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Dockerfile
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# First things first, we build an image which is where we're going to compile
# our static assets with. We use this stage in development.
FROM node:22.8.0-bookworm AS static-deps
WORKDIR /opt/warehouse/src/
# However, we do want to trigger a reinstall of our node.js dependencies anytime
# our package.json changes, so we'll ensure that we're copying that into our
# static container prior to actually installing the npm dependencies.
COPY package.json package-lock.json .babelrc /opt/warehouse/src/
# Installing npm dependencies is done as a distinct step and *prior* to copying
# over our static files so that, you guessed it, we don't invalidate the cache
# of installed dependencies just because files have been modified.
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/root/.npm,sharing=locked \
npm ci
# This is our actual build stage, where we'll compile our static assets.
FROM static-deps AS static
# Actually copy over our static files, we only copy over the static files to
# save a small amount of space in our image and because we don't need them. We
# copy `webpack.config.js` last even though it's least likely to change, because
# it's very small so copying it needlessly isn't a big deal but it will save a
# small amount of copying when only `webpack.config.js` is modified.
COPY warehouse/static/ /opt/warehouse/src/warehouse/static/
COPY warehouse/admin/static/ /opt/warehouse/src/warehouse/admin/static/
COPY webpack.config.js /opt/warehouse/src/
RUN NODE_ENV=production npm run build
# We'll build a light-weight layer along the way with just docs stuff
FROM python:3.12.6-slim-bookworm AS docs
# By default, Docker has special steps to avoid keeping APT caches in the layers, which
# is good, but in our case, we're going to mount a special cache volume (kept between
# builds), so we WANT the cache to persist.
RUN set -eux; \
rm -f /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/docker-clean; \
echo 'Binary::apt::APT::Keep-Downloaded-Packages "true";' > /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/keep-cache;
# Install System level build requirements, this is done before
# everything else because these are rarely ever going to change.
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/var/cache/apt,sharing=locked \
--mount=type=cache,target=/var/lib/apt,sharing=locked \
set -x \
&& apt-get update \
&& apt-get install --no-install-recommends -y \
build-essential git libcairo2-dev libfreetype6-dev libjpeg-dev libpng-dev libz-dev
# We create an /opt directory with a virtual environment in it to store our
# application in.
RUN set -x \
&& python3 -m venv /opt/warehouse
# Now that we've created our virtual environment, we'll go ahead and update
# our $PATH to refer to it first.
ENV PATH="/opt/warehouse/bin:${PATH}"
# Next, we want to update pip, setuptools, and wheel inside of this virtual
# environment to ensure that we have the latest versions of them.
# TODO: We use --require-hashes in our requirements files, but not here, making
# the ones in the requirements files kind of a moot point. We should
# probably pin these too, and update them as we do anything else.
RUN pip --no-cache-dir --disable-pip-version-check install --upgrade pip setuptools wheel
# We copy this into the docker container prior to copying in the rest of our
# application so that we can skip installing requirements if the only thing
# that has changed is the Warehouse code itself.
COPY requirements /tmp/requirements
# Install the Python level Warehouse requirements, this is done after copying
# the requirements but prior to copying Warehouse itself into the container so
# that code changes don't require triggering an entire install of all of
# Warehouse's dependencies.
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/root/.cache/pip \
set -x \
&& pip --disable-pip-version-check \
install --no-deps \
-r /tmp/requirements/docs-dev.txt \
-r /tmp/requirements/docs-user.txt \
-r /tmp/requirements/docs-blog.txt \
&& pip check \
&& find /opt/warehouse -name '*.pyc' -delete
WORKDIR /opt/warehouse/src/
# We'll make the docs container run as a non-root user, ensure that the built
# documentation belongs to the same user on the host machine.
ARG USER_ID
ARG GROUP_ID
RUN groupadd -o -g $GROUP_ID -r docs
RUN useradd -o -m -u $USER_ID -g $GROUP_ID docs
RUN chown docs /opt/warehouse/src
USER docs
# Now we're going to build our actual application, but not the actual production
# image that it gets deployed into.
FROM python:3.12.6-slim-bookworm AS build
# Define whether we're building a production or a development image. This will
# generally be used to control whether or not we install our development and
# test dependencies.
ARG DEVEL=no
# Define whether we're building a CI image. This will include all the docs stuff
# as well for the matrix!
ARG CI=no
# To enable Ipython in the development environment set to yes (for using ipython
# as the warehouse shell interpreter,
# i.e. 'docker compose run --rm web python -m warehouse shell --type=ipython')
ARG IPYTHON=no
# By default, Docker has special steps to avoid keeping APT caches in the layers, which
# is good, but in our case, we're going to mount a special cache volume (kept between
# builds), so we WANT the cache to persist.
RUN set -eux; \
rm -f /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/docker-clean; \
echo 'Binary::apt::APT::Keep-Downloaded-Packages "true";' > /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/keep-cache;
# Install System level Warehouse build requirements, this is done before
# everything else because these are rarely ever going to change.
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/var/cache/apt,sharing=locked \
--mount=type=cache,target=/var/lib/apt,sharing=locked \
set -x \
&& apt-get update \
&& apt-get install --no-install-recommends -y \
build-essential libffi-dev libxml2-dev libxslt-dev libpq-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev libssl-dev \
$(if [ "$DEVEL" = "yes" ]; then echo 'libjpeg-dev'; fi)
# We create an /opt directory with a virtual environment in it to store our
# application in.
RUN set -x \
&& python3 -m venv /opt/warehouse
# Now that we've created our virtual environment, we'll go ahead and update
# our $PATH to refer to it first.
ENV PATH="/opt/warehouse/bin:${PATH}"
# Next, we want to update pip, setuptools, and wheel inside of this virtual
# environment to ensure that we have the latest versions of them.
# TODO: We use --require-hashes in our requirements files, but not here, making
# the ones in the requirements files kind of a moot point. We should
# probably pin these too, and update them as we do anything else.
RUN pip --no-cache-dir --disable-pip-version-check install --upgrade pip setuptools wheel
# We copy this into the docker container prior to copying in the rest of our
# application so that we can skip installing requirements if the only thing
# that has changed is the Warehouse code itself.
COPY requirements /tmp/requirements
# Install our development dependencies if we're building a development install
# otherwise this will do nothing.
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/root/.cache/pip \
set -x \
&& if [ "$DEVEL" = "yes" ]; then pip --disable-pip-version-check install -r /tmp/requirements/dev.txt; fi
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/root/.cache/pip \
set -x \
&& if [ "$DEVEL" = "yes" ] && [ "$IPYTHON" = "yes" ]; then pip --disable-pip-version-check install -r /tmp/requirements/ipython.txt; fi
# Install the Python level Warehouse requirements, this is done after copying
# the requirements but prior to copying Warehouse itself into the container so
# that code changes don't require triggering an entire install of all of
# Warehouse's dependencies.
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/root/.cache/pip \
set -x \
&& pip --disable-pip-version-check \
install --no-deps \
-r /tmp/requirements/deploy.txt \
-r /tmp/requirements/main.txt \
$(if [ "$DEVEL" = "yes" ]; then echo '-r /tmp/requirements/tests.txt -r /tmp/requirements/lint.txt'; fi) \
$(if [ "$CI" = "yes" ]; then echo '-r /tmp/requirements/docs-dev.txt -r /tmp/requirements/docs-user.txt -r /tmp/requirements/docs-blog.txt'; fi ) \
&& pip check \
&& find /opt/warehouse -name '*.pyc' -delete
# Now we're going to build our actual application image, which will eventually
# pull in the static files that were built above.
FROM python:3.12.6-slim-bookworm
# Setup some basic environment variables that are ~never going to change.
ENV PYTHONUNBUFFERED 1
ENV PYTHONPATH /opt/warehouse/src/
ENV PATH="/opt/warehouse/bin:${PATH}"
WORKDIR /opt/warehouse/src/
# Define whether we're building a production or a development image. This will
# generally be used to control whether or not we install our development and
# test dependencies.
ARG DEVEL=no
# Define whether we're building a CI image. This will include all the docs stuff
# as well for the matrix!
ARG CI=no
# This is a work around because otherwise postgresql-client bombs out trying
# to create symlinks to these directories.
RUN set -x \
&& mkdir -p /usr/share/man/man1 \
&& mkdir -p /usr/share/man/man7
# Install System level Warehouse requirements, this is done before everything
# else because these are rarely ever going to change.
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/var/cache/apt,sharing=locked \
--mount=type=cache,target=/var/lib/apt,sharing=locked \
set -x \
&& apt-get update \
&& apt-get install --no-install-recommends -y \
libpq5 libxml2 libxslt1.1 libcurl4 \
$(if [ "$DEVEL" = "yes" ]; then echo 'bash libjpeg62 postgresql-client build-essential libffi-dev libxml2-dev libxslt-dev libpq-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev libssl-dev vim oathtool'; fi) \
&& apt-get clean \
&& rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/* /tmp/* /var/tmp/*
# Copy the directory into the container, this is done last so that changes to
# Warehouse itself require the least amount of layers being invalidated from
# the cache. This is most important in development, but it also useful for
# deploying new code changes.
COPY --from=static /opt/warehouse/src/warehouse/static/dist/ /opt/warehouse/src/warehouse/static/dist/
COPY --from=static /opt/warehouse/src/warehouse/admin/static/dist/ /opt/warehouse/src/warehouse/admin/static/dist/
COPY --from=build /opt/warehouse/ /opt/warehouse/
COPY . /opt/warehouse/src/
# Pre-cache TLD list
RUN tldextract --update
# Load our module to pre-compile as much bytecode as we can easily.
# Saves time collectively on container boot!
RUN python -m warehouse