This repository contains the Dockerfile for building our default Ansible runner image.
To use the Ansible runner image, simply update your stack settings
to use public.ecr.aws/spacelift/runner-ansible
as the runner image for the stack.
The image is pushed to the public.ecr.aws/spacelift/runner-ansible
public repository. It is also pushed to the
ghcr.io/spacelift-io/runner-ansible
repository as a backup in case of issues with ECR.
Altogether we have 3 flavors of the image:
public.ecr.aws/spacelift/runner-ansible
- built on top of the Spacelift Terraform runner image, with Ansible installed.public.ecr.aws/spacelift/runner-ansible-aws
- built on top ofrunner-ansible
, withboto3
installed.public.ecr.aws/spacelift/runner-ansible-gcp
- built on top ofrunner-ansible
, withgoogle-auth
installed.
This repository uses two main branches:
main
- contains the production version of the runner image.future
- used to test development changes.
Pushes to main deploy to the latest
tag, whereas pushes to future deploy to the future
tag. This
means that to use the development version you can use the public.ecr.aws/spacelift/runner-ansible:future
image.
The only requirement for working on this repo is a Docker installation.
The easiest way to test a new image before opening a pull request is to push it to your own Docker repository and then update a test stack to use your custom image. The following steps explain the process using Docker Hub, but any other public container registry can be used.
First, sign-up for an account at Docker Hub, and login via docker login
:
docker login
Next, build the image using your Docker Hub username to tag it. For example, if your username
is abc123
, you would use the following command to build the image:
docker build -t abc123/runner-ansible:latest .
Once the build has completed, push your changes:
docker push abc123/runner-ansible:latest
Congratulations! You can now update your stack to use abc123/runner-ansible:latest
as its
runner image.