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Stacker Tutorial

Stacker is a tool that allows for building OCI images in a reproducible manner, completely unprivileged. For this tutorial, we assume you have followed the installation guide and your environment satisfies all the runtime dependecies.

First stacker.yaml

The basic input to stacker is the stacker.yaml file, which describes what the base for your OCI image should be, and what to do to construct it. One of the smallest stacker files is just:

first:
    from:
        type: docker
        url: docker://centos:latest

Note the key first represents the name of the layer, and it can have any value except config, which has a special usage, see the stacker yaml documentation

With this stacker file as first.yaml, we can do a basic stacker build:

$ stacker build -f first.yaml
building image first...
importing files...
Getting image source signatures
Copying blob sha256:5e35d10a3ebadf9d6ab606ce72e1e77f8646b2e2ff8dd3a60d4401c3e3a76f31
 69.60 MB / 69.60 MB [=====================================================] 16s
Copying config sha256:44a17ce607dadfb71de41d82c75d756c2bca4db677bba99969f28de726e4411e
 862 B / 862 B [============================================================] 0s
Writing manifest to image destination
Storing signatures
unpacking to /home/ubuntu/tutorial/roots/_working
running commands...
generating layer...
filesystem first built successfully

What happened here is that stacker downloaded the centos:latest tag from the docker hub and generated it as an OCI image with tag "first". We can verify this:

$ umoci ls --layout oci
centos-latest
first

The centos-latest there is the OCI tag for the base image, and first is the image we generated.

The next thing to note is that if we do another rebuild, less things happen:

$ stacker build -f first.yaml
building image first...
importing files...
found cached layer first

Stacker will cache all of the inputs to stacker files, and only rebuild when one of them changes. The cache (and all of stacker's metadata) live in the .stacker directory where you run stacker from. Stacker's metadata can be cleaned with stacker clean, and its entire cache can be removed with stacker clean.

So far, the only input is a base image, but what about if we want to import a script to run or a config file? Consider the next example:

first:
    from:
        type: docker
        url: docker://centos:latest
    import:
        - config.json
        - install.sh
    run: |
        mkdir -p /etc/myapp
        cp /stacker/config.json /etc/myapp/
        /stacker/install.sh

If the content of install.sh is just echo hello world, then stacker's output will look something like:

$ stacker build -f first.yaml
building image first...
importing files...
copying config.json
copying install.sh
Getting image source signatures
Skipping fetch of repeat blob sha256:5e35d10a3ebadf9d6ab606ce72e1e77f8646b2e2ff8dd3a60d4401c3e3a76f31
Copying config sha256:44a17ce607dadfb71de41d82c75d756c2bca4db677bba99969f28de726e4411e
 862 B / 862 B [============================================================] 0s
Writing manifest to image destination
Storing signatures
unpacking to /home/ubuntu/tutorial/roots/_working
running commands...
running commands for first
+ mkdir -p /etc/myapp
+ cp /stacker/config.json /etc/myapp
+ /stacker/install.sh
hello world
generating layer...
filesystem first built successfully

There are two new stacker file directives here:

import:
    - config.json
    - install.sh

Which imports those two files into the /stacker directory inside the image. This directory will not be present during the final image, so copy any files you need out of it into their final place in the image. Also, importing things from the web (via http://example.com/foo.tar.gz urls) is supported, and these things will be cached on disk. Stacker will not evaluate as long as it has a file there, so if something at the URL changes, you need to run stacker build with the --no-cache argument, or simply delete the file from .stacker/imports/$target_name/foo.tar.gz.

And then there is:

run: |
    mkdir -p /etc/myapp
    cp /stacker/config.json /etc/myapp/
    /stacker/install.sh

Which is the set of commands to run in order to install and configure the image.

Also note that it used a cached version of the base layer, but then re-built the part where you asked for commands to be run, since that is new.

dev/build containers

Finally, stacker offers "build only" containers, which are just built, but not emitted in the final OCI image. For example:

build:
    from:
        type: docker
        url: docker://ubuntu:latest
    run: |
        apt update
        apt install -y software-properties-common git
        apt-add-repository -y ppa:gophers/archive
        apt update
        apt install -y golang-1.9
        export PATH=$PATH:/usr/lib/go-1.9/bin
        export GOPATH=~/go
        mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/openSUSE
        cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/openSUSE
        git clone https://github.com/opencontainers/umoci
        cd umoci
        make umoci.static
        cp umoci.static /
    build_only: true
umoci:
    from:
        type: docker
        url: docker://centos:latest
    import: stacker://build/umoci.static
    run: cp /stacker/umoci.static /usr/bin/umoci

Will build a static version of umoci in an ubuntu container, but the final image will only contain an umoci tag with a statically linked version of umoci at /usr/bin/umoci. There are a few new directives to support this:

build_only: true

indicates that the container shouldn't be emitted in the final image, because we're going to import something from it and don't need the rest of it. The line:

import: stacker://build/umoci.static

is what actually does this import, and it says "from a previously built stacker image called 'build', import /umoci.static".