Limit your docker
image size with a simple CLI command.
Perfect to be used inside your CI process.
Read the announcing post.
pip install docker-image-size-limit
Or use our Github Action or pre-built docker image.
We support just a single command:
$ disl your-image-name:label 300MiB
your-image-name:label exceeds 300MiB limit by 114.4 MiB
Add --max-layers
flag to also lint the maximum amount of layers possible
in your image:
# If your image has 7 layers:
$ disl your-image-name:label 300MiB --max-layers=5
your-image-name:label exceeds 5 maximum layers by 2
# If your image has 5 layers:
$ disl your-image-name:label 300MiB --max-layers=5
# ok!
You can specify your image as:
- Image name:
python
- Image name with tag:
python:3.6.6-alpine
You can specify your size as:
- Raw number of bytes:
1024
- Human-readable megabytes:
30 MB
or30 MiB
- Human-readable gigabytes:
1 GB
or1 GiB
- Any other size supported by
humanfriendly
You can also import and use this library as python
code:
from docker import from_env
from docker_image_size_limit import check_image_size
oversize = check_image_size(from_env(), 'image-name:latest', '1 GiB')
assert oversize < 0, 'Too big image!' # negative oversize - is a good thing!
We also ship PEP-561 compatible type annotations with this library.
You can also use this check as a GitHub Action:
- uses: wemake-services/docker-image-size-limit@master
with:
image: "$YOUR_IMAGE_NAME"
size: "$YOUR_SIZE_LIMIT"
Here's an example.
We have a pre-built image available.
First, pull our pre-built docker image:
docker pull wemakeservices/docker-image-size-limit
Then you can use it like so:
docker run -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock --rm \
-e INPUT_IMAGE="$YOUR_IMAGE_NAME" \
-e INPUT_SIZE="$YOUR_SIZE_LIMIT" \
wemakeservices/docker-image-size-limit
You can use this script instead:
LIMIT=1024 # adjust at your will
IMAGE='your-image-name:latest'
SIZE="$(docker image inspect "$IMAGE" --format='{{.Size}}')"
test "$SIZE" -gt "$LIMIT" && echo 'Limit exceeded'; exit 1 || echo 'Ok!'
But I prefer to reuse tools over
custom bash
scripts here and there.
MIT.