FlexDeploy can be configured to automatically build and scan Docker images as a part of your build workflow. In cases where you are running your container directly on a docker runtime you can automatically configure that here as well.
Optionally, a path to Dockerfile can be provided. If it is empty, a default Dockerfile in a project source checkout folder is expected. If the checkout folder is empty, then a Dockerfile is expected in the root of the FD_TEMP_DIR. A Dockerfile must be present to build an image. This behavior changed slightly in 5.0.3 beta. Previously, the location was expected to be in FD_TEMP_DIR/FD_PROJECT_NAME.
...
The build instance must be a Docker host to use this feature, and the dockerBuildProjectImage operation of the FlexDeployDockerPlugin must be associated to the build instance. See Creating and Editing Instances for more information on how to add a plugin operation to an Instance.
Setting | Input Type | Description | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Image Name | Groovy | A Groovy Script that evaluates to the local image tag that should be built. This should include the full registry prefix, user repository, image name and tag. docker.io can be omitted as a registry prefix as that is the default. | "joelwenzel/natours:"+ProjectVersion "comp.azureio.registry/ourcompany/app:"+ProjectVersion |
Registry Account | Selection | Specify a Registry Account (created in Topology->Integrations→Containers) you would like to push your image to. Note that this is optional and can be set in Topology Overview Properties as well. | DockerIO |
Build Image | Boolean | Should FlexDeploy automatically add the buildProjectImage workflow step? | true |
Push Image | Boolean | After building the image should it be pushed to the specified Registry? | true |
Tag Latest | Boolean | Should the image also be tagged with 'latest'? | true |
Image Scanning
FlexDeploy supports local image scanning out of the box with Anchore. The only requirement is docker being installed on your build server. The configuration here will always scan the locally built Docker image. If you want to analyze a remote image or publish results to an Anchore Engine application, you will need to modify your workflow with the appropriate Anchore Operations.
Setting | Input Type | Description | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Scan Image | Selection |
| BEFORE_PUSH |
Fail When | Groovy | An optional Groovy script to determine if the scan should fail. See the Anchore Plugin for a list of variables and sample scripts. If the script should evaluate to true (I.E. a failure) then the image building process will halt and the workflow execution will fail. | STATUS == "fail" |
Custom Policy Bundle | Plain Text | Anchore uses "policy bundles" to define analysis/scanning criteria. You can provide a custom bundle here defining your own scanning requirements. You can reference an absolute path on your docker build server or a relative location in your source control for the image. | anchore/customPolicy.json |
Container Settings/Deploy
After building the image there are 3 options to consider for deployment. Deploying via helm or standard kubectl to a Kubernetes node. Or running the docker container directly. The below configuration supports the latter approach to deploy and run a docker container directly using the image built during the build workflow.
Every setting here, apart from 'Run Container' is groovy script with ALL of the workflow execution properties available, though only a few of the commonly used are listed in the drop down.
Setting | Input Type | Description | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Run Container | Boolean | Should a container, using the built image and fields below, be started during the deploy workflow. Checking this as true will automatically add the 'deployProjectContainer' operation to your workflow as the first step. | true |
Container Name | Groovy | Groovy script to determine what the started container name should be. Be sure to enclose literal strings in quotes. | "myapp-"+FD_ENVIRONMENT_CODE.toLowerCase() |
Volumes | Groovy | Optional Groovy script of volumes to expose to the container. Separate entries by a comma. hostPath:containerPath,hostPath:containerPath | FD_TEMP_DIR+":/home/user/temp" or "C:/data/natours:/usr/src/app/data" |
Ports | Groovy | Optional Groovy script of ports to expose. Separate entries by a comma. hostPort:containerPort,hostPort:containerPort | "80:8099" |
Additional Params | Groovy | Any additional parameters to the container, which will be added to the run command. | "--cidfile /test/file.cid -d -e MYVAR1" |
Info | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
Note that because the deployProjectContainer is added to the workflow automatically, it is very well possible that your deploy workflow may be empty at design time. |
Container Status
FlexDeploy has the ability to retrieve the status of the container as well as view logs, start and stop. There are a couple of prerequisites in order to make use of this functionality.
Your docker installation must have the Docker API enabled
- For configuring SSL see here.
Create a DockerAPI account (Topology->Integrations->Container)
Set the API Account on your Project under the Container Configuration tab
Finally, you must ensure the container was deployed via the deployProjectContainer operation, otherwise FlexDeploy will have no record of the container. This happens automatically by checking 'runContainer' in the Container Configuration tab.
With all of that complete you will have access to view and perform actions on the deployed project containers:
Container Monitoring
All of this information is available under Administration->Monitoring->Containers as well. On this page it will give you a snapshot of all containers running in that environment.