Skip to content

bossm8/dockerfile-templater

Repository files navigation

Dockerfile Templater

Simple GO utility to generate Dockerfiles from a template accepting yml data.

Introduction

This utility helps deduplicating code by generating multiple Dockerfiles from a single template. Making multi-variant image builds easier and faster.

The templater is able to generate Dockerfiles in different variants from a go templated Dockerfile (the templater includes sprig to provide more template functionality). The data passed to the template is read from a yml configuration file (variants). To make things more dynamic, the variants file can itself be a template and accept data from an additional yml file (variants configuration). Read below to get more information about each file and their required format.

Usage

Template Functions

The templater includes sprig (which is also included in helm) to extend the limited set of go template functions.

Additionally it also brings the following custom functions:

  • toYaml Paste yaml structures into templates:
    values: {{ toYaml .data | nindent 2 }}

Variants YML

Flag: --variants.def

The main template configuration which will ultimately be passed to the Dockerfile template.

It must contain the following structure:

variants:
    - name: <unique variant name>
      image:
        name: <name which you will use for the image>
        tag: <tag which you will use for the image>
      <custom content free of constraints>

Plain

If you do not provide an additional variants configuration file (--variants.cfg) the variants file (--variants.def) is expected to be a valid yml file. There will be no processing and the data read from the file is directly passed to the Dockerfile template.

Templated

As mentioned, the variants can itself be templated, this enables a high flexibility such as different combinations of package versions and reduces configuration duplications. When the flag --variants.cfg is supplied, this file will be interpreted as a template itself and be processed with the contents of the variants configuration before it will be fed into the Dockerfile template.

Variants YML Config

Flag: --variants.cfg

Supplying this file is optional but may help reducing configuration and duplication in the variants itself. This file has no constraints on it's content except that it must be a valid yml file.

Dockerfile

Flag: --dockerfile.tpl

The templated Dockerfile which accepts the configuration of the variants yml. It must be a valid go template.

Template Directory

Flag: --dockerfile.tpldir

An optional directory which contains includable templates for your templated Dockerfile. Files in this directory which end in .tpl can then be included in your main Dockerfile template (or in the includes itself). This flag can be used multiple times to include multiple directories.

Additional Variables / Variable Overrides

Flag: --dockerfile.var

Additional variables or variable overrides to apply before rendering a Dockerfile. There are three different cases which may occur:

  1. Override a variable on a single variant only. In this case the variable needs to be prefixed with the variants.name.

    --dockerfile.var <VARIANT_NAME>:<KEY_PATH>=value

  2. Override a variable on all variants. Here the variant name must be omitted.

    --dockerfile.var <KEY_PATH>=value

  3. Add a new variable. The same rules as mentioned above apply.

Examples:

  • Override the image tag of a variant named xy:

    --dockerfile.var xy:image.tag=latest

  • Override the image name for all variants:

    --dockerfile.var image.name=myimage

  • Add new elements with env:

    DTPL_DOCKERFILE_VAR='{"dev.debug": true, "dev.verbose": true}' dockerfile-templater (...)

Notes:

  • You may add new hierarchy elements, they will be created on the fly
  • Existing key: value elements cannot be converted into a hierarchy

Output

Flag: --out.dir

The generated Dockerfiles are written to the specified directory when rendered.

Output Name Format

Flag: --out.fmt

Dockerfiles are written with the specified naming scheme to the output directory. The format takes a go template string that can contain variables defined in the variants.

The default format (Dockerfile.{{ .image.name }}.{{ .image.tag }}) allows you to build the images like this for example (assuming no dots in the name/tag):

for DF in $(find dockerfiles -type f); do
    NAME=$(echo ${DF} | awk -F '.' '{print $2}')
    TAG=$(echo ${DF} | awk -F '.' '{print $3}')
    docker build . -f ${DF} -t ${NAME}:${TAG}
done

Verbosity

There are two additional flags which control the verbosity of the templater:

  • --verbose: Print debug messages
  • --debug: Debug the handled yml structures, this may help debugging the yml syntax, especially if the variants file is a template itself. This flag must be used in conjunction with --verbose.

Configuration File / Environment

As an alternative to commandline flags you may also provide the relevant flags with either a configuration file (--config) or environment variables prefixed with DTPL and dots replaced with underscores.

Example for --dockerfile.tpldir:

CLI usage:

(..) --dockerfile.tpldir some/dir --dockerfile.tpldir other/dir

Configuration file:

dockerfile:
    tpldir:
        - some/dir
        - other/dir

Environment variable:

export DTPL_DOCKERFILE_TPLDIR="some/dir other/dir"

Notes:

  • For the flag dockerfile.var the environment variable must be specified as json:

    DTPL_DOCKERFILE_VAR='{"key1": "value1"}'

Docker

There are currently two flavours of the dockerized templater, latest and debug. Similar to the containers from kaniko, the debug variant is based on a busybox image and can thus be used with an interactive shell.

Latest

This image is built from scratch and contains the templater only. Example usage:

docker run -it --rm \
           --user $(id -u):$(id -g) \
           -v ${PWD}:${PWD} -w ${PWD} \
       ghcr.io/bossm8/dockerfile-templater:latest \
           --dockerfile.tpl Dockerfile.tpl \
           --variants.def variants.yml \
           --variants.cfg variants.cfg.yml

Debug

The debug image can be used to generate Dockerfiles in pipelines for example. Below is an example GitLab CI/CD pipeline configuration:

stages:
    - pre-build
    - build

generate-dockerfiles:
    stage: pre-build
    image: 
        name: ghcr.io/bossm8/dockerfile-templater:debug
        entrypoint: [""]
    script:
        - templater
            --dockerfile.tpl Dockerfile.tpl
            --variants.def variants.yml
            --variants.cfg variants.cfg.yml
            --out.dir ${CI_PROJECT_DIR}/dockerfiles
    artifacts:
        paths:
            - dockerfiles

build-images:
    stage: build
    image: 
        name: gcr.io/kaniko-project/executor:debug
        entrypoint: [""]
    script:
        - |
            for DF in $(find dockerfiles -type f); do
                NAME=$(echo ${DF} | awk -F '.' '{print $2}')
                TAG=$(echo ${DF} | awk -F '.' '{print $3}')
                /kaniko/executor \
                    --cleanup \
                    --dockerfile ${DF} \
                    --destination ${NAME}:${TAG}
            done
    needs:
        - job: generate-dockerfiles
          artifacts: true

Binary

Find binaries for your OS in the releases.

Examples

The examples directory, as well as the pkg/docker (which is used to build the templater image with github workflows) contain some basic example files which can be used with the templater.