github.com/slene/docker@v1.8.0-rc1/docs/articles/dockerfile_best-practices.md (about) 1 <!--[metadata]> 2 +++ 3 title = "Best practices for writing Dockerfiles" 4 description = "Hints, tips and guidelines for writing clean, reliable Dockerfiles" 5 keywords = ["Examples, Usage, base image, docker, documentation, dockerfile, best practices, hub, official repo"] 6 [menu.main] 7 parent = "smn_images" 8 +++ 9 <![end-metadata]--> 10 11 # Best practices for writing Dockerfiles 12 13 ## Overview 14 15 Docker can build images automatically by reading the instructions from a 16 `Dockerfile`, a text file that contains all the commands, in order, needed to 17 build a given image. `Dockerfile`s adhere to a specific format and use a 18 specific set of instructions. You can learn the basics on the 19 [Dockerfile Reference](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/) page. If 20 you’re new to writing `Dockerfile`s, you should start there. 21 22 This document covers the best practices and methods recommended by Docker, 23 Inc. and the Docker community for creating easy-to-use, effective 24 `Dockerfile`s. We strongly suggest you follow these recommendations (in fact, 25 if you’re creating an Official Image, you *must* adhere to these practices). 26 27 You can see many of these practices and recommendations in action in the [buildpack-deps `Dockerfile`](https://github.com/docker-library/buildpack-deps/blob/master/jessie/Dockerfile). 28 29 > Note: for more detailed explanations of any of the Dockerfile commands 30 >mentioned here, visit the [Dockerfile Reference](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/) page. 31 32 ## General guidelines and recommendations 33 34 ### Containers should be ephemeral 35 36 The container produced by the image your `Dockerfile` defines should be as 37 ephemeral as possible. By “ephemeral,” we mean that it can be stopped and 38 destroyed and a new one built and put in place with an absolute minimum of 39 set-up and configuration. 40 41 ### Use a .dockerignore file 42 43 In most cases, it's best to put each Dockerfile in an empty directory. Then, 44 add to that directory only the files needed for building the Dockerfile. To 45 increase the build's performance, you can exclude files and directories by 46 adding a `.dockerignore` file to that directory as well. This file supports 47 exclusion patterns similar to `.gitignore` files. For information on creating one, 48 see the [.dockerignore file](../../reference/builder/#dockerignore-file). 49 50 ### Avoid installing unnecessary packages 51 52 In order to reduce complexity, dependencies, file sizes, and build times, you 53 should avoid installing extra or unnecessary packages just because they 54 might be “nice to have.” For example, you don’t need to include a text editor 55 in a database image. 56 57 ### Run only one process per container 58 59 In almost all cases, you should only run a single process in a single 60 container. Decoupling applications into multiple containers makes it much 61 easier to scale horizontally and reuse containers. If that service depends on 62 another service, make use of [container linking](https://docs.docker.com/userguide/dockerlinks/). 63 64 ### Minimize the number of layers 65 66 You need to find the balance between readability (and thus long-term 67 maintainability) of the `Dockerfile` and minimizing the number of layers it 68 uses. Be strategic and cautious about the number of layers you use. 69 70 ### Sort multi-line arguments 71 72 Whenever possible, ease later changes by sorting multi-line arguments 73 alphanumerically. This will help you avoid duplication of packages and make the 74 list much easier to update. This also makes PRs a lot easier to read and 75 review. Adding a space before a backslash (`\`) helps as well. 76 77 Here’s an example from the [`buildpack-deps` image](https://github.com/docker-library/buildpack-deps): 78 79 RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y \ 80 bzr \ 81 cvs \ 82 git \ 83 mercurial \ 84 subversion 85 86 ### Build cache 87 88 During the process of building an image Docker will step through the 89 instructions in your `Dockerfile` executing each in the order specified. 90 As each instruction is examined Docker will look for an existing image in its 91 cache that it can reuse, rather than creating a new (duplicate) image. 92 If you do not want to use the cache at all you can use the ` --no-cache=true` 93 option on the `docker build` command. 94 95 However, if you do let Docker use its cache then it is very important to 96 understand when it will, and will not, find a matching image. The basic rules 97 that Docker will follow are outlined below: 98 99 * Starting with a base image that is already in the cache, the next 100 instruction is compared against all child images derived from that base 101 image to see if one of them was built using the exact same instruction. If 102 not, the cache is invalidated. 103 104 * In most cases simply comparing the instruction in the `Dockerfile` with one 105 of the child images is sufficient. However, certain instructions require 106 a little more examination and explanation. 107 108 * For the `ADD` and `COPY` instructions, the contents of the file(s) 109 in the image are examined and a checksum is calculated for each file. 110 The last-modified and last-accessed times of the file(s) are not considered in 111 these checksums. During the cache lookup, the checksum is compared against the 112 checksum in the existing images. If anything has changed in the file(s), such 113 as the contents and metadata, then the cache is invalidated. 114 115 * Aside from the `ADD` and `COPY` commands cache checking will not look at the 116 files in the container to determine a cache match. For example, when processing 117 a `RUN apt-get -y update` command the files updated in the container 118 will not be examined to determine if a cache hit exists. In that case just 119 the command string itself will be used to find a match. 120 121 Once the cache is invalidated, all subsequent `Dockerfile` commands will 122 generate new images and the cache will not be used. 123 124 ## The Dockerfile instructions 125 126 Below you'll find recommendations for the best way to write the 127 various instructions available for use in a `Dockerfile`. 128 129 ### FROM 130 131 [Dockerfile reference for the FROM instruction](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#from) 132 133 Whenever possible, use current Official Repositories as the basis for your 134 image. We recommend the [Debian image](https://registry.hub.docker.com/_/debian/) 135 since it’s very tightly controlled and kept extremely minimal (currently under 136 100 mb), while still being a full distribution. 137 138 ### RUN 139 140 [Dockerfile reference for the RUN instruction](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#run) 141 142 As always, to make your `Dockerfile` more readable, understandable, and 143 maintainable, put long or complex `RUN` statements on multiple lines separated 144 with backslashes. 145 146 Probably the most common use-case for `RUN` is an application of `apt-get`. 147 When using `apt-get`, here are a few things to keep in mind: 148 149 * Don’t do `RUN apt-get update` on a single line. This will cause 150 caching issues if the referenced archive gets updated, which will make your 151 subsequent `apt-get install` fail without comment. 152 153 * Avoid `RUN apt-get upgrade` or `dist-upgrade`, since many of the “essential” 154 packages from the base images will fail to upgrade inside an unprivileged 155 container. If a base package is out of date, you should contact its 156 maintainers. If you know there’s a particular package, `foo`, that needs to be 157 updated, use `apt-get install -y foo` and it will update automatically. 158 159 * Do write instructions like: 160 161 RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y \ 162 package-bar \ 163 package-baz \ 164 package-foo 165 166 Writing the instruction this way not only makes it easier to read 167 and maintain, but also, by including `apt-get update`, ensures that the cache 168 will naturally be busted and the latest versions will be installed with no 169 further coding or manual intervention required. 170 171 * Further natural cache-busting can be realized by version-pinning packages 172 (e.g., `package-foo=1.3.*`). This will force retrieval of that version 173 regardless of what’s in the cache. 174 Writing your `apt-get` code this way will greatly ease maintenance and reduce 175 failures due to unanticipated changes in required packages. 176 177 #### Example 178 179 Below is a well-formed `RUN` instruction that demonstrates the above 180 recommendations. Note that the last package, `s3cmd`, specifies a version 181 `1.1.0*`. If the image previously used an older version, specifying the new one 182 will cause a cache bust of `apt-get update` and ensure the installation of 183 the new version (which in this case had a new, required feature). 184 185 RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y \ 186 aufs-tools \ 187 automake \ 188 btrfs-tools \ 189 build-essential \ 190 curl \ 191 dpkg-sig \ 192 git \ 193 iptables \ 194 libapparmor-dev \ 195 libcap-dev \ 196 libsqlite3-dev \ 197 lxc=1.0* \ 198 mercurial \ 199 parallel \ 200 reprepro \ 201 ruby1.9.1 \ 202 ruby1.9.1-dev \ 203 s3cmd=1.1.0* 204 205 Writing the instruction this way also helps you avoid potential duplication of 206 a given package because it is much easier to read than an instruction like: 207 208 RUN apt-get install -y package-foo && apt-get install -y package-bar 209 210 ### CMD 211 212 [Dockerfile reference for the CMD instruction](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#cmd) 213 214 The `CMD` instruction should be used to run the software contained by your 215 image, along with any arguments. `CMD` should almost always be used in the 216 form of `CMD [“executable”, “param1”, “param2”…]`. Thus, if the image is for a 217 service (Apache, Rails, etc.), you would run something like 218 `CMD ["apache2","-DFOREGROUND"]`. Indeed, this form of the instruction is 219 recommended for any service-based image. 220 221 In most other cases, `CMD` should be given an interactive shell (bash, python, 222 perl, etc), for example, `CMD ["perl", "-de0"]`, `CMD ["python"]`, or 223 `CMD [“php”, “-a”]`. Using this form means that when you execute something like 224 `docker run -it python`, you’ll get dropped into a usable shell, ready to go. 225 `CMD` should rarely be used in the manner of `CMD [“param”, “param”]` in 226 conjunction with [`ENTRYPOINT`](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#entrypoint), unless 227 you and your expected users are already quite familiar with how `ENTRYPOINT` 228 works. 229 230 ### EXPOSE 231 232 [Dockerfile reference for the EXPOSE instruction](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#expose) 233 234 The `EXPOSE` instruction indicates the ports on which a container will listen 235 for connections. Consequently, you should use the common, traditional port for 236 your application. For example, an image containing the Apache web server would 237 use `EXPOSE 80`, while an image containing MongoDB would use `EXPOSE 27017` and 238 so on. 239 240 For external access, your users can execute `docker run` with a flag indicating 241 how to map the specified port to the port of their choice. 242 For container linking, Docker provides environment variables for the path from 243 the recipient container back to the source (ie, `MYSQL_PORT_3306_TCP`). 244 245 ### ENV 246 247 [Dockerfile reference for the ENV instruction](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#env) 248 249 In order to make new software easier to run, you can use `ENV` to update the 250 `PATH` environment variable for the software your container installs. For 251 example, `ENV PATH /usr/local/nginx/bin:$PATH` will ensure that `CMD [“nginx”]` 252 just works. 253 254 The `ENV` instruction is also useful for providing required environment 255 variables specific to services you wish to containerize, such as Postgres’s 256 `PGDATA`. 257 258 Lastly, `ENV` can also be used to set commonly used version numbers so that 259 version bumps are easier to maintain, as seen in the following example: 260 261 ENV PG_MAJOR 9.3 262 ENV PG_VERSION 9.3.4 263 RUN curl -SL http://example.com/postgres-$PG_VERSION.tar.xz | tar -xJC /usr/src/postgress && … 264 ENV PATH /usr/local/postgres-$PG_MAJOR/bin:$PATH 265 266 Similar to having constant variables in a program (as opposed to hard-coding 267 values), this approach lets you change a single `ENV` instruction to 268 auto-magically bump the version of the software in your container. 269 270 ### ADD or COPY 271 272 [Dockerfile reference for the ADD instruction](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#add)<br/> 273 [Dockerfile reference for the COPY instruction](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#copy) 274 275 Although `ADD` and `COPY` are functionally similar, generally speaking, `COPY` 276 is preferred. That’s because it’s more transparent than `ADD`. `COPY` only 277 supports the basic copying of local files into the container, while `ADD` has 278 some features (like local-only tar extraction and remote URL support) that are 279 not immediately obvious. Consequently, the best use for `ADD` is local tar file 280 auto-extraction into the image, as in `ADD rootfs.tar.xz /`. 281 282 If you have multiple `Dockerfile` steps that use different files from your 283 context, `COPY` them individually, rather than all at once. This will ensure that 284 each step's build cache is only invalidated (forcing the step to be re-run) if the 285 specifically required files change. 286 287 For example: 288 289 COPY requirements.txt /tmp/ 290 RUN pip install /tmp/requirements.txt 291 COPY . /tmp/ 292 293 Results in fewer cache invalidations for the `RUN` step, than if you put the 294 `COPY . /tmp/` before it. 295 296 Because image size matters, using `ADD` to fetch packages from remote URLs is 297 strongly discouraged; you should use `curl` or `wget` instead. That way you can 298 delete the files you no longer need after they've been extracted and you won't 299 have to add another layer in your image. For example, you should avoid doing 300 things like: 301 302 ADD http://example.com/big.tar.xz /usr/src/things/ 303 RUN tar -xJf /usr/src/things/big.tar.xz -C /usr/src/things 304 RUN make -C /usr/src/things all 305 306 And instead, do something like: 307 308 RUN mkdir -p /usr/src/things \ 309 && curl -SL http://example.com/big.tar.xz \ 310 | tar -xJC /usr/src/things \ 311 && make -C /usr/src/things all 312 313 For other items (files, directories) that do not require `ADD`’s tar 314 auto-extraction capability, you should always use `COPY`. 315 316 ### ENTRYPOINT 317 318 [Dockerfile reference for the ENTRYPOINT instruction](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#entrypoint) 319 320 The best use for `ENTRYPOINT` is to set the image's main command, allowing that 321 image to be run as though it was that command (and then use `CMD` as the 322 default flags). 323 324 Let's start with an example of an image for the command line tool `s3cmd`: 325 326 ENTRYPOINT ["s3cmd"] 327 CMD ["--help"] 328 329 Now the image can be run like this to show the command's help: 330 331 $ docker run s3cmd 332 333 Or using the right parameters to execute a command: 334 335 $ docker run s3cmd ls s3://mybucket 336 337 This is useful because the image name can double as a reference to the binary as 338 shown in the command above. 339 340 The `ENTRYPOINT` instruction can also be used in combination with a helper 341 script, allowing it to function in a similar way to the command above, even 342 when starting the tool may require more than one step. 343 344 For example, the [Postgres Official Image](https://registry.hub.docker.com/_/postgres/) 345 uses the following script as its `ENTRYPOINT`: 346 347 ```bash 348 #!/bin/bash 349 set -e 350 351 if [ "$1" = 'postgres' ]; then 352 chown -R postgres "$PGDATA" 353 354 if [ -z "$(ls -A "$PGDATA")" ]; then 355 gosu postgres initdb 356 fi 357 358 exec gosu postgres "$@" 359 fi 360 361 exec "$@" 362 ``` 363 364 > **Note**: 365 > This script uses [the `exec` Bash command](http://wiki.bash-hackers.org/commands/builtin/exec) 366 > so that the final running application becomes the container's PID 1. This allows 367 > the application to receive any Unix signals sent to the container. 368 > See the [`ENTRYPOINT`](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#entrypoint) 369 > help for more details. 370 371 372 The helper script is copied into the container and run via `ENTRYPOINT` on 373 container start: 374 375 COPY ./docker-entrypoint.sh / 376 ENTRYPOINT ["/docker-entrypoint.sh"] 377 378 This script allows the user to interact with Postgres in several ways. 379 380 It can simply start Postgres: 381 382 $ docker run postgres 383 384 Or, it can be used to run Postgres and pass parameters to the server: 385 386 $ docker run postgres postgres --help 387 388 Lastly, it could also be used to start a totally different tool, such as Bash: 389 390 $ docker run --rm -it postgres bash 391 392 ### VOLUME 393 394 [Dockerfile reference for the VOLUME instruction](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#volume) 395 396 The `VOLUME` instruction should be used to expose any database storage area, 397 configuration storage, or files/folders created by your docker container. You 398 are strongly encouraged to use `VOLUME` for any mutable and/or user-serviceable 399 parts of your image. 400 401 ### USER 402 403 [Dockerfile reference for the USER instruction](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#user) 404 405 If a service can run without privileges, use `USER` to change to a non-root 406 user. Start by creating the user and group in the `Dockerfile` with something 407 like `RUN groupadd -r postgres && useradd -r -g postgres postgres`. 408 409 > **Note:** Users and groups in an image get a non-deterministic 410 > UID/GID in that the “next” UID/GID gets assigned regardless of image 411 > rebuilds. So, if it’s critical, you should assign an explicit UID/GID. 412 413 You should avoid installing or using `sudo` since it has unpredictable TTY and 414 signal-forwarding behavior that can cause more problems than it solves. If 415 you absolutely need functionality similar to `sudo` (e.g., initializing the 416 daemon as root but running it as non-root), you may be able to use 417 [“gosu”](https://github.com/tianon/gosu). 418 419 Lastly, to reduce layers and complexity, avoid switching `USER` back 420 and forth frequently. 421 422 ### WORKDIR 423 424 [Dockerfile reference for the WORKDIR instruction](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#workdir) 425 426 For clarity and reliability, you should always use absolute paths for your 427 `WORKDIR`. Also, you should use `WORKDIR` instead of proliferating 428 instructions like `RUN cd … && do-something`, which are hard to read, 429 troubleshoot, and maintain. 430 431 ### ONBUILD 432 433 [Dockerfile reference for the ONBUILD instruction](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/#onbuild) 434 435 An `ONBUILD` command executes after the current `Dockerfile` build completes. 436 `ONBUILD` executes in any child image derived `FROM` the current image. Think 437 of the `ONBUILD` command as an instruction the parent `Dockerfile` gives 438 to the child `Dockerfile`. 439 440 A Docker build executes `ONBUILD` commands before any command in a child 441 `Dockerfile`. 442 443 `ONBUILD` is useful for images that are going to be built `FROM` a given 444 image. For example, you would use `ONBUILD` for a language stack image that 445 builds arbitrary user software written in that language within the 446 `Dockerfile`, as you can see in [Ruby’s `ONBUILD` variants](https://github.com/docker-library/ruby/blob/master/2.1/onbuild/Dockerfile). 447 448 Images built from `ONBUILD` should get a separate tag, for example: 449 `ruby:1.9-onbuild` or `ruby:2.0-onbuild`. 450 451 Be careful when putting `ADD` or `COPY` in `ONBUILD`. The “onbuild” image will 452 fail catastrophically if the new build's context is missing the resource being 453 added. Adding a separate tag, as recommended above, will help mitigate this by 454 allowing the `Dockerfile` author to make a choice. 455 456 ## Examples for Official Repositories 457 458 These Official Repositories have exemplary `Dockerfile`s: 459 460 * [Go](https://registry.hub.docker.com/_/golang/) 461 * [Perl](https://registry.hub.docker.com/_/perl/) 462 * [Hy](https://registry.hub.docker.com/_/hylang/) 463 * [Rails](https://registry.hub.docker.com/_/rails) 464 465 ## Additional resources: 466 467 * [Dockerfile Reference](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/) 468 * [More about Base Images](https://docs.docker.com/articles/baseimages/) 469 * [More about Automated Builds](https://docs.docker.com/docker-hub/builds/) 470 * [Guidelines for Creating Official 471 Repositories](https://docs.docker.com/docker-hub/official_repos/)