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Create self-contained development environments inside Docker containers

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Dock

dock is a tool for defining, building, and running self-contained development environments inside Docker containers.

Installation

All you need to run dock is to have Docker and Bash installed on your system.

via Homebrew (macOS)

brew tap brigade/dock
brew install dock

You can then upgrade at any time by running:

brew upgrade dock

via Bash (Linux/macOS)

You can install/upgrade Dock with this command:

curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/brigade/dock/master/script/install-dock | bash

It will ask for your sudo password only if necessary.

Docker for Mac

If you are using Docker for Mac, you need to add /usr/local/Cellar (if you installed Dock using Homebrew) or /usr/local/bin (if you installed using the Bash script) to the list of mountable directories.

This allows Dock to mount itself within the container so you can recursively execute Dock within Dock containers. You can add the path via Preferences -> File Sharing:

Docker for Mac File Sharing

Getting Started

You can try out Dock against the Dock repository itself to get a feel for how it works.

WARNING: This will start a privileged container on your machine (in order to start a Docker daemon within the container, it needs extended privileges). Proceed at your own risk.

git clone git://github.com/brigade/dock
cd dock
bin/dock # If you have installed Dock then you can just run `dock`

After running dock inside the Dock repository, you should be running inside a Docker container. The environment will look and feel like CentOS 7 because it is based off of that image (see the corresponding Dockerfile). Your current directory will be /workspace inside that container, and the contents of that directory will be the Dock repository itself (i.e. the current project).

$ pwd
/workspace
$ ls
Dockerfile LICENSE.md README.md ...

Any changes you make to these files will automatically be reflected in the original repository, and vice versa. This allows you to continue using your favorite tools and editors to make changes to your project, but actually run code or tests inside the container to isolate these from the rest of your system.

Usage

Run dock within your repository by specifying any options followed by the command you wish to run in the Dock container:

cd path/to/repo
dock [options] [command...]

If no command is given, Dock will execute the default_command defined in your Dock configuration file. If no default_command is specified, the ENTRYPOINT/CMD directives defined in the Dockerfile that created the image Dock is running will dictate which command will be executed.

Option Description
-a Attach to an already-running Dock container
-c config-file Path of Dock configuration file to use (default .dock)
-d Detach/daemonize (run resulting Dock container in the background)
-e dock-id Extend an existing Dock container (add new project configuration and services)
-f Force creation of new container (destroying old one if it exists)
-h Display summary of command line options
-q Silence Dock-related output (so only output from command run in the container is shown)
-t dock-id Terraform an existing Dock container (fully compose and merge embedded projects)
-v Display version information
-V Display verbose version information (for bug reports)

Attach to an already-running container

Dock is intended to make it easy to manage a single development environment for a repository, like you would any virtual machine. Thus it explicitly prevents you from running dock multiple times in the same project to run multiple containers for that single project (if you must, you can get around this by cloning the project into separate directories with different names so they are assigned different container names by default).

You can however open multiple shells to the same container by attaching to an already-running Dock container by running dock -a in the project directory.

Destroy an already-running container

If you run dock in a repository which already has an associated container running, you'll prompted to confirm if you would like to destroy the current container (if there's no interactive shell, Dock will halt with an error).

You can bypass this prompt by setting the environment variable DOCK_FORCE_DESTROY=1. This is useful in CI environments where there is no interactive shell but you are sure you always want to destroy any lingering containers.

Run a container in the background

If you want to have Dock start up isolated services and don't require an active shell session inside the container, you can start the container in detached mode.

Run dock -d or specify detach true in your Dock configuration.

Extend an existing container

You can run multiple projects within a single Dock container in very much the same way Dock runs a single project.

If you run dock in a repository and specify a Dock container identifier (used to annotate and distinguish between Dock container environments) to extend, dock will add the project src and all associated environment configuration (e.g. volumes, exposed ports, environment variables) into the Dock container represented by the identifier.

If the specified Dock container does not exist, dock will create and run a new Dock container based on the configuration of the current project.

$ cd /<path-to-project>     # step 1
$ dock -e <dock-id>         # step 2
...
SUCCESS: Dock <dock-id> successfully created!
$ cd /<path-to-new-project> # step 3
$ dock -e <dock-id>         # step 4
...
SUCCESS: Dock <dock-id> successfully extended!

Terraform an existing container

Specifying a -t flag along with a Dock container identifier when running Dock will result in the full composition and merging of the embedded project components within the container. This option essentially stands up all services and associated components added to the target Dock container using the extends options while also handling the proper identification and deduplication of shared components.

The result of the operation will be a container consistent with running docker-compose up on each docker-compose.yml file associated with all projects embedded within and obeying Docker's official docker-compose extension support.

$ dock -t <dock-id>       # step 1
...
SUCCESS: Dock <dock-id> successfully terraformed!

Automatically execute a script in a Dock container

By adding a correct shebang line to your script, you can have the script automatically run inside a Dock container.

#!/usr/local/bin/dock bash
echo "We are in a container!"

If you run this in a project with a valid Dock configuration file, the script will invoke Dock which will start a container using the image defined by the configuration execute the script using whatever command you passed as the second argument (bash in this case).

Any Dock-related output will go to the standard error stream, but the standard output stream will contain output from the original script. If you need to inspect the command's standard error stream and don't want to deal with filtering out Dock-related output, you can specify the QUIET environment variable in order to silence all Dock-related output. Note that this can potentially be confusing since if the image has never been built before it may take a while to build, giving the appearance of nothing happening.

WARNING: Never specify more than one argument to the shebang line. Different operating systems have different restrictions on shebangs. While some allow you to specify as many as you want, Linux in particular will treat all arguments after the executable as a single argument. For example, the following code:

#!/usr/local/bin/dock bash -c 'some command'
...

...will treat the shebang line as /usr/local/bin/dock "bash -c 'some command'" (i.e. treating bash -c 'some command' as a single argument), which will fail since there is no such file.

If you need to execute a script with a complicated set of arguments, create a wrapper script:

#!/usr/local/bin/dock script/my-wrapper-script
...

The wrapper script will be passed the path to the script file as a single argument. It is up to you to write the script to know how to handle/execute the file it is given.

Expose services inside the container on your host

While an important feature offered by Dock is isolating your development environments from each other (e.g. so that services listening on the same port don't conflict), it is convenient to be able to expose these ports on your host so you can easily interact with them using tools installed on your host.

You can expose/publish a port using the publish command in your configuration:

publish 3306:3306 # Expose MySQL on the same port on the host

Where this differs from the --publish flag of docker run is that if the port is already taken by another process on your machine (e.g. another Dock container for a different project) you'll still be able to start the container. You'll see a warning letting you know that the port could not be exposed.

If you really need to expose the service for a given project, stop the container for the other project so it releases the port, start the project whose service you want to expose, and then start back up your other project.

Alternatively, you can decide to expose the services to different ports on the host so they don't conflict.

Configuration

The Dock configuration file is quite flexible since it's simply sourced as a Bash script. By default Dock looks for a .dock file at the root of your repository and sources it.

This means anything you can do in Bash you can also do in this script. Therefore caution is required!

However, this also provides an incredible amount of power. A common use case is to dynamically change which environment variables are set or volumes are mounted based on whether you are running in a CI (continuous integration) testing environment or just a regular development environment.

Dock exposes configuration options and helpers.

Options

These configuration options can be set in your Dock configuration file.

attach_command

Command to execute when attaching to a container via dock -a. By default this is just bash.

attach_command gosu app_user

WARNING: You must split the command into individual arguments in order for them to be executed correctly. This means if you have a single argument with whitespace you'll need to wrap it in quotes or escape it:

attach_command echo "This is a single argument"
attach_command echo These are multiple separate arguments

build_arg

Specify an additional build argument to pass to the docker build command that Dock will execute when building the Dockerfile specified by the dockerfile option. Ignored if you have only specified an image rather than a dockerfile, as no building is done in such case.

build_arg MY_ARG "some value"

build_context

Specify the path or URL to use for the build context of the docker build command that Dock will execute when building the Dockerfile. Ignored if you have only specified an image rather than a dockerfile.

build_context path/in/repo

build_context https://example.com/context.tar.gz

See the docker build documentation for details on how the build context and Dockerfile paths are handled.

build_flags

Specify additional arguments for the docker build command that Dock will execute when building the Dockerfile specified by the dockerfile option. Ignored if you have only specified an image rather than a dockerfile, as no building is done in such case.

Note: This is not exclusively for the --build-arg flag that allows you to specify build-time variables (use the build_arg option instead). It allows you to specify any flag that docker build accepts, e.g. --memory, --no-cache, etc.

build_flags --no-cache

container_hostname

Specifies an explicit hostname for the container.

container_hostname "$(container_name).test.com"

container_name

Specifies the name to give the Dock container. Default is the directory name of the repository followed by "-dock", e.g. my-project-dock.

The container name is what Dock uses to determine if the container is already running.

container_name my-container-name

default_command

Specifies a default command to run if no command is explicitly given.

You should ideally always have a default command specified so that a user who knows nothing about your repository can simply run dock to get started.

default_command script/start-services

WARNING: You must split the command into individual arguments in order for them to be executed correctly. This means if you have a single argument with whitespace you'll need to wrap it in quotes or escape it:

default_command echo "This is a single argument"
default_command echo These are multiple separate arguments

detach

Specifies whether the Dock container should run in the background (e.g. the --detach flag of docker run).

You can re-attach to a detached Dock container by running dock -a.

detach true

detach_keys

Specifies the key sequence to detach from the container.

Dock changes this sequence from the default ctrl-p,p to ctrl-x,x. This makes the ctrl-p readline shortcut for cycling through previous commands work as expected without needing to type ctrl-p twice, which is useful when you are running a shell in the container.

This is almost certainly what you want, but detach_keys is available if you want to change it to some other sequence.

dockerfile

Specify path to the Dockerfile to build into an image used by the Dock container. If a relative path is given, this will be relative to the repository root directory (even if you have specified a custom build_context, the path is always relative to the root of the repository).

Cannot specify dockerfile and image options in the same configuration.

dockerfile Dockerfile

dock_in_dock

Specify whether to allow Dock to create containers within a Dock container. Default is false, and this is almost always what you want.

The Dock project itself needs to test the creation of Dock containers within a Dock container, so it enables this feature.

dock_in_dock true

env_var

Specifies an environment variable name and value to be set inside the container.

env_var MY_ENV_VAR "my value"

image

If dockerfile is specified, defines the image name to tag the build with.

Otherwise this specifies the image used to create the container.

image centos:7.2.1511

optional_env_var

Specifies the name of an environment variable which is included in the container environment if defined in the context in which dock is run. If not defined, it is ignored and no value is set inside the container.

This is a way of safely declaring which environment variables you want to "inject" from your host into the Dock container.

optional_env_var MY_OPTIONAL_ENV_VAR

privileged

Whether to run the container with elevated privileges. Defaults to false.

privileged true

publish

Expose a port inside the Dock container to the host. Useful if you want to make it easier for developers to connect to services inside the Dock container using tools installed on their host machine.

If another process on the host has already bound to the port, Dock will display a warning but will otherwise ignore the error, since you will still be able to access the service from inside the container.

The format of the port specification is the same as the -p/--publish flag of the docker run command ([host-ip:][host-port:]container-port).

# Expose MySQL
publish "3306:3306"

pull_latest

Specifies whether Docker should always attempt to pull the latest version of an image/tag to ensure it is up to date. Default is false.

pull_latest true

required_env_var

Specifies the name of an environment variable that must be defined. If not defined, Dock will halt with an error message.

required_env_var MY_REQUIRED_ENV_VAR

run_flags

Specify additional arguments for the docker run command that Dock will execute.

Most common flags are configured via the various options allowed in the Dock configuration, e.g. env_var, volume, etc. However, for special cases this is provided to allow you to specify additional flags.

run_flags --memory 1g

startup_services

Services to startup when terraforming a multi-project, integrated and self-contained Dock development environment, as defined within a project's docker-compose.yml.

startup_services "my_service mysql"

volume

Specify a volume or bind mount.

# Mount /var/lib/docker directory in the container on the host file system.
# Destroyed on container shutdown. Useful if you are using a container file
# system like OverlayFS and want to perform a lot of writes with the
# performance of the underlying host file system.
volume "/var/lib/docker"

# Create a data volume named "${container_name}_docker" which store the
# contents of the container's /var/lib/docker directory. Will not be destroyed
# when the container is shutdown/destroyed.
volume "${container_name}_docker:/var/lib/docker"

# Mount a file/directory on the host file system at a particular location in
# the container. Use the ${repo_root} variable so you reference a path that
# will exist regardless of the location of your repository.
volume "${repo_root}/script/my-script:/usr/bin/my-script"

workspace_path

Define the path in the container that the repository will be mounted at. Default is /workspace.

workspace_path /my-custom-dir

Helpers

Dock defines a number of helper functions which may be useful when writing your configuration file.

WARNING: Bash variables and functions are referenced differently. Since these helpers are all functions, always use $(...) to include the output of a function in a string, e.g.:

volume "$(container_name)_docker:/var/lib/docker"

ask

Asks a user for input. Uses the default answer if we're not running in an interactive context (as specified by interactive).

All arguments must be specified.

ask "Are you sure? (y/n)" n variable_to_store_answer_in

container_hostname

Outputs the explicit hostname that will be assigned to the container, if one was specified via container_hostname "some.name". Otherwise it returns a non-zero exit status.

container_name

Outputs the name of the Docker container that Dock will create.

detach

Returns whether container will be detached on startup.

Returns zero exit status (success) if yes.

group_id

Group ID of the user that ran the Dock command.

interactive

Whether we're running Dock in an interactive context where a human can provide input (e.g. standard input is a TTY).

Returns zero exit status (success) if yes.

linux

Whether the host is running Linux.

Returns zero exit status (success) if yes.

mac_os

Whether the host is running macOS.

Returns zero exit status (success) if yes.

privileged

Returns whether the container will be started with extended privileges.

Returns zero exit status (success) if yes.

repo_path

Path to repository root on the host system.

user_id

User ID of the user that ran the Dock command.

workspace_path

Directory in the container that the repository will be mounted at.

Outputs the absolute path.

Development

Hacking on Dock is easy thanks to the fact that it is run within a Dock container! Provided you have Docker and Bash installed on your system, working on Dock is as easy as running bin/dock from the root of the repository.

Running Tests

Tests can be run by executing:

bin/test

...from the root of the repository. This will start a Dock container and run all tests, which are written in Bash using Bats.

To run a specific test or set of tests, execute:

bin/test test/path/to/test.bats test/path/to/another.bats

Change Log

If you're interested in seeing a summarized list of changes between each version of Dock, see the Dock Change Log

License

Dock is released under the Apache 2.0 license.

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