.. _stackbuild: Building based on Containers ============================ .. note:: **Abstract** When building images exposes one of the following requirements the stackbuild plugin provides an opportunity to address it: * Preserve the image rootfs for a later rebuild without requiring the original software repositories. * Build an image based on an existing container. * Build an image based on a container stack. * Transform a container into a {kiwi} image type Installation ------------ Add the {kiwi} repo from the Open Build Service. For details see :ref:`installation-from-obs`. The following {kiwi} plugin needs to be installed on the build system: .. code:: bash $ sudo zypper in python3-kiwi_stackbuild_plugin Concept ------- The design of the stackbuild plugin is two fold: First the plugin comes with a command called `stash` which allows to store a kiwi built root tree as an OCI container. OCI stands for *Open Container Interface* and is a defacto standard format in the container world. Once the container got created it can be managed using the preferred container toolchain. The plugin code itself uses `podman` to work with containers. As a next step and with the root tree as a container the plugin offers the opportunity to build images based on one ore more containers. That's also the reason why the plugin is called *stackbuild* as it allows you to stack different root containers together. Consequently the other command provided is named `stackbuild`. The `stash` and `stackbuild` commands can be used independently from each other. If there is already a registry with containers that should be used to build images from, `stackbuild` can directly consume them. This concept leads to a number of use cases and a few of them were picked and put into the abstract of this article. For the purpose of documenting the functionality of the plugin only a part of the possibilities are taken into account as follows: .. _stash: Create a stash -------------- The `stash` command creates an OCI compliant container from a given {kiwi-product} image root tree and registers it in the local container registry. From there a user can push it to any registry of choice. The following example creates a stash of a Tumbleweed build and illustrates how to register it in a foreign container registry: .. code:: bash # Build some image... $ git clone https://github.com/OSInside/kiwi.git $ sudo kiwi-ng system build \ --description kiwi/build-tests/x86/tumbleweed/test-image-MicroOS/ \ --set-repo http://download.opensuse.org/tumbleweed/repo/oss \ --target-dir /tmp/myTWToday # Stash the image root into a container $ sudo kiwi-ng system stash \ --root /tmp/myTWToday/build/image-root \ --container-name twmos-snapshot # Register the stash in a registry $ podman login $ podman push twmos-20211008 \ docker://docker.io/.../twmos-snapshot:2021-10-08 If the `stash` command is called multiple times with the same container-name this leads to a new layer in the container for each call. To inspect the number of layers added to the container the following command can be used: .. code:: bash $ podman inspect twmos-snapshot To list all stashes created by the `stash` command the following command can be used .. code:: bash $ kiwi-ng system stash --list Rebuild from a stash -------------------- The `stackbuild` command takes the given container(s) from the local or remote registry and uses it/them to either rebuild an image from that data or build a new image on top of that data. If multiple containers are given the `stackbuild` command stacks them together in the order as they were provided. .. note:: When using multiple containers the result stack root tree is created from a sequence of rsync commands into the same target directory. The stackbuild plugin does this with any container content given and does not check, validate or guarantee that the selection of containers are actually stackable or leads to an usable root tree. This means it's in the responsibility of the caller to make sure the provided containers can actually be stacked together in the given order. To simply rebuild the image from the stash created in :ref:`stash` call `stackbuild` as follows: .. code:: bash # Delete the image $ sudo rm -rf /tmp/myTWToday # Rebuild image from stash $ sudo kiwi-ng system stackbuild \ --stash twmos-snapshot:2021-10-08 \ --target-dir /tmp/myTWToday This rebuilds the image from the stash and the {kiwi} configuration inside of the stash. As all rootfs data is already in the stash, the command will not need external resources to rebuild the image. Turn a container into a VM image -------------------------------- Another use case for the `stackbuild` plugin is the transformation of container images into another image type that is supported by {kiwi}. The following example demonstrates how an existing container image from the openSUSE registry can be turned into a virtual machine image. When moving a container into a virtual machine image the following aspects has to be taken into account: 1. A container image usually has no kernel installed. 2. A container image usually has no bootloader installed. 3. A container image usually has no user configured. For a VM image the mentioned aspects are mandatory. Therefore the following {kiwi} image description contains this additional information which the container cannot provide: Create the {kiwi} description as follows: .. code:: bash $ mkdir container_to_VM_layer $ vi container_to_VM_layer/config.kiwi And place the following content: .. code:: xml The Author user@example.org Leap Container as VM false 1.99.1 zypper en_US us UTC To build the virtual machine image from the current hosted Leap 15.3 container at SUSE, call the following `stackbuild` command: .. code:: bash $ sudo kiwi-ng system stackbuild \ --stash leap:{exc_os_version} \ --from-registry registry.opensuse.org/opensuse \ --target-dir /tmp/myLeap \ --description container_to_VM_layer The resulting virtual machine image can be booted as follows: .. code:: bash $ qemu-kvm Leap-VM.x86_64-1.99.1.raw