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docker-base's Introduction

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docker-base

https://hub.docker.com/r/behance/docker-base/tags/

Provides base OS, security patches, and tools for quick and easy spinup.

Variants

OS Tag Notes
Ubuntu 20.04 -VERSION#-ubuntu-20.04 Current
Ubuntu 22.04 -VERSION#-ubuntu-22.04 Current

Tools

  • S6 process supervisor is used for only for zombie reaping (as PID 1), boot coordination, and termination signal translation
  • Goss is used for build-time testing
  • Dgoss is used for run-time testing.

Expectations

To add a service to be monitored, simply create a service run script For programmatic switches, create the service in /etc/services-available, and symlink to /etc/services.d to enable

Security

A convenience script is provided for security-only package updates.

On Ubuntu and CentOS-based variants, run: /bin/bash -e /security_updates.sh

This file is actually a symlink to the variant-specific script contained in the /scripts folder

Packaging

A convenience script is provided for post-package installation cleanup

On all variants, run: /bin/bash -e /clean.sh

This file, like security_updates (above) is actually a symlink to the variant-specific script contained in the /scripts folder

Environment Variables

Variable Example Description
S6_KILL_FINISH_MAXTIME S6_KILL_FINISH_MAXTIME=55000 The maximum time (in ms) a script in /etc/cont-finish.d could take before sending a KILL signal to it. Take into account that this parameter will be used per each script execution, it's not a max time for the whole set of scripts. This value has a max of 65535 on Alpine variants.
S6_KILL_GRACETIME S6_KILL_GRACETIME=500 Wait time (in ms) for S6 finish scripts before sending kill signal. This value has a max of 65535 on Alpine variants.
  • with-contenv tool, which is used to expose environment variables across scripts, has a limitation that it cannot read beyond 4k characters for environment variable values. To work around this issue, use the script /scripts/with-bigcontenv instead of with-contenv. You'll need to remove the with-contenv from the shebang line, and add source /scripts/with-bigcontenv in the next line after the shebang line.

Startup/Runtime Modification

To inject changes just before runtime, shell scripts may be placed into the /etc/cont-init.d folder. As part of the process manager, these scripts are run in advance of the supervised processes. @see https://github.com/just-containers/s6-overlay#executing-initialization-andor-finalization-tasks

Processor Architectures

All variants are tested on x64 and arm64. The convenience script archstring is provided to switch between strings based on the current machine. Usage: archstring --x64 intel --arm64 arm Which will return "intel" when on x64 and arm when on arm64. This is handy when package names or download paths need to be modified per architecture.

Testing

  • Container tests itself as part of build process using goss validator. To add additional build-time tests, overwrite (or extend) the ./container/root/goss.base.yaml file.
  • To initiate run-time validation, please execute test.sh. It uses dgoss validator. To add additional run-time tests, extend ./test.sh and ./goss.yaml file.

Advanced Modification

More advanced changes can take effect using the run.d system. Similar to the /etc/cont-init.d/ script system, any shell scripts (ending in .sh) in the /run.d/ folder will be executed ahead of the S6 initialization.

  • If a run.d script terminates with a non-zero exit code, container will stop, terminating with the script's exit code, unless...
  • If script terminates with exit code of $SIGNAL_BUILD_STOP (99), this will signal the container to stop cleanly. This can be used for a multi-stage build process

Shutdown Behavior

Sequence of events for a crashed supervised service:

  1. S6 finish scripts are executed. The supervised service is presumed down at this point, its return code is a variable (${1}).
  2. If no finish script is specified, service gets restarted, with no further action
  3. If finish script specifies to bring the container down, admin-initiated container termination behavior applies (below).

Sequence of events for a docker stop or admin-initiated container termination:

  1. SIGTERM is broadcast to all supervised services, described as a run script. S6_KILL_GRACETIME corresponds with how long to wait for a SIGTERM to complete and return. This first signal can be trapped/intercepted to convert into a graceful stop (see below). Failure for the supervised service to respond to the signal within S6_KILL_GRACETIME will result in an untrappable SIGKILL.
  2. Scripts in /etc/cont-finish.d are executed, each with S6_KILL_FINISH_MAXTIME.
  3. S6 finish scripts are executed. The supervised service is presumed down at this point, its return code is a variable (${1}).
  4. Beyond this point, signals cannot be trapped or interrupted. All services should already be down by this point, or they will be forcibly brought down by the following signals.
  5. SIGHUP is broadcast to all services, in all trees.
  6. SIGTERM is broadcast to all services, in all trees.
  7. SIGKILL terminates anything remaining

Implementing graceful shutdown from admin-initiated container termination

  • Set S6_KILL_FINISH_MAXTIME long-enough to shutdown/drain service properly. See table above for upper limits.
  • Trap SIGTERM in supervised service run script. Take no action directly at this time.
  • Create a graceful shutdown script, place in /etc/cont-finish.d directory. Supervised service must terminate itself as a result, within S6_KILL_FINISH_MAXTIME time. Some examples include: sending alternate shutdown control signals (like SIGWINCH or SIGQUIT),

Long-running processes (workers + crons)

This container image can be used with multiple entrypoints (not to be confused with Docker entrypoints). For example, a codebase that runs a web service, but also requires crons and background workers. These processes should not run inside the same container (like a VM would), but can be executed separately from the same image artifact by adding arguments to the run command.

docker run {image_id} /worker.sh 3 /bin/binary -parameters -that -binary -receives

Runs 3 copies of /bin/binary that receives the parameters -parameters -that -binary -receives

Container Organization

Besides the instructions contained in the Dockerfile, the majority of this container's use is in configuration and process. The ./container/root repo directory is overlayed into a container during build. Adding additional files to the folders in there will be present in the final image. All paths from the following explanation are assumed from the repo's ./root/ base:

Directory Use
/etc/cont-init.d/ startup scripts that run ahead of services booting: https://github.com/just-containers/s6-overlay#executing-initialization-andor-finalization-tasks
/etc/fix-attrs.d/ scripts that may fix permissions at runtime: https://github.com/just-containers/s6-overlay#fixing-ownership--permissions
/etc/services.d/ services that will be supervised by S6: https://github.com/just-containers/s6-overlay#writing-a-service-script
/etc/services-available/ same as above, but must be symlinked into /etc/services.d/ to take effect
/run.d/ shell scripts (ending in .sh) that make runtime modifications ahead of S6 initialization
/scripts convenience scripts that can be leveraged in derived images

Release Management

Github actions provide the machinery for producing tags distributed through Docker Hub. Once a tested and approved PR is merged, simply cutting a new semantically-versioned tag will generate the following matrix of tagged builds:

  • [major].[minor].[patch](?-variant)
  • [major].[minor](?-variant)
  • [major](?-variant) Platform support is available for architectures:
  • linux/arm64
  • linux/amd64

To add new variant based on a new Dockerfile, add an entry to the matrix.props with its file and variant suffix.

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