4.4 KiB
Docker container driver
The buildx Docker container driver allows creation of a managed and customizable BuildKit environment in a dedicated Docker container.
Using the Docker container driver has a couple of advantages over the default Docker driver. For example:
- Specify custom BuildKit versions to use.
- Build multi-arch images, see QEMU
- Advanced options for cache import and export
Synopsis
Run the following command to create a new builder, named container
, that uses
the Docker container driver:
$ docker buildx create \
--name container \
--driver=docker-container \
--driver-opt=[key=value,...]
container
The following table describes the available driver-specific options that you can
pass to --driver-opt
:
Parameter | Value | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
image |
String | Sets the image to use for running BuildKit. | |
network |
String | Sets the network mode for running the BuildKit container. | |
cgroup-parent |
String | /docker/buildx |
Sets the cgroup parent of the BuildKit container if Docker is using the cgroupfs driver. |
Usage
When you run a build, Buildx pulls the specified image
(by default,
moby/buildkit
)
Docker Hub. When the container has
started, Buildx submits the build submitted to the containerized build server.
$ docker buildx build -t <image> --builder=container .
WARNING: No output specified with docker-container driver. Build result will only remain in the build cache. To push result image into registry use --push or to load image into docker use --load
#1 [internal] booting buildkit
#1 pulling image moby/buildkit:buildx-stable-1
#1 pulling image moby/buildkit:buildx-stable-1 1.9s done
#1 creating container buildx_buildkit_container0
#1 creating container buildx_buildkit_container0 0.5s done
#1 DONE 2.4s
...
Loading to local image store
Unlike when using the default docker
driver, images built with the
docker-container
driver must be explicitly loaded into the local image store.
Use the --load
flag:
$ docker buildx build --load -t <image> --builder=container .
...
=> exporting to oci image format 7.7s
=> => exporting layers 4.9s
=> => exporting manifest sha256:4e4ca161fa338be2c303445411900ebbc5fc086153a0b846ac12996960b479d3 0.0s
=> => exporting config sha256:adf3eec768a14b6e183a1010cb96d91155a82fd722a1091440c88f3747f1f53f 0.0s
=> => sending tarball 2.8s
=> importing to docker
The image becomes available in the image store when the build finishes:
$ docker image ls
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
<image> latest adf3eec768a1 2 minutes ago 197MB
QEMU
The docker-container
driver supports using QEMU (user
mode) to build non-native platforms. Use the --platform
flag to specify which
architectures that you want to build for.
For example, to build a Linux image for amd64
and arm64
:
$ docker buildx build \
--builder=container \
--platform=linux/amd64,linux/arm64 \
-t <registry>/<image> \
--push .
Warning
QEMU performs full-system emulation of non-native platforms, which is much slower than native builds. Compute-heavy tasks like compilation and compression/decompression will likely take a large performance hit.
Further reading
For more information on the Docker container driver, see the buildx reference.