Title. Just wondering if I did something bad/terrible with it. Link is @ title. Check the image tag @ its repo to see how it was built. And before someone asks… the Docker lemmy community is really dead so I had to resort to you guys. Sorry, I guess.

And thanks in advance.

  • lidstah@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    A bit late but you might want to have a look at docker multi-stage build documentation which does exactly what you did (start from a base image then copying stuff from it to your own image), something like that:

    FROM someimage:sometag AS build
    [do stuff]
    FROM minimalimage:someothertag
    COPY --from=build /some/file /some/other/file
    [and so on]
    USER somebody
    CMD ["/path/somecommand"]
    

    Which will simplify building new images against newer “build” image newer tags easier.

    btw, you were quite creative on this one! You also might want to have a look at the distroless image, the goal being to only have the bare minimum to run your application in the image: your executable and its runtime dependencies.

    • GustavoM@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Now you’ve confused me a little bit – is there any difference between a scratch and a distroless image? Aren’t they (technically) the same thing?

      That aside, thank you for your input and compliment.

      • lidstah@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        You’re welcome! scratch and distroless are indeed basically the same thing, scratch being the ‘official’ docker minimal image while distroless is from google - as I’m more a Kubernetes user (at home and at work) than a Docker user, I tend to think about distroless first :) - my apologies if my comment was a bit confusing on this matter.

        By the way, have fun experimenting with docker (or podman), it’s interesting, widely used both in selfhosting and professional environments, and it’s a great learning experience - and a good way to pass time during these long winter evenings :)

        • GustavoM@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          Oh, I see. Thanks for clarifying. And I’ve got to admit that “dockerizing” everything is a fun process indeed. :P