This patch:
- Combines the shellcheck and lint stages. Free CircleCI plans allow a maximum
of 4 concurrent jobs, and from the timing, the "lint" and "shellcheck" stages
combined would still take less time than the other stages, so combining them
keeps the same overall duration, but saving one machine "slot".
- Splits some steps, so that their output can be found more easily in the CI
results. For example, separating building of Docker images from running them.
- Adds a "Docker info" step, because information about the environment can be
useful when debugging.
- Adds the "Docker info" and "Docker version" steps to all stages, so that it's
possible to get that information without having to find the stage in which
it's printed.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
(cherry picked from commit 937e65cac5)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
18.03 has reached EOL; let's use a more current version in CI
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
(cherry picked from commit 8b19c1d73a)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Vendoring can take some time, depending on network-speed, so
reduce flakiness by increasing the default timeout, to prevent:
make[1]: Entering directory '/go/src/github.com/docker/cli'
rm -rf vendor
bash -c 'vndr |& grep -v -i clone'
2019/03/18 11:38:26 Collecting initial packages
Too long with no output (exceeded 10m0s)
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
When building the Dockerfiles for development, those images are mainly used to
create a reproducible build-environment. The source code is bind-mounted into
the image at runtime; there is no need to create an image with the actual
source code, and copying the source code into the image would lead to a new
image being created for each code-change (possibly leading up to many "dangling"
images for previous code-changes).
However, when building (and using) the development images in CI, bind-mounting
is not an option, because the daemon is running remotely.
To make this work, the circle-ci script patched the Dockerfiles when CI is run;
adding a `COPY` to the respective Dockerfiles.
Patching Dockerfiles is not really a "best practice" and, even though the source
code does not and up in the image, the source would still be _sent_ to the daemon
for each build (unless BuildKit is used).
This patch updates the makefiles, circle-ci script, and Dockerfiles;
- When building the Dockerfiles locally, pipe the Dockerfile through stdin.
Doing so, prevents the build-context from being sent to the daemon. This speeds
up the build, and doesn't fill up the Docker "temp" directory with content that's
not used
- Now that no content is sent, add the COPY instructions to the Dockerfiles, and
remove the code in the circle-ci script to "live patch" the Dockerfiles.
Before this patch is applied (with cache):
```
$ time make -f docker.Makefile build_shell_validate_image
docker build -t docker-cli-shell-validate -f ./dockerfiles/Dockerfile.shellcheck .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 41MB
Step 1/2 : FROM debian:stretch-slim
...
Successfully built 81e14e8ad856
Successfully tagged docker-cli-shell-validate:latest
2.75 real 0.45 user 0.56 sys
```
After this patch is applied (with cache)::
```
$ time make -f docker.Makefile build_shell_validate_image
cat ./dockerfiles/Dockerfile.shellcheck | docker build -t docker-cli-shell-validate -
Sending build context to Docker daemon 2.048kB
Step 1/2 : FROM debian:stretch-slim
...
Successfully built 81e14e8ad856
Successfully tagged docker-cli-shell-validate:latest
0.33 real 0.07 user 0.08 sys
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>