This control-repo
provides various ways to use, configure and work with Docker
.
They are available via shell commands
, we are going to show them both.
We can try to test a Puppet run
for a role
in a Docker
container.
To run Puppet
for the default docker_test_role
on the default image (centos-7
):
bin/docker_test_role.sh
To test another role
(define the profiles to use and the relevant data in hieradata/role/$role.yaml
bin/docker_test_role.sh ansible
It's also possible to select the underlying OS to use in the base image:
Available images are: ubuntu-12.04
, ubuntu-14.04
, ubuntu-16.04
, centos-7
, debian-7
, debian-8
, alpine-3.3
.
bin/docker_test_role.sh myrole debian-8
NOTE: the base images used for the different OS are by default downloaded from https://hub.docker.com/r/example42/puppet-agent/tags/.
It's possible to use custom ones by:
- Setting on
Hiera
in the"role".yaml
files the parameterdocker::username
(example42 by default) - Build custom
puppet-agent
images - Push them to our registry for use outside our local machine
In this control-repo
various ways to use Puppet
to build Docker images
are explored.
They follow different approaches and have their own limitations. Work is progress (WIP) here.
Dockerize a role
entirely based on tp defines
for one or multiple OS Docker images
.
In this approach, Puppet
is executed on our local machine, we might need root privileges
to set file permissions.
bin/docker_tp_build_role.sh
The above command uses the data in hieradata/role/docker_tp_build.yaml
To specify a different role to build for:
bin/docker_tp_build_role.sh webserver
To build an image with Rocker, without leaving traces of Puppet
inside the image, we can run the following command.
Data used for the image is in hieradata/role/$puppetrole.yaml
docker.rocker_build_role
A few other commands are available for general Docker
maintenance.
To show general Docker
information (version, containers and images):
bin/docker_status.sh
To remove all local images and containers (WARNING: have no important data there).
By default a confirmation prompt appears:
bin/docker_purge.sh
To run in unattended mode (useful for cleanups in CI pipelines
):
bin/docker_purge.sh auto
Docker
operations the command line require Docker
to be locally installed.
If we use Mac
or Windows
we need the newer native client.
To install docker
we can run one of these commands:
bin/docker_setup.sh
You'll need to run docker login
before trying any operation that involves pushing our images to Docker registry
.