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authorAthar Hameed <athar@gitlab.com>2018-03-27 14:46:56 +0000
committerAchilleas Pipinellis <axil@gitlab.com>2018-03-27 14:46:56 +0000
commit0f2080717310d1a94f2825f54abb842563beaf65 (patch)
tree6a3698d958e15cbd26e3e9da7269fe1cf2a0b438 /doc/ci/docker
parent96b355dca025ed2d85784bd73a9ff9d838181a3f (diff)
downloadgitlab-ce-0f2080717310d1a94f2825f54abb842563beaf65.tar.gz
Add Docker layer caching to CI docker-in-docker docs
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/ci/docker')
-rw-r--r--doc/ci/docker/using_docker_build.md91
1 files changed, 76 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ci/docker/using_docker_build.md b/doc/ci/docker/using_docker_build.md
index 22afcb9199d..183808641c0 100644
--- a/doc/ci/docker/using_docker_build.md
+++ b/doc/ci/docker/using_docker_build.md
@@ -1,26 +1,29 @@
-# Using Docker Build
+# Building Docker images with GitLab CI/CD
-GitLab CI allows you to use Docker Engine to build and test docker-based projects.
+GitLab CI/CD allows you to use Docker Engine to build and test docker-based projects.
-**This also allows to you to use `docker-compose` and other docker-enabled tools.**
+TIP: **Tip:**
+This also allows to you to use `docker-compose` and other docker-enabled tools.
One of the new trends in Continuous Integration/Deployment is to:
-1. create an application image,
-1. run tests against the created image,
-1. push image to a remote registry, and
-1. deploy to a server from the pushed image.
+1. Create an application image
+1. Run tests against the created image
+1. Push image to a remote registry
+1. Deploy to a server from the pushed image
-It's also useful when your application already has the `Dockerfile` that can be used to create and test an image:
+It's also useful when your application already has the `Dockerfile` that can be
+used to create and test an image:
```bash
-$ docker build -t my-image dockerfiles/
-$ docker run my-docker-image /script/to/run/tests
-$ docker tag my-image my-registry:5000/my-image
-$ docker push my-registry:5000/my-image
+docker build -t my-image dockerfiles/
+docker run my-docker-image /script/to/run/tests
+docker tag my-image my-registry:5000/my-image
+docker push my-registry:5000/my-image
```
-This requires special configuration of GitLab Runner to enable `docker` support during jobs.
+This requires special configuration of GitLab Runner to enable `docker` support
+during jobs.
## Runner Configuration
@@ -74,8 +77,8 @@ GitLab Runner then executes job scripts as the `gitlab-runner` user.
5. You can now use `docker` command and install `docker-compose` if needed.
-> **Note:**
-* By adding `gitlab-runner` to the `docker` group you are effectively granting `gitlab-runner` full root permissions.
+NOTE: **Note:**
+By adding `gitlab-runner` to the `docker` group you are effectively granting `gitlab-runner` full root permissions.
For more information please read [On Docker security: `docker` group considered harmful](https://www.andreas-jung.com/contents/on-docker-security-docker-group-considered-harmful).
### Use docker-in-docker executor
@@ -259,8 +262,66 @@ aware of the following implications:
docker run --rm -t -i -v $(pwd)/src:/home/app/src test-image:latest run_app_tests
```
+## Making docker-in-docker builds faster with Docker layer caching
+
+When using docker-in-docker, Docker will download all layers of your image every
+time you create a build. Recent versions of Docker (Docker 1.13 and above) can
+use a pre-existing image as a cache during the `docker build` step, considerably
+speeding up the build process.
+
+### How Docker caching works
+
+When running `docker build`, each command in `Dockerfile` results in a layer.
+These layers are kept around as a cache and can be reused if there haven't been
+any changes. Change in one layer causes all subsequent layers to be recreated.
+
+You can specify a tagged image to be used as a cache source for the `docker build`
+command by using the `--cache-from` argument. Multiple images can be specified
+as a cache source by using multiple `--cache-from` arguments. Keep in mind that
+any image that's used with the `--cache-from` argument must first be pulled
+(using `docker pull`) before it can be used as a cache source.
+
+### Using Docker caching
+
+Here's a simple `.gitlab-ci.yml` file showing how Docker caching can be utilized:
+
+```yaml
+image: docker:latest
+
+services:
+ - docker:dind
+
+variables:
+ CONTAINER_IMAGE: registry.gitlab.com/$CI_PROJECT_PATH
+ DOCKER_DRIVER: overlay2
+
+before_script:
+ - docker login -u gitlab-ci-token -p $CI_JOB_TOKEN registry.gitlab.com
+
+build:
+ stage: build
+ script:
+ - docker pull $CONTAINER_IMAGE:latest || true
+ - docker build --cache-from $CONTAINER_IMAGE:latest --tag $CONTAINER_IMAGE:$CI_BUILD_REF --tag $CONTAINER_IMAGE:latest .
+ - docker push $CONTAINER_IMAGE:$CI_BUILD_REF
+ - docker push $CONTAINER_IMAGE:latest
+```
+
+The steps in the `script` section for the `build` stage can be summed up to:
+
+1. The first command tries to pull the image from the registry so that it can be
+ used as a cache for the `docker build` command.
+1. The second command builds a Docker image using the pulled image as a
+ cache (notice the `--cache-from $CONTAINER_IMAGE:latest` argument) if
+ available, and tags it.
+1. The last two commands push the tagged Docker images to the container registry
+ so that they may also be used as cache for subsequent builds.
+
## Using the OverlayFS driver
+NOTE: **Note:**
+The shared Runners on GitLab.com use the `overlay2` driver by default.
+
By default, when using `docker:dind`, Docker uses the `vfs` storage driver which
copies the filesystem on every run. This is a very disk-intensive operation
which can be avoided if a different driver is used, for example `overlay2`.