@turbokube/contain

0.4.4 • Public • Published

contain

Simple declarative container builds from local artifacts.

contain is a unix philosophy CLI that does the following thing well: Produces a container image from a local directory structure and a base image.

It runs nicely with Skaffold as custom buildCommand, as it picks up the IMAGE and PLATFORMS envs.

basics

Contain is designed to take platform-agnostic layers and append to multi-platform bases. Nodejs and Java are examples of runtime environments that work well with such images.

Future versions might add support for:

  • Single platform base images (can be auto detected)
  • Configuring platform per layer, i.e. omit a layer on non-matching platforms

To leave room for single platform images, Contain requires that you set platforms to all, the same value you'd use for ko multi-platform images.

There are many image manifests formats but Contain supports only OCI. By validating manifest types Contain helps keeping your images consistent. Future versions could add support for other formats, but that would be opt-in by config.

execution

Here's an example of a base image manifest, with optional attestation:

{
  "schemaVersion": 2,
  "mediaType": "application/vnd.oci.image.index.v1+json",
  "manifests": [
    {
      "mediaType": "application/vnd.oci.image.manifest.v1+json",
      "digest": "sha256:2e2643ac2745067b637a4e1c4d5a3936b27a430cf0d989562c04fb7d7c53e69c",
      "size": 475,
      "platform": {
        "architecture": "amd64",
        "os": "linux"
      }
    },
    {
      "mediaType": "application/vnd.oci.image.manifest.v1+json",
      "digest": "sha256:e34c5ca17d295d5873f451ab094fb5b5515a0a5ec433d8613276baeb8f1c7741",
      "size": 475,
      "platform": {
        "architecture": "arm64",
        "os": "linux"
      }
    },
    {
      "mediaType": "application/vnd.oci.image.manifest.v1+json",
      "digest": "sha256:897bf5e232d9c5a72947462cc13072e988428e0ff80f4441c7a238e4892afc00",
      "size": 566,
      "annotations": {
        "vnd.docker.reference.digest": "sha256:2e2643ac2745067b637a4e1c4d5a3936b27a430cf0d989562c04fb7d7c53e69c",
        "vnd.docker.reference.type": "attestation-manifest"
      },
      "platform": {
        "architecture": "unknown",
        "os": "unknown"
      }
    },
    {
      "mediaType": "application/vnd.oci.image.manifest.v1+json",
      "digest": "sha256:a7f5930278c418d53dc56bfcd22f7332fbda225006a1875fbc673df454929a49",
      "size": 566,
      "annotations": {
        "vnd.docker.reference.digest": "sha256:e34c5ca17d295d5873f451ab094fb5b5515a0a5ec433d8613276baeb8f1c7741",
        "vnd.docker.reference.type": "attestation-manifest"
      },
      "platform": {
        "architecture": "unknown",
        "os": "unknown"
      }
    }
  ]
}

This means that to get the actual base layer references, Contain will have to pull both of the application/vnd.oci.image.manifest.v1+json manifests. They're also pretty-printed json, like

{
  "schemaVersion": 2,
  "mediaType": "application/vnd.oci.image.manifest.v1+json",
  "config": {
    "mediaType": "application/vnd.oci.image.config.v1+json",
    "digest": "sha256:0d0715737c21d4dc2a49af26ef780241ad5d6ab1a0e1133364e40d002ca16722",
    "size": 575
  },
  "layers": [
    {
      "mediaType": "application/vnd.oci.image.layer.v1.tar+gzip",
      "digest": "sha256:c61587a79a418fb6188de8add2e9f694b012acde27abefd27dedaff5f02de71e",
      "size": 93
    }
  ]
}

Running sha256sum on the above you get 2e2643ac2745067b637a4e1c4d5a3936b27a430cf0d989562c04fb7d7c53e69c which is the digest in the index manifest. Using this manifest you can retrieve the layers, but because Contain is agnostic to what the base image contains there's no need to spend the bandwidth of pulling them.

Later on if the resulting image is pushed to a different registry than where the base image lives, go-containerregistry will handle the copying of all layers.

Contain does not support nested indexes. It will bail if any manifest in the index has mediaType application/vnd.oci.image.index.v1+json.

Upon successful retrieval of indexes, contain can start the actual build.

Layers are just tarballs. The task for Contain is to produce these tar+gzips from your config, hash them and append each layer in order to each platform's index. That creates a new index per platform, each one having a new digest (checksum). With those checksums Contain can produce a new index.

In practice Contain will run append and push to the first platform, then derive the layers to append from that one.

Currently Contain can't update attestations. Those index entries are therefore dropped.

Readme

Keywords

none

Package Sidebar

Install

npm i @turbokube/contain

Weekly Downloads

70

Version

0.4.4

License

MPL-2.0

Unpacked Size

23.2 kB

Total Files

4

Last publish

Collaborators

  • solsson