Crates.io | containeryard |
lib.rs | containeryard |
version | 0.2.7 |
source | src |
created_at | 2024-07-17 12:06:58.260654 |
updated_at | 2024-10-27 12:32:18.658033 |
description | Container Yard is a declarative, reproducible, and reusable decentralized approach for defining containers. Think Nix flakes meets Containerfiles (aka Dockerfiles). |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/mcmah309/containeryard |
max_upload_size | |
id | 1306143 |
size | 158,047 |
ContainerYard is a declarative, reproducible, and reusable decentralized approach for defining containers. Think Nix flakes meets Containerfiles (aka Dockerfiles).
ContainerYard breaks Containerfiles into modules. Modules represent some specific functionality of a container. e.g. The rust module defines rust's installation. Modules also support Tera templating.
A yard.yaml
file is used to compose modules into Containerfiles.
# yaml-language-server: $schema=https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mcmah309/containeryard/master/src/schemas/yard-schema.json
inputs:
# Modules found on local paths
modules:
finalizer: local_modules/finalizer
# Modules found in a remote repos
remotes:
- url: https://github.com/mcmah309/yard_module_repository
commit: 992eac4ffc0a65d7e8cd30597d93920901fbd1cd
modules:
base: bases/ubuntu/base
git_config: independent/git_config
bash_flavor: apt/bash_interactive/flavors/mcmah309
outputs:
# Output Containerfile created from modules
Containerfile:
# Module "base" from inputs
- base:
# Inputs, shell commands `$(..)` and ENV vars `$..` also supported
version: "24.04"
# Inline modules
- RUN apt install git
- git_config:
user_name: $(git config --get user.name)
email: $(git config --get user.email)
- bash_flavor:
- finalizer:
hooks:
build:
# Command executed before the build. Will reload this file after the command is executed
pre: yard update
post: echo Done
To compose the modules defined in yard.yaml
into Containerfiles, simply run yard build .
.
Which in the above case, will output a single Containerfile to your current directory.
A module consists of a Tera template named Containerfile
and a yard-module.yaml
file
that defines configuration options and dependencies of the template.
Containerfile
FROM alpine:{{ version | default (value="latest") }}
RUN apk update \
&& apk upgrade \
&& apk add --no-cache ca-certificates \
&& update-ca-certificates
yard-module.yaml
# yaml-language-server: $schema=https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mcmah309/containeryard/master/src/schemas/yard-module-schema.json
description: "This is a modules description"
args:
required:
optional:
- version
# Files to be pulled in with this module
required_files:
For more module examples click here.
Note: yard
is the cli tool for ContainerYard.
RELEASE_VER=<INSERT_CURRENT_VERSION> # e.g. RELEASE_VER='v0.2.7'
deb_file="containeryard_$(echo $RELEASE_VER | sed 's/^v//')-1_amd64.deb"
curl -LO https://github.com/mcmah309/containeryard/releases/download/$RELEASE_VER/$deb_file
dpkg -i "$deb_file"
cargo install containeryard
Consider adding --profile dist
for a longer compile time but a more optimal build.
Developers constantly rewrite the same Containerfile/Dockerfile configs. Besides taking away developer time,
these configs become hard to maintain/upgrade and adding new features feels like starting from scratch again.
The goal of ContainerYard is to foster a library ecosystem of composable Containerfile modules. Users
can then import these various modules with little to no configuration. Want Rust? Just add it to your yard.yaml
file.
Want Flutter? Do the same. With ContainerYard you should never have to define certain Containerfile configs again. But
if you do want to do something custom, ContainerYard does not get in your way, everything is Containerfile based
and the output is a pure Containerfile. No need to learn a complex tool, no need to re-invent the wheel, Containerfiles
and Tera templates are powerful enough. Just let ContainerYard be the glue.
Nix flakes guarantees reproducibility at the cost of developer flexibility. Container Yard is decentralized, allowing users to easily use different package managers and upstreams. As such, Container Yard sacrifices some reproducibility guarantees and gains complete developer flexibility.
Container Yard is also extremely simple and built on familiar developer tools - Containerfiles and Tera templates.
Feel free to open an issue with any suggestions/ideas/bugs you may have and/or create PR's.
ContainerYard builds and uses its own dev container :D see here. Open the project in vscode, click the "open in container" button and you are ready to go! Otherwise just use the provided Containerfile or your own local setup.
*Feel free to create a PR to add your own!*