162 lines
5 KiB
Org Mode
162 lines
5 KiB
Org Mode
#+TITLE: Making docker-compose easier with wdocker
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#+DATE: 2016-02-21
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#+COLESLAW_TAGS: wdocker docker docker-compose
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#+OPTION: num:nil
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* Introduction
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[[https://github.com/babab/wdocker][wdocker]] is a little utility written by a [[https://benjamin.althu.es][friend]] and former colleague
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of mine. It allows you to define commands for it in a
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~Dockerfile~. He wrote it because he used a lot of composite
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commands when writing docker images like:
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#+BEGIN_SRC sh
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docker stop CONTAINER && docker rm CONTAINER && docker rmi IMAGE && \
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docker build -t IMAGE && docker run --name CONTAINER IMAGE
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#+END_SRC
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By using wdocker to define a command he can greatly simplify his own
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workflow. Let's call it rebuild:
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#+BEGIN_SRC dockerfile
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#wd# container = CONTAINER
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#wd# image = IMAGE
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#wd# stop = docker stop {container}
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#wd# rm = docker rm {container}
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#wd# rmi = docker rmi {container}
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#wd# build = docker build -t {image}
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#wd# run = docker run --name {container} {image}
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#wd# rebuild: {stop} && {rm} && {rmi} && {build} && {run}
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FROM ubuntu
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# ...
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#+END_SRC
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Now he can use the following command instead of the list presented
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before:
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: wdocker rebuild
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* Syntax
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wdocker has very simple syntax. You can define variables and
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commands:
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: #wd# variable = value
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: #wd# command: program
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Variables can be used by putting them in braces, including in other
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variables, as you've seen in the first example.
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: #wd# variable = -l
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: #wd# list: ls {variable}
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This would run =ls -l= when the command =wdocker list= is called.
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As you can see you're not limited to using docker in your wdocker
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commands. This property is what allows me to use wdocker in my
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workflow.
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* Combining with docker-compose
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I started using docker not too long ago at work to develop our
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projects in. This is nice because it allows me to completely isolate
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my development environments. Since we have a few processes running
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together a single docker image isn't a great option, so I use
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docker-compose to define and combine the containers I need.
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As a side-effect this requires me to write long commands to do
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something like run rspec tests:
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: docker-compose run --rm -e RACK_ENV=test -e RAILS_ENV=test \
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: container bundle exec rspec
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The alternative is defining a specialized test container with a
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bogus entry command (such as ~true~) and use that, which would still
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make the command:
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: docker-compose run --rm test-container bundle exec rspec
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Instead I can define a wdocker command in the ~Dockerfile~ used to
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build the containers used:
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#+BEGIN_SRC dockerfile
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#wd# rspec: docker-compose run --rm -e RACK_ENV=test -e RAILS_ENV=test container bundle exec rspec
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FROM ruby
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#...
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#+END_SRC
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Now I can run the following, much shorter, command to run the rspec
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tests:
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: wdocker rspec
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We also use cucumber for some other tests, which is even longer to
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type in, adding the ~cucumber~ command is easy:
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#+BEGIN_SRC dockerfile
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#wd# rspec: docker-compose run --rm -e RACK_ENV=test -e RAILS_ENV=test container bundle exec rspec
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#wd# cucumber: docker-compose run --rm -e RACK_ENV=test -e RAILS_ENV=test container bundle exec cucumber
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FROM ruby
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# ...
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#+END_SRC
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Now I can run =wdocker cucumber= as well.
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The latest git version of wdocker passes any arguments after the
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command name directly to the command to be executed. So if I need to
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run tests in a single spec file I can just do:
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: wdocker rspec spec/models/mymodel_spec.rb
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We have two commands defined now that are 90% the same. I always use
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the ~--rm~ switch to remove the started container after it's done, I
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don't want a lot of containers piling up. I also always have to use
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~bundle exec~ to run commands, since the containers don't use rvm or
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add the script directories to ~$PATH~. We can extract them to some
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variables:
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#+BEGIN_SRC dockerfile
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#wd# run = docker-compose run --rm
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#wd# exec = bundle exec
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#wd# test = -e RACK_ENV=test -e RAILS_ENV=test
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#wd# rspec: {run} {test} container {exec} rspec
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#wd# cucumber: {run} {test} container {exec} cucumber
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FROM ruby
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# ...
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#+END_SRC
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Right now these commands always use the ~container~ service defined
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in ~docker-compose.yml~. I could add it to the ~run~ command, but I
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might need to run some commands on another container, but I can
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define another variable:
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#+BEGIN_SRC dockerfile
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#wd# run = docker-compose run --rm
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#wd# test = -e RACK_ENV=test -e RAILS_ENV=test
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#wd# run-test-container = {run} {test} container
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#wd# exec = bundle exec
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#wd# rspec: {run-test-container} {exec} rspec
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#wd# cucumber: {run-test-container} {exec} cucumber
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FROM ruby
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# ...
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#+END_SRC
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Now you also see that variables can be nested in other variables.
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If you ever forget what you defined or if the mix of commands and
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variables becomes too much for you, you can call the wdocker command
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without arguments to see the commands you defined and the shell
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commands they'll run.
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