There are two available flavors of Envoy Docker images for Linux, based on Ubuntu and Alpine Linux and an image based on Windows2019.
The Ubuntu based Envoy Docker image at envoyproxy/envoy-build:<hash>
is used for CI checks,
where <hash>
is specified in envoy_build_sha.sh
. Developers
may work with the latest build image SHA in envoy-build-tools
repo to provide a self-contained environment for building Envoy binaries and running tests that reflects the latest built Ubuntu Envoy image.
Moreover, the Docker image at envoyproxy/envoy-dev:<hash>
is an image that has an Envoy binary at /usr/local/bin/envoy
.
The <hash>
corresponds to the main commit at which the binary was compiled. Lastly, envoyproxy/envoy-dev:latest
contains an Envoy
binary built from the latest tip of main that passed tests.
Minimal images based on Alpine Linux allow for quicker deployment of Envoy. The Alpine base image is only built with symbols stripped.
To get the binary with symbols, use the corresponding Ubuntu based debug image. The image is pushed with two different tags:
<hash>
and latest
. Parallel to the Ubuntu images above, <hash>
corresponds to the
main commit at which the binary was compiled, and latest
corresponds to a binary built from the latest tip of main that passed tests.
The Windows 2019 based Envoy Docker image at envoyproxy/envoy-build-windows2019:<hash>
is used for CI checks, where <hash>
is specified in envoy_build_sha.sh
.
Developers may work with the most recent envoyproxy/envoy-build-windows2019
image to provide a self-contained environment for building Envoy binaries and
running tests that reflects the latest built Windows 2019 Envoy image.
Currently there are three build images for Linux and one for Windows:
envoyproxy/envoy-build
— alias toenvoyproxy/envoy-build-ubuntu
.envoyproxy/envoy-build-ubuntu
— based on Ubuntu 18.04 (Bionic) with GCC 9 and Clang 10 compiler.envoyproxy/envoy-build-centos
— based on CentOS 7 with GCC 9 and Clang 10 compiler, this image is experimental and not well tested.envoyproxy/envoy-build-windows2019
— based on Windows 2019 LTS with VS 2019 Build Tools.
The source for these images is located in the envoyproxy/envoy-build-tools repository.
We use the Clang compiler for all Linux CI runs with tests. We have an additional Linux CI run with GCC which builds binary only.
As of November 2019 after #8859 the official released binary is
linked against libc++ on Linux.
To override the C++ standard library in your build, set environment variable ENVOY_STDLIB
to libstdc++
or libc++
and
run ./ci/do_ci.sh
as described below.
The ./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh
script can be used to set up a Docker container on Linux and Windows
to build an Envoy static binary and run tests.
The build image defaults to envoyproxy/envoy-build-ubuntu
on Linux and
envoyproxy/envoy-build-windows2019
on Windows, but you can choose build image by setting
IMAGE_NAME
in the environment.
In case your setup is behind a proxy, set http_proxy
and https_proxy
to the proxy servers before
invoking the build.
IMAGE_NAME=envoyproxy/envoy-build-ubuntu http_proxy=http://proxy.foo.com:8080 https_proxy=http://proxy.bar.com:8080 ./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh <build_script_args>'
An example basic invocation to build a developer version of the Envoy static binary (using the Bazel fastbuild
type) is:
./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh './ci/do_ci.sh bazel.dev'
The Envoy binary can be found in /tmp/envoy-docker-build/envoy/source/exe/envoy-fastbuild
on the Docker host. You
can control this by setting ENVOY_DOCKER_BUILD_DIR
in the environment, e.g. to
generate the binary in ~/build/envoy/source/exe/envoy-fastbuild
you can run:
ENVOY_DOCKER_BUILD_DIR=~/build ./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh './ci/do_ci.sh bazel.dev'
For a release version of the Envoy binary you can run:
./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh './ci/do_ci.sh bazel.release.server_only'
The build artifact can be found in /tmp/envoy-docker-build/envoy/source/exe/envoy
(or wherever
$ENVOY_DOCKER_BUILD_DIR
points).
For a debug version of the Envoy binary you can run:
./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh './ci/do_ci.sh bazel.debug.server_only'
The build artifact can be found in /tmp/envoy-docker-build/envoy/source/exe/envoy-debug
(or wherever
$ENVOY_DOCKER_BUILD_DIR
points).
To leverage a bazel remote cache add the http_remote_cache endpoint to the BAZEL_BUILD_EXTRA_OPTIONS environment variable
./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh "BAZEL_BUILD_EXTRA_OPTIONS='--remote_http_cache=http://127.0.0.1:28080' ./ci/do_ci.sh bazel.release"
The ./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh './ci/do_ci.sh <TARGET>'
targets are:
bazel.api
— build and run API tests under-c fastbuild
with clang.bazel.asan
— build and run tests under-c dbg --config=clang-asan
with clang.bazel.asan <test>
— build and run a specified test or test dir under-c dbg --config=clang-asan
with clang.bazel.debug
— build Envoy static binary and run tests under-c dbg
.bazel.debug <test>
— build Envoy static binary and run a specified test or test dir under-c dbg
.bazel.debug.server_only
— build Envoy static binary under-c dbg
.bazel.dev
— build Envoy static binary and run tests under-c fastbuild
with clang.bazel.dev <test>
— build Envoy static binary and run a specified test or test dir under-c fastbuild
with clang.bazel.release
— build Envoy static binary and run tests under-c opt
with clang.bazel.release <test>
— build Envoy static binary and run a specified test or test dir under-c opt
with clang.bazel.release.server_only
— build Envoy static binary under-c opt
with clang.bazel.sizeopt
— build Envoy static binary and run tests under-c opt --config=sizeopt
with clang.bazel.sizeopt <test>
— build Envoy static binary and run a specified test or test dir under-c opt --config=sizeopt
with clang.bazel.sizeopt.server_only
— build Envoy static binary under-c opt --config=sizeopt
with clang.bazel.coverage
— build and run tests under-c dbg
with gcc, generating coverage information in$ENVOY_DOCKER_BUILD_DIR/envoy/generated/coverage/coverage.html
.bazel.coverage <test>
— build and run a specified test or test dir under-c dbg
with gcc, generating coverage information in$ENVOY_DOCKER_BUILD_DIR/envoy/generated/coverage/coverage.html
.bazel.coverity
— build Envoy static binary and run Coverity Scan static analysis.bazel.msan
— build and run tests under-c dbg --config=clang-msan
with clang.bazel.msan <test>
— build and run a specified test or test dir under-c dbg --config=clang-msan
with clang.bazel.tsan
— build and run tests under-c dbg --config=clang-tsan
with clang.bazel.tsan <test>
— build and run a specified test or test dir under-c dbg --config=clang-tsan
with clang.bazel.fuzz
— build and run fuzz tests under-c dbg --config=asan-fuzzer
with clang.bazel.fuzz <test>
— build and run a specified fuzz test or test dir under-c dbg --config=asan-fuzzer
with clang. If specifying a single fuzz test, must use the full target name with "_with_libfuzzer" for<test>
.bazel.compile_time_options
— build Envoy and run tests with various compile-time options toggled to their non-default state, to ensure they still build.bazel.compile_time_options <test>
— build Envoy and run a specified test or test dir with various compile-time options toggled to their non-default state, to ensure they still build.bazel.clang_tidy <files>
— build and run clang-tidy specified source files, if no files specified, runs against the diff with the last GitHub commit.check_format
— runclang-format
andbuildifier
on entire source tree.fix_format
— run and enforceclang-format
andbuildifier
on entire source tree.check_spelling
— runmisspell
on entire project.fix_spelling
— run and enforcemisspell
on entire project.check_spelling_pedantic
— runaspell
on C++ and proto comments.docs
— build documentation tree ingenerated/docs
.
An example basic invocation to build the Envoy static binary and run tests is:
./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh './ci/windows_ci_steps.sh'
You can modify ./ci/windows_ci_steps.sh
to modify bazel
arguments, tests to run, etc. as well
as set environment variables to adjust your container build environment as described above.
The Envoy binary can be found in C:\Windows\Temp\envoy-docker-build\envoy\source\exe
on the Docker host. You
can control this by setting ENVOY_DOCKER_BUILD_DIR
in the environment, e.g. to
generate the binary in C:\Users\foo\build\envoy\source\exe
you can run:
ENVOY_DOCKER_BUILD_DIR="C:\Users\foo\build" ./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh './ci/do_ci.sh bazel.dev'
Note the quotations around the ENVOY_DOCKER_BUILD_DIR
value to preserve the backslashes in the
path.
If you would like to run an interactive session to keep the build container running (to persist your local build environment), run:
./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh 'bash'
From an interactive session, you can invoke bazel
manually or use the ./ci/windows_ci_steps.sh
script to build and run tests.
The base build image used in the CI flows here lives in the envoy-build-tools repository. If you need to make and/or test changes to the build image, instructions to do so can be found in the build_container folder. See the Dockerfiles and build scripts there for building a new image.
The macOS CI build is part of the Azure Pipelines workflow.
Dependencies are installed by the ci/mac_ci_setup.sh
script, via Homebrew,
which is pre-installed on the Azure Pipelines macOS image.
The dependencies are cached and re-installed on every build. The ci/mac_ci_steps.sh
script executes the specific commands that
build and test Envoy. Note that the full version of Xcode (not just Command Line Tools) is required.
Coverity Scan static analysis is not run within Envoy CI. However, Envoy can be locally built and
submitted for analysis. A Coverity Scan Envoy project token must be generated from the
Coverity Project Settings.
Only a Coverity Project Administrator can create a token. With this token, running
ci/do_coverity_local.sh
will use the Ubuntu based envoyproxy/envoy-build-ubuntu
image to build the
Envoy static binary with the Coverity Scan tool chain. This process generates an artifact,
envoy-coverity-output.tgz, that is uploaded to Coverity for static analysis.
To build and submit for analysis:
COVERITY_TOKEN={generated Coverity project token} ./ci/do_coverity_local.sh