On 10 Nov 2017, at 18:31, Gustavo Fernandes
<gustavo(a)infinispan.org> wrote:
IMHO the cons are much more significant than the pros, here's a few more:
- Increase the barrier to users/contributors, forcing them to learn a new tool if they
need to customize the image;
- Prevents usage of new/existent features in the Dockerfile, such as [1], at least until
the generator supports it;
- Makes the integration with Dockerhub harder.
Furthermore, integrating Jolokia and DB drivers are trivial tasks, it hardly justifies
migrating the image completely just to be able to re-use some external scripts to patch
the server at Docker build time.
With relation to the release cycle, well, this is another discussion. As far as
Infinispan is concerned, it takes roughly 1h to release both the project and the docker
image :)
So my vote is -1
[1]
https://docs.docker.com/engine/userguide/eng-image/multistage-build/#befo...
Thanks,
Gustavo
On Thu, Nov 9, 2017 at 11:33 AM, Sebastian Laskawiec <slaskawi(a)redhat.com> wrote:
That's a very good point Gustavo.
Let me try to iterate on pros and cons of each approach:
• Putting all bits into distribution:
• Pros:
• Unified approach for both project and product
• Supporting all platforms with a single distribution
• Cons:
• Long turnaround from community to the product based bits (like Online Services)
• Some work has already been done in Concreate-based approach (like Jolokia) and
battle-tested (e.g. with EAP).
• Putting all additional bits into integration layers (Concreate-based approach):
• Pros:
• Short turnaround, in most of the cases we need to patch the integration bits only
• Some integration bits has already been implemented for us (Joloka, DB drivers etc)
• Cons:
• Some integrations bits needs to be reimplemented, e.g. KUBE_PING
• Each integration layer needs to have its own code (e.g. community Docker image,
xPaaS images, Online Services)
I must admit that in the past I was a pretty big fan of putting all bits into community
distribution and driving it forward from there. But this actually changed once Concreate
tool appeared. It allows to externalize modules into separate repositories which promotes
code reuse (e.g. we could easily use Jolokia integration implemented for EAP and at the
same time provide our own custom configuration for it). Of course most of the bits assume
that underlying OS is RHEL which is not true for the community (community images use
CentOS) so there might be some mismatch there but it's definitely something to start
with. The final argument that made me change my mind was turnaround loop. Going through
all those releases is quite time-consuming and sometimes we just need to update micro
version to fix something. A nice example of this is KUBE_PING which had a memory leak -
with concreate-based approach we could fix it in one day; but as long as it is in
distribution, we need to wait whole release cycle.
Thanks,
Sebastian
On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 8:07 PM Gustavo Fernandes <gustavo(a)infinispan.org> wrote:
IMHO we should ship things like scripts, external modules, drivers, etc with the server
itself, leaving the least amount of logic in the Docker image.
What you are proposing is the opposite: introducing a templating engine that adds a level
of indirection to the Docker image (the Dockerfile is generated) plus
it grabs jars, modules, scripts, xmls, etc from potentially external sources and does
several patches to the server at Docker image creation time.
WRT the docker hub, I think it could be used with Concreate by using hooks, I did a quick
experiment of a Dockerhub automated build having a dynamically generating a Dockerfile in
[1], but I guess
the biggest question is if the added overall complexity is worth it. I'm leaning
towards a -1, but would like to hear more opinions :)
[1]
https://hub.docker.com/r/gustavonalle/dockerhub-test/
Thanks,
Gustavo
On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 3:14 PM, Sebastian Laskawiec <slaskawi(a)redhat.com> wrote:
Hey!
Together with Ryan we are thinking about the future of Infinispan Docker image [1].
Currently we use a single Dockerfile and a bootstrap script which is responsible for
setting up memory limits and creating/generating (if necessary) credentials. Our build
pipeline uses Docker HUB integration hooks, so whenever we push a new commit (or a tag)
our images are being rebuilt. This is very simple to understand and very powerful setup.
However we are thinking about bringing product and project images closer together and
possibly reusing some bits (a common example might be Jolokia - those bits could be easily
reused without touching core server distribution). This however requires converting our
image to a framework called Concreate [2]. Concreate divides setup scripts into modules
which are later on assembled into a single Dockerfile and built. Modules can also be
pulled from other public git repository and I consider this as the most powerful option.
It is also worth to mention, that Concreate is based on YAML file - here's an example
of JDG image [3].
As you can see, this can be quite a change so I would like to reach out for some
opinions. The biggest issue I can see is that we will lose our Docker HUB build pipeline
and we will need to build and push images on our CI (which already does this locally for
Online Services).
WDYT?
Thanks,
Sebastian
[1]
https://github.com/jboss-dockerfiles/infinispan/tree/master/server
[2]
http://concreate.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
[3]
https://github.com/jboss-container-images/jboss-datagrid-7-openshift-imag...
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