- Change integration tests to use docker hub instead of GCR due to bug
in library that requires authentication with gcr.io even for public
images. See #966 for bug tracking this.
- Make uploading to GCS bucket configurable through a flag --uploadToGCS
- Utilize a locally deployed docker registry in travis CI to remove
dependency of needing to authenticate with GCP. This requires host
networking such that we can access the registry on localhost:5000
- Use the commit that's being tested for `TestGitBuildcontext`
- Remove duplicate GitBuildContext case that's now covered by default in
travis CI.
* Revert "Change cache key calculation to be more reproducible. (#525)"
This reverts commit 1ffae47fdd.
* Add logging of composition key back
* Do not include build args in cache key
This should be save, given that the commands will have the args included
when the cache key gets built.
Before we were using the full image digest, but that contains a timestamp. Now
we only use the layers themselves and the image config (env vars, etc.).
Also fix a bug in unpacking the layers themselves. mtimes can change during unpacking,
so set them all once at the end.
To add layer caching to kaniko, I added two flags: --cache and
--use-cache.
If --use-cache is set, then the cache will be used, and if --cache is
specified then that repo will be used to store cached layers. If --cache
isn't set, a cache will be inferred from the destination provided.
Currently, caching only works for RUN commands. Before executing the
command, kaniko checks if the cached layer exists. If it does, it pulls
it and extracts it. It then adds those files to the snapshotter and
append a layer to the config history. If the cached layer does not exist, kaniko executes the command and
pushes the newly created layer to the cache.
All cached layers are tagged with a stable key, which is built based off
of:
1. The base image digest
2. The current state of the filesystem
3. The current command being run
4. The current config file (to account for metadata changes)
I also added two integration tests to make sure caching works
1. Dockerfile_test_cache runs 'date', which should be exactly the same
the second time the image is built
2. Dockerfile_test_cache_install makes sure apt-get install can be
reproduced