This repo provides Dockerized versions of asdf supported tool sets.
An image can provide one or more asdf tools, you can for example create a image with just erlang, or erlang+elixir or erlang+elixir+node, basically anything that asdf supports.
There's also an asdf-alpine sister repo.
The list of built images can be found at dockerhub and you can find their source branch on github.
Images are built automatically for every branch and published at dockerhub.
The master
branch provides the base Dockerfile
for all other branches.
See the Repo Layout section for more information on how to create more
images.
Every branch name must be a valid docker tag name that specifies the tool names and versions it provides, for example:
erlang-20.0
and elixir-1.5.0-rc.2-otp-20
This way people can either base their own Docker images on them or try any existing tool set published as an image, like latest elixir:
docker run --rm -ti vborja/asdf-ubuntu:elixir-1.5.0-rc.2-otp-20 iex
All contributions are more than welcome, if you'd like to help expanding the number of tools available as docker images that would be really great!
If you want to create a new version, just start a new branch from the old-version, and send a PR, be sure to build the image locally and test if the tool works as expected.
If you are adding a new unrelated tool, please create an orphan branch, for example
git clone https://github.com/vic/asdf-ubuntu
cd asdf-ubuntu
# start working on a new node image
git checkout --orphan nodejs-8.2.1
rm * # clean the branch files
echo 'FROM vborja/asdf-ubuntu' > Dockerfile
# Read the following section about Repo layout
# build it
docker build . -t nodejs-8.2.1
# try it
docker run --rm -ti nodejs-8.2.1 node
# commit and create a new PR when everything is ok.
If you create a new branch be sure to add the .travis.yml
file so that the image
for that branch is built automatically.
The master Dockerfile
from this repo serves as base for all asdf-ubuntu
images. It's single purpose is to create an asdf
user with home /asdf
, add the
asdf shim directory to PATH, along with a asdf-install-toolset
.
Your repo can contain as many asdf tools as you want, the following example is taken from erlang-20.0 branch.
/
Dockerfile #
erlang/ # the directory name must be the same as the tool name.
version # stores the erlang version as expected by asdf
plugin-repo # stores the erlang tool plugin url.
build-deps # an script run as root to install system dependencies
build-env # an script run as asdf user sourced before asdf install.
other/ # another tool with the same file structure
The Dockerfile
content typically looks like:
FROM vborja/asdf-ubuntu
# start erlang install
COPY erlang .asdf/toolset/erlang/
USER root
RUN bash .asdf/toolset/erlang/build-deps
USER asdf
RUN asdf-install-toolset erlang
# install other tool if needed
COPY other .asdf/toolset/other/
USER root
RUN bash .asdf/toolset/other/build-deps
USER asdf
RUN asdf-install-toolset other
Some images like elixir-1.5.0-rc.2-otp-20 start from a previous one, in this case from (erlang 20.0) and just add another tool into it.