dcinja
is the smallest binary size template engine, designed specifically for Docker images.
- Overview
- Why dcinja?
- Dependency library
- Binary size
- Command line usage
- Template document
- Example
- Real docker example
- Integration from release build
- Troubleshooting
dcinja
leverages the powerful inja template engine, encapsulated within a Docker command-line binary.
It offers a dynamic configuration generator for Docker containers, making it an excellent alternative
to envsubst
.
Unlike envsubst
, which has limitations in style and usage, dcinja
provides a more robust solution
for generating various types of configurations.
For building Docker images, a smaller execution binary size is often preferable. Compiled with a C++ compiler, the dcinja binary is only 500KB ~ 600KB, making it highly suitable for dynamically generating configuration files at runtime within containers.
dcinja
is built upon robust, well-maintained C++ libraries, ensuring stability and performance:
All dependencies are statically linked into the dcinja binary, meaning you do not need to install any of these libraries separately. This makes dcinja easy to use and integrate into your Docker images without additional setup.
arch | os | dcinja size | embedded libstdc++ |
---|---|---|---|
linux-amd64 | Ubuntu 16+, Debian stretch+ | 591KB | Y |
alpine | alpine 3.9+ | 586KB | N (libstdc++.so 1.3MB+) |
Reference repo docker example to build dcinja
and copy to /bin/
as system command in docker image.
help description
dcinja [OPTION...]
-h, --help print help
-w, --cwd arg change current working dir
-s, --src arg source template file path
-d, --dest arg dest template file path
-e, --defines arg define environment parameters, read system env when not assigned value, ex: `-e NAME=FOO -e NUM=1 -e MY_ENV`
--force-system-envs force to use system envs as final value
-j, --json arg define json content, ex: `-j {"NAME": "FOO"} -j {"PHONE": "123"}`
-f, --json-file arg load json content from file, ex: `-f p1.json -f p2.json`
-v, --verbose verbose mode
inja - document tutorial, It's compatible with Jinja2.
- variables
{{ ... }}
- statements
{% ... %}
- for loop
{% for key in data %} ... {% endfor %}
- condition
{% if value >= 1 %} ... {% else if value >= 0 %} ... {% endif %}
- include
{% include "xxx.template" %}
- assignment
{% set name="test" %}
- for loop
- functions
- upper
{{ upper("name") }}
- length
{{ length(data_list) }}
- ...
- upper
- comments
{# ... #}
input template from STDIN, output template to STDOUT
$ echo "TEST Name: {{ name }}" | dcinja -j '{"name": "Foo"}'
>>> TEST Name: Foo
input template from file, output template to file
$ dcinja -j '{"name": "Foo"}' -s input.template -d output.template
input json from file
$ dcinja -f param.json -s input.template -d output.template
define env from command line or system env
$ dcinja -e name=Foo -s input.template -d output.template
or
$ export name=Foo
$ dcinja -e name -s input.template -d output.template
parameter context priority:
-e
>> -j
>> -f
-f
: json file-j
: json content defiend in command line-e
: environment parameter defeind in command line or system--force-system-envs
: force to use system envs as final value
$ cat name.json
>>> {"name": "P1"}
$ echo "Name: {{ name }}" | dcinja -f name.json
>>> Name: P1
$ echo "Name: {{ name }}" | dcinja -j '{"name": "P2"}' -e name=P3 -f name.json
>>> Name: P3
- nginx, dynamic generate nginx.conf and index.html by entrypoint. Example Link.
- nginx, dynamic generate nginx.conf and header in Dockerfile. Example Link.
- nginx, generate nginx.conf and header in Dockerfile at build time. Example Link.
Dockerfile example, download dcinja
into docker image /bin/ as command. Copy the dcinja
executable file via
docker COPY --from
command.
ubuntu
FROM ubuntu:latest
COPY --from=falldog/dcinja:latest /app/dcinja /bin
# testing, check dcinja working normal
RUN dcinja -h \
&& echo "Normal: {{ name }}" | dcinja -j '{"name": "TEST"}'
# ...
alpine
Need to install libstdc++
package.
FROM alpine:latest
RUN apk --no-cache add libstdc++
COPY --from=falldog/dcinja:latest-alpine /app/dcinja /bin
# testing, check dcinja working normal
RUN dcinja -h \
&& echo "Normal: {{ name }}" | dcinja -j '{"name": "TEST"}'
# ...
The binary size build by c++ compiler, it's platform sensitive, the minimum c++ compiler support is C++11. It will dependent with libstdc++.so
.
ldd result at ubuntu 18.04
$ ldd dcinja
linux-vdso.so.1 (0x00007ffe933a9000)
libstdc++.so.6 => /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libstdc++.so.6 (0x00007f376bc40000)
libm.so.6 => /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libm.so.6 (0x00007f376b8a2000)
libgcc_s.so.1 => /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libgcc_s.so.1 (0x00007f376b68a000)
libc.so.6 => /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6 (0x00007f376b299000)
/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (0x00007f376c220000)
Need to make sure your environment have the correct c++ runtime on
- Ubuntu
apt-get update
apt-get install libstdc++
(Only support ubuntu 16.04+)
- Alpine
apk add libstdc++