OpenStack LOCI is a project designed to quickly build Lightweight OCI compatible images of OpenStack services based on Ubuntu.
Additionally, we produce a "wheels" image for requirements containing all of the packages listed in upper-constraints.txt.
The instructions below can be used for any OpenStack service currently targeted by LOCI. For simplicity, we will continue to use Keystone as an example.
Note: To build locally, you will need a version of docker >= 17.05.0.
You need to start by building a base image for your distribution that included the required build dependencies. Loci has included a collection of Dockerfiles to get you started with building a base image. These are located in the dockerfiles directory.
It's easy to build a base image:
$ docker build . \
-f Dockerfile.base \
--build-arg FROM=ubuntu:jammy \
--build-arg CEPH_REPO='deb https://download.ceph.com/debian-reef/ jammy main' \
--tag base:ubuntu_jammy
The requirements
image is where we put all the packages listed in the OpenStack
upper constraints
together with their dependencies. This is a consistent set of packages so that if we install various
OpenStack components from this set of packages we can be sure they are compatible with each other.
In Loci we use multistage Dockerfile with the project image as a default target.
To build the requirements
image use the following command
$ docker build . \
-f Dockerfile \
--target requirements \
--build-arg FROM=base:ubuntu_jammy \
--build-arg PROJECT=requirements \
--tag requirements:master-ubuntu_jammy
Then you can build the rest of the service images using this requirements image:
$ docker build . \
--build-arg FROM=base:ubuntu_jammy \
--build-arg WHEELS=requirements:master-ubuntu_jammy \
--build-arg PROJECT=keystone \
--tag keystone:master-ubuntu_jammy
Here you can specify the requirements
(WHEELS) image which is mounted during the build and is used
as a wheels repository. By default the quay.io/airshipit/requirements:master-ubuntu_jammy
is used.
If building behind a proxy, remember to use build arguments to pass these through to the build:
$ docker build . \
--build-arg http_proxy=$http_proxy \
--build-arg https_proxy=$https_proxy \
--build-arg no_proxy=$no_proxy \
--build-arg PROJECT=keystone \
--tag keystone:master-ubuntu_jammy
For more advanced building you can use docker build arguments to define:
FROM
The base Docker image to build from. Dockerfiles to bootstrap the base images can be found in thedockerfiles
directory, and are a good starting point for customizing a base image.PROJECT
The name of the project to install.PROJECT_REPO
The git repo containing the OpenStack project the container should containPROJECT_REF
The git ref, branch, or tag the container should fetch for the projectPROJECT_RELEASE
The project branch to determine python dependencies (defaults to master)PROJECT_PIP_EXTRAS
python extras to use during project install.UID
The uid of the user that will be created (defaults to 42424).GID
The gid of the group that will be created (default to 42424).WHEELS
The location of the wheels Docker image. The image must contain wheels in the root directory. It is mounted while building other images.[myregistry/]mydockernamespace/requirements[:tag]
PROFILES
The bindep profiles to specify to configure which packages get installed. This is a space separated list.PIP_PACKAGES
Specify additional python packages you would like installed. The only caveat is these packages must exist in WHEELS form. So if you wanted to include rpdb, you would need to have built that into your WHEELS.KEEP_ALL_WHEELS
Set this toTrue
if you want to keep all packages, even not built ourselfs in the WHEELS image. This is useful for reproducible builds, as 3rd party libraries will be keept in the WHEELS image.PIP_ARGS
Specify additional pip parameters you would like.PIP_WHEEL_ARGS
Specify additional pip wheel parameters you would like. Default is PIP_ARGS.DIST_PACKAGES
Specify additional distribution packages you would like installed.EXTRA_BINDEP
Specify a bindep-* file to add in the container. It would be considered next to the default bindep.txt.EXTRA_PYDEP
Specify a pydep-* file to add in the container. It would be considered next to the default pydep.txt.REGISTRY_PROTOCOL
Set this tohttps
if you are running your own registry on https,http
if you are running on http, or leave it asdetect
if you want to re-use existing protocol detection.REGISTRY_INSECURE
Set this toTrue
if your image registry is running on HTTPS with self-signed certificates to ignore SSL verification. (defaults to False)EXTRA_PROJECTS
extra projects to install fromloci/data
directory.HORIZON_EXTRA_PANELS
specify list of pannels to enable during horizon build.
This makes it really easy to integrate LOCI images into your development or CI/CD workflow, for example, if you wanted to build an image from this PS you could run:
$ docker build . \
--build-arg PROJECT=keystone \
--build-arg PROJECT_REPO=https://review.opendev.org/openstack/keystone \
--build-arg PROJECT_REF=refs/changes/24/923324/10 \
--tag keystone:923324-10
To build cinder with lvm and ceph support you would run:
$ docker build . \
--build-arg PROJECT=cinder \
--build-arg PROFILES="lvm ceph"
It may be required to install library or other dependency that is present in upper-constraints.txt from sources. It may be achieved by using the following approach:
- Clone all projects that you want to install to the loci/data directory
- The directory content will be copied during image build stage
- Use KEEP_ALL_WHEELS=True build arg to preserve all built wheels in requirements image. This will allow to have reproducable builds when same requirements image is used.
If pipy project name is different from python project name add your project into mapping file scripts/python-custom-name-mapping.txt
The images should contain all the required assets for running the service. But
if you wish or need to customize the loci/keystone
image that's great! We
hope to have built the images to make this as easy and flexible as possible. To
do this we recommend that you perform any required customization in a child
image using a pattern similar to:
FROM quay.io/airshipit/keystone:master-ubuntu_jammy
MAINTAINER you@example.com
RUN set -x \
&& apt-get update \
&& apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends your-awesome-binary-package \
&& rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
LOCI is considered stable. There are production installs of OpenStack using LOCI built images at this time.
The project is very low-entropy with very little changing, but this is expected. The highest traffic section of LOCI is the gates.