Build static golang binaries and package them into minimal docker containers
BSD 3-Clause, see accompanying LICENSE file.
- bash
- docker 1.5+
gockerize <image> <package> [<source> [<mapping> [<Dockerfile>]]]
The default use case is to call the script from the root directory of the package being built, with any dependencies vendored in and the Dockerfile at the root of the package.
The image
argument determines the name of the resulting Docker image.
The package
argument is the fully qualified name of the package being
built.
The source
argument can be used to easily include non-vendored dependencies
into the build context. For instance, given the following hierarchy:
src/
acme.com/
common/
foo/
Where foo
is the service to be built and common
is a package it depends on.
The following command can be used, from src/acme.com/foo
:
gockerize foo acme.com/foo ..
This will result in all of src/acme.com
being used as build context, under
$GOPATH/src/acme.com
.
Similarly, mapping
can be changed from its default value to accommodate
source layouts that deviate from golang's conventions and Dockerfile
can
point to a Dockerfile at a non-default location, including outside of the
Docker build context.
The contents of the GOARGS
environment variable are passed to the go build
command inside the container. Among other things, this makes it easy to use
custom build tags.
A typical Dockerfile may look like:
FROM scratch
ADD bin/foo /foo
EXPOSE 12345
ENTRYPOINT [ "/foo" ]
The Docker image is built within a temporary container and its build
context is limited to the content of GOPATH
on that container, hence
the reference to bin/foo
which is the location of the binary produced
by compiling package acme.com/foo
.
For ease of use, gockerize uses go get
to automatically fetch remote
dependencies from github and other public repositories supported by default,
however, vendored dependencies should be preferred as they ensure repeatable
build.
By default, gockerize uses Go 1.5.3 and enables GOVENDOREXPERIMENT.
However, it is possible to use any desired version of Go by setting the GOVERSION
environment variable appropriately, for instance GOVERSION=1.9.2
to build with
Go 1.9.2
Fully static builds allow easy patching of the standard library. gockerize
leverages that by automatically applying patches found in the patches
subdir
of the package being built.
Care should be taken that the patches cleanly apply against the version of Go used in the container (1.5.3 at this time).