates a new image loading the diffs
from each layer into a single new layer and references all the parent's
layers.
Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>
When sending a build context to a remote server it may be
(significantly) advantageous to compress the build context. This commit
adds support for gz compression when constructing a build context
using a command like "docker build --compress ."
Signed-off-by: Paul Kehrer <paul.l.kehrer@gmail.com>
- Add link to valid image name and tag formats in referenced files
- Per review comments, updated docs to remove reference to `USERNAME` and
`REGISTRYHOST`.
- Per review comment, removed links from man page.
- Per review comment, added and updated examples on `docker tag`
Signed-off-by: Subhajit Ghosh <isubuz.g@gmail.com>
Right now, the quiet (-q, --quiet) flag ignores the output
generated from within the container.
However, it ought to be quiet in a way that all kind
of diagnostic output should be ignored, unless the build
process fails.
This patch makes the quiet flag behave in the following way:
1. If the build process succeeds, stdout contains the image ID
and stderr is empty.
2. If the build process fails, stdout is empty and stderr
has the error message and the diagnostic output of that process.
If the quiet flag is not set, then everything goes to stdout
and error messages, if there are any, go to stderr.
Signed-off-by: Boaz Shuster <ripcurld.github@gmail.com>
- Optional "--shm-size=" was added to the sub-command(run, create,and build).
- The size of /dev/shm in the container can be changed
when container is made.
- Being able to specify is a numerical value that applies number,
b, k, m, and g.
- The default value is 64MB, when this option is not set.
- It deals with both native and lxc drivers.
Signed-off-by: NIWA Hideyuki <niwa.hiedyuki@jp.fujitsu.com>
add needed clarity for
1) using STDIN to pass build context
2) --cpu-shares flag use
also a few typos
Signed-off-by: Sally O'Malley <somalley@redhat.com>
- missing help option in `docs/reference/commandline/*.md` (some files
have it, the other I fixed didn't)
- missing `[OPTIONS]` in Usage description
- missing options
- formatting
- start/stop idempotence
Signed-off-by: Antonio Murdaca <amurdaca@redhat.com>
- The build-time variables are passed as environment-context for command(s)
run as part of the RUN primitve. These variables are not persisted in environment of
intermediate and final images when passed as context for RUN. The build environment
is prepended to the intermediate continer's command string for aiding cache lookups.
It also helps with build traceability. But this also makes the feature less secure from
point of view of passing build time secrets.
- The build-time variables also get used to expand the symbols used in certain
Dockerfile primitves like ADD, COPY, USER etc, without an explicit prior definiton using a
ENV primitive. These variables get persisted in the intermediate and final images
whenever they are expanded.
- The build-time variables are only expanded or passed to the RUN primtive if they
are defined in Dockerfile using the ARG primitive or belong to list of built-in variables.
HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, http_proxy, https_proxy, FTP_PROXY and NO_PROXY are built-in
variables that needn't be explicitly defined in Dockerfile to use this feature.
Signed-off-by: Madhav Puri <madhav.puri@gmail.com>
This PR adds recommendations in man pages to use only [a-z0-9-_.] when
naming and tagging images. The purpose of this is to add consistency
and to make image naming caps rules seem less arbitrary.
This PR addresses confusion with:
1. BaseImage:Tagged (not allowed)
2. baseimage:Tagged (allowed)
3. baseimage/tagged:V1 (allowed)
4. baseimage/Tagged:V1 (not allowed)
Signed-off-by: Sally O'Malley <somalley@redhat.com>
Adding in other areas per comments
Updating with comments; equalizing generating man page info
Updating with duglin's comments
Doug is right here again;fixing.
Signed-off-by: Mary Anthony <mary@docker.com>