Jib is a Gradle plugin for building Docker and OCI images for your Java applications.
For the Maven plugin, see the jib-maven-plugin project.
For information about the project, see the Jib project README.
☑️ Jib User Survey |
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What do you like best about Jib? What needs to be improved? Please tell us by taking a one-minute survey. Your responses will help us understand Jib usage and allow us to serve our customers (you!) better. |
- Upcoming Features
- Quickstart
- Multi Module Projects
- Extended Usage
- Need Help?
- Community
Make sure you are using Gradle version 5.1 or later.
In your Gradle Java project, add the plugin to your build.gradle
:
plugins {
id 'com.google.cloud.tools.jib' version '3.4.4'
}
See the Gradle Plugin Portal for more details.
You can containerize your application easily with one command:
gradle jib --image=<MY IMAGE>
This builds and pushes a container image for your application to a container registry. If you encounter authentication issues, see Authentication Methods.
To build to a Docker daemon, use:
gradle jibDockerBuild
If you would like to set up Jib as part of your Gradle build, follow the guide below.
Configure the plugin by setting the image to push to:
Using Google Container Registry (GCR)...
Make sure you have the docker-credential-gcr
command line tool. Jib automatically uses docker-credential-gcr
for obtaining credentials. See Authentication Methods for other ways of authenticating.
For example, to build the image gcr.io/my-gcp-project/my-app
, the configuration would be:
jib.to.image = 'gcr.io/my-gcp-project/my-app'
Make sure you have the docker-credential-ecr-login
command line tool. Jib automatically uses docker-credential-ecr-login
for obtaining credentials. See Authentication Methods for other ways of authenticating.
For example, to build the image aws_account_id.dkr.ecr.region.amazonaws.com/my-app
, the configuration would be:
jib.to.image = 'aws_account_id.dkr.ecr.region.amazonaws.com/my-app'
Using Docker Hub Registry...
Make sure you have a docker-credential-helper set up. For example, on macOS, the credential helper would be docker-credential-osxkeychain
. See Authentication Methods for other ways of authenticating.
For example, to build the image my-docker-id/my-app
, the configuration would be:
jib.to.image = 'my-docker-id/my-app'
Using JFrog Container Registry (JCR) or JFrog Artifactory...
Make sure you have a docker-credential-helper set up. For example, on macOS, the credential helper would be docker-credential-osxkeychain
. See Authentication Methods for other ways of authenticating.
For example, to build the image my-company-docker-local.jfrog.io/my-app
, the configuration would be:
jib.to.image = 'my-company-docker-local.jfrog.io/my-app'
Using Azure Container Registry (ACR)...
Make sure you have a ACR Docker Credential Helper
installed and set up. For example, on Windows, the credential helper would be docker-credential-acr-windows
. See Authentication Methods for other ways of authenticating.
For example, to build the image my_acr_name.azurecr.io/my-app
, the configuration would be:
jib.to.image = 'my_acr_name.azurecr.io/my-app'
Build your container image with:
gradle jib
Subsequent builds are much faster than the initial build.
Having trouble? Let us know by submitting an issue, contacting us on Gitter, or posting to the Jib users forum.
Jib can also build your image directly to a Docker daemon. This uses the docker
command line tool and requires that you have docker
available on your PATH
.
gradle jibDockerBuild
If you are using minikube
's remote Docker daemon, make sure you set up the correct environment variables to point to the remote daemon:
eval $(minikube docker-env)
gradle jibDockerBuild
Alternatively, you can set environment variables in the Jib configuration. See dockerClient
for more configuration options.
You can build and save your image to disk as a tarball with:
gradle jibBuildTar
This builds and saves your image to build/jib-image.tar
, which you can load into docker with:
docker load --input build/jib-image.tar
You can also have jib
run with each build by attaching it to the build
task:
tasks.build.dependsOn tasks.jib
Then, gradle build
will build and containerize your application.
As part of an image build, Jib also writes out the image digest and the image ID. By default, these are written out to build/jib-image.digest
and build/jib-image.id
respectively, but the locations can be configured using the jib.outputPaths.digest
and jib.outputPaths.imageId
configuration properties. See Extended Usage for more details.
Special handling of project dependencies is recommended when building complex multi module projects. See Multi Module Example for detailed information.
The plugin provides the jib
extension for configuration with the following options for customizing the image build:
Field | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
to |
to |
Required | Configures the target image to build your application to. |
from |
from |
See from |
Configures the base image to build your application on top of. |
container |
container |
See container |
Configures the container that is run from your built image. |
extraDirectories |
extraDirectories |
See extraDirectories |
Configures the directories used to add arbitrary files to the image. |
outputPaths |
outputPaths |
See outputPaths |
Configures the locations of additional build artifacts generated by Jib. |
dockerClient |
dockerClient |
See dockerClient |
Configures Docker for building to/from the Docker daemon. |
skaffold |
skaffold |
See skaffold |
Configures the internal skaffold tasks. This configuration should only be used when integrating with skaffold . |
containerizingMode |
String |
exploded |
If set to packaged , puts the JAR artifact built by the Gradle Java plugin into the final image. If set to exploded (default), containerizes individual .class files and resources files. |
allowInsecureRegistries |
boolean |
false |
If set to true, Jib ignores HTTPS certificate errors and may fall back to HTTP as a last resort. Leaving this parameter set to false is strongly recommended, since HTTP communication is unencrypted and visible to others on the network, and insecure HTTPS is no better than plain HTTP. If accessing a registry with a self-signed certificate, adding the certificate to your Java runtime's trusted keys may be an alternative to enabling this option. |
configurationName |
String |
runtimeClasspath |
Specify the name of the Gradle Configuration to use. |
from
is a closure with the following properties:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
image |
String |
eclipse-temurin:{8,11,17,21}-jre (or jetty for WAR) |
The image reference for the base image. The source type can be specified using a special type prefix. |
auth |
auth |
None | Specifies credentials directly (alternative to credHelper ). |
credHelper |
String |
None | Specifies a credential helper that can authenticate pulling the base image. This parameter can either be configured as an absolute path to the credential helper executable or as a credential helper suffix (following docker-credential- ). |
platforms |
platforms |
See platforms |
Configures platforms of base images to select from a manifest list. |
to
is a closure with the following properties:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
image |
String |
Required | The image reference for the target image. This can also be specified via the --image command line option. If the tag is not present here :latest is implied. |
auth |
auth |
None | Specifies credentials directly (alternative to credHelper ). |
credHelper |
String |
None | Specifies a credential helper that can authenticate pushing the target image. This parameter can either be configured as an absolute path to the credential helper executable or as a credential helper suffix (following docker-credential- ). |
tags |
List<String> |
None | Additional tags to push to. |
auth
is a closure with the following properties (see Using Specific Credentials):
Property | Type |
---|---|
username |
String |
password |
String |
platforms
can configure multiple platform
closures. Each individual platform
has the following properties:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
architecture |
String |
amd64 |
The architecture of a base image to select from a manifest list. |
os |
String |
linux |
The OS of a base image to select from a manifest list. |
See How do I specify a platform in the manifest list (or OCI index) of a base image? for examples.
container
is a closure with the following properties:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
appRoot |
String |
/app |
The root directory on the container where the app's contents are placed. Particularly useful for WAR-packaging projects to work with different Servlet engine base images by designating where to put exploded WAR contents; see WAR usage as an example. |
args |
List<String> |
None | Additional program arguments appended to the command to start the container (similar to Docker's CMD instruction in relation with ENTRYPOINT). In the default case where you do not set a custom entrypoint , this parameter is effectively the arguments to the main method of your Java application. |
creationTime |
String |
EPOCH |
Sets the container creation time. (Note that this property does not affect the file modification times, which are configured using jib.container.filesModificationTime .) The value can be EPOCH to set the timestamps to Epoch (default behavior), USE_CURRENT_TIMESTAMP to forgo reproducibility and use the real creation time, or an ISO 8601 date-time parsable with DateTimeFormatter.ISO_DATE_TIME such as 2019-07-15T10:15:30+09:00 or 2011-12-03T22:42:05Z . The value can also be initialized lazily with a provider. |
entrypoint |
List<String> |
None | The command to start the container with (similar to Docker's ENTRYPOINT instruction). If set, then jvmFlags , mainClass , extraClasspath , and expandClasspathDependencies are ignored. You may also set jib.container.entrypoint = 'INHERIT' to indicate that the entrypoint and args should be inherited from the base image.* The value can also be initialized lazily with a provider. |
environment |
Map<String, String> |
None | Key-value pairs for setting environment variables on the container (similar to Docker's ENV instruction). |
extraClasspath |
List<String> |
None | Additional paths in the container to prepend to the computed Java classpath. |
expandClasspathDependencies |
boolean |
false |
|
filesModificationTime |
String |
EPOCH_PLUS_SECOND |
Sets the modification time (last modified time) of files in the image put by Jib. (Note that this does not set the image creation time, which can be set using jib.container.creationTime .) The value should either be EPOCH_PLUS_SECOND to set the timestamps to Epoch + 1 second (default behavior), or an ISO 8601 date-time parsable with DateTimeFormatter.ISO_DATE_TIME such as 2019-07-15T10:15:30+09:00 or 2011-12-03T22:42:05Z . The value can also be initialized lazily with a provider. |
format |
String |
Docker |
Use OCI to build an OCI container image. |
jvmFlags |
List<String> |
None | Additional flags to pass into the JVM when running your application. The value can also be initialized lazily with a provider. |
labels |
Map<String, String> |
None | Key-value pairs for applying image metadata (similar to Docker's LABEL instruction). |
mainClass |
String |
Inferred** | The main class to launch your application from. The value can also be initialized lazily with a provider. |
ports |
List<String> |
None | Ports that the container exposes at runtime (similar to Docker's EXPOSE instruction). |
user |
String |
None | The user and group to run the container as. The value can be a username or UID along with an optional groupname or GID. The following are all valid: user , uid , user:group , uid:gid , uid:group , user:gid . |
volumes |
List<String> |
None | Specifies a list of mount points on the container. |
workingDirectory |
String |
None | The working directory in the container. |
extraDirectories
is a closure with the following properties (see Adding Arbitrary Files to the Image):
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
paths |
paths closure, or Object |
(project-dir)/src/main/jib |
May be configured as a closure configuring path elements, or as source directory values recognized by Project.files() , such as String , File , Path , List<String|File|Path> , etc. |
permissions |
Map<String, String> |
None | Maps file paths (glob patterns) on container to Unix permissions. (Effective only for files added from extra directories.) If not configured, permissions default to "755" for directories and "644" for files. See Adding Arbitrary Files to the Image for an example. |
paths
can configure multiple path
closures (see Adding Arbitrary Files to the Image). Each individual path
has the following properties:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
from |
Object |
(project-dir)/src/main/jib |
Accepts source directories that are recognized by Project.files() , such as String , File , Path , List<String|File|Path> , etc. |
into |
String |
/ |
The absolute unix path on the container to copy the extra directory contents into. |
includes |
List<String> |
None | Glob patterns for including files. See Adding Arbitrary Files to the Image for an example. |
excludes |
List<String> |
None | Glob patterns for excluding files. See Adding Arbitrary Files to the Image for an example. |
outputPaths
is a closure with the following properties:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
tar |
File |
(project-dir)/build/jib-image.tar |
The path of the tarball generated by jibBuildTar . Relative paths are resolved relative to the project root. |
digest |
File |
(project-dir)/build/jib-image.digest |
The path of the image digest written out during the build. Relative paths are resolved relative to the project root. |
imageId |
File |
(project-dir)/build/jib-image.id |
The path of the image ID written out during the build. Relative paths are resolved relative to the project root. |
dockerClient
is an object used to configure Docker when building to/from the Docker daemon. It has the following properties:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
executable |
File |
docker |
Sets the path to the Docker executable that is called to load the image into the Docker daemon. Please note: Users are responsible for ensuring that the Docker path passed in is valid and has the right permissions to be executed. |
environment |
Map<String, String> |
None | Sets environment variables used by the Docker executable. |
Each of these parameters is configurable via commandline using system properties. Jib's system properties follow the same naming convention as the configuration parameters, with each level separated by dots (i.e. -Djib.parameterName[.nestedParameter.[...]]=value
). Some examples are below:
gradle jib \
-Djib.to.image=myregistry/myimage:latest \
-Djib.to.auth.username=$USERNAME \
-Djib.to.auth.password=$PASSWORD
gradle jibDockerBuild \
-Djib.dockerClient.executable=/path/to/docker \
-Djib.container.environment=key1="value1",key2="value2" \
-Djib.container.args=arg1,arg2,arg3
The following table contains additional system properties that are not available as build configuration parameters:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
jib.httpTimeout |
int |
20000 |
HTTP connection/read timeout for registry interactions, in milliseconds. Use a value of 0 for an infinite timeout. |
jib.useOnlyProjectCache |
boolean |
false |
If set to true, Jib does not share a cache between different Gradle projects. |
jib.baseImageCache |
File |
Platform-dependent*** | Sets the directory to use for caching base image layers. This cache can (and should) be shared between multiple images. |
jib.applicationCache |
File |
[project dir]/build/jib-cache |
Sets the directory to use for caching application layers. This cache can be shared between multiple images. |
jib.console |
String |
None | If set to plain , Jib will print plaintext log messages rather than display a progress bar during the build. |
* If you configure args
while entrypoint
is set to 'INHERIT'
, the configured args
value will take precedence over the CMD propagated from the base image.
** Uses the main class defined in the jar
task or tries to find a valid main class.
*** The default base image cache is in the following locations on each platform:
- Linux:
[cache root]/google-cloud-tools-java/jib/
, where[cache root]
is$XDG_CACHE_HOME
($HOME/.cache/
if not set) - Mac:
[cache root]/Google/Jib/
, where[cache root]
is$XDG_CACHE_HOME
($HOME/Library/Caches/
if not set) - Windows:
[cache root]\Google\Jib\Cache
, where[cache root]
is%XDG_CACHE_HOME%
(%LOCALAPPDATA%
if not set)
Some options can be set in the global Jib configuration file. The file is at the following locations on each platform:
- Linux:
[config root]/google-cloud-tools-java/jib/config.json
, where[config root]
is$XDG_CONFIG_HOME
($HOME/.config/
if not set) - Mac:
[config root]/Google/Jib/config.json
, where[config root]
is$XDG_CONFIG_HOME
($HOME/Library/Preferences/Config/
if not set) - Windows:
[config root]\Google\Jib\Config\config.json
, where[config root]
is%XDG_CONFIG_HOME%
(%LOCALAPPDATA%
if not set)
disableUpdateCheck
: when set to true, disables the periodic up-to-date version check.registryMirrors
: a list of mirror settings for each base image registry. In the following example, if the base image configured in Jib is for a Docker Hub image, thenmirror.gcr.io
,localhost:5000
, and the Docker Hub (registry-1.docker.io
) are tried in order until Jib can successfully pull a base image.
{
"disableUpdateCheck": false,
"registryMirrors": [
{
"registry": "registry-1.docker.io",
"mirrors": ["mirror.gcr.io", "localhost:5000"]
},
{
"registry": "quay.io",
"mirrors": ["private-mirror.test.com"]
}
]
}
Note about mirror.gcr.io
: it is not a Docker Hub mirror but a cache. It caches frequently-accessed public Docker Hub images, and it's often possible that your base image does not exist in mirror.gcr.io
. In that case, Jib will have to fall back to use Docker Hub.
In this configuration, the image:
- Is built from a base of
openjdk:alpine
(pulled from Docker Hub) - Is pushed to
localhost:5000/my-image:built-with-jib
,localhost:5000/my-image:tag2
, andlocalhost:5000/my-image:latest
- Runs by calling
java -Dmy.property=example.value -Xms512m -Xdebug -cp app/libs/*:app/resources:app/classes mypackage.MyApp some args
- Exposes port 1000 for tcp (default), and ports 2000, 2001, 2002, and 2003 for udp
- Has two labels (key1:value1 and key2:value2)
- Is built as OCI format
jib {
from {
image = 'openjdk:alpine'
}
to {
image = 'localhost:5000/my-image/built-with-jib'
credHelper = 'osxkeychain'
tags = ['tag2', 'latest']
}
container {
jvmFlags = ['-Dmy.property=example.value', '-Xms512m', '-Xdebug']
mainClass = 'mypackage.MyApp'
args = ['some', 'args']
ports = ['1000', '2000-2003/udp']
labels = [key1:'value1', key2:'value2']
format = 'OCI'
}
}
There are three different types of base images that Jib accepts: an image from a container registry, an image stored in the Docker daemon, or an image tarball on the local filesystem. You can specify which you would like to use by prepending the jib.from.image
configuration with a special prefix, listed below:
Prefix | Example | Type |
---|---|---|
None | openjdk:11-jre |
Pulls the base image from a registry. |
registry:// |
registry://eclipse-temurin:11-jre |
Pulls the base image from a registry. |
docker:// |
docker://busybox |
Retrieves the base image from the Docker daemon. |
tar:// |
tar:///path/to/file.tar |
Uses an image tarball stored at the specified path as the base image. Also accepts relative paths (e.g. tar://build/jib-image.tar ). |
You can add arbitrary, non-classpath files to the image without extra configuration by placing them in a src/main/jib
directory. This will copy all files within the jib
folder to the target directory (/
by default) in the image, maintaining the same structure (e.g. if you have a text file at src/main/jib/dir/hello.txt
, then your image will contain /dir/hello.txt
after being built with Jib).
Note that Jib does not follow symbolic links in the container image. If a symbolic link is present, it will be removed prior to placing the files and directories.
You can configure different directories by using the jib.extraDirectories.paths
parameter in your build.gradle
:
jib {
// Copies files from 'src/main/custom-extra-dir' and '/home/user/jib-extras' instead of 'src/main/jib'
extraDirectories.paths = ['src/main/custom-extra-dir', '/home/user/jib-extras']
}
Alternatively, the jib.extraDirectories
parameter can be used as a closure to set custom extra directories, as well as the extra files' permissions on the container:
jib {
extraDirectories {
paths = 'src/main/custom-extra-dir' // Copies files from 'src/main/custom-extra-dir'
permissions = [
'/path/on/container/to/fileA': '755', // Read/write/execute for owner, read/execute for group/other
'/path/to/another/file': '644', // Read/write for owner, read-only for group/other
'/glob/pattern/**/*.sh': 755
]
}
}
Using paths
as a closure, you may also specify the target of the copy and include or exclude files:
extraDirectories {
paths {
path {
// copies the contents of 'src/main/extra-dir' into '/' on the container
from = file('src/main/extra-dir')
}
path {
// copies the contents of 'src/main/another/dir' into '/extras' on the container
from = file('src/main/another/dir')
into = '/extras'
}
path {
// copies a single-file.xml
from = 'src/main/resources/xml-files'
into = '/dest-in-container'
includes = ['single-file.xml']
}
path {
// copies only .txt files except for 'hidden.txt' at the source root
from = 'build/some-output'
into = '/txt-files'
includes = ['*.txt', '**/*.txt']
excludes = ['hidden.txt']
}
}
}
You can also configure paths
and permissions
through lazy configuration in Gradle, using providers in build.gradle
:
extraDirectories {
paths = project.provider { 'src/main/custom-extra-dir' }
permissions = project.provider { ['/path/on/container/to/fileA': '755'] }
}
extraDirectories {
paths {
path {
from = project.provider { 'src/main/custom-extra-dir' }
into = project.provider { '/dest-in-container' }
includes = project.provider { ['*.txt', '**/*.txt'] }
excludes = project.provider { ['hidden.txt'] }
}
}
}
Pushing/pulling from private registries require authorization credentials.
- Jib looks from credentials from
$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/containers/auth.json
,$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/containers/auth.json
,$HOME/.config/containers/auth.json
,$DOCKER_CONFIG/config.json
, and$HOME/.docker/config.json
.
See this issue and man containers-auth.json
for more information about the files.
Docker credential helpers are CLI tools that handle authentication with various registries.
Some common credential helpers include:
- Google Container Registry:
docker-credential-gcr
- AWS Elastic Container Registry:
docker-credential-ecr-login
- Docker Hub Registry:
docker-credential-*
- Azure Container Registry:
docker-credential-acr-*
Configure credential helpers to use by specifying them as a credHelper
for their respective image in the jib
extension.
Example configuration:
jib {
from {
image = 'aws_account_id.dkr.ecr.region.amazonaws.com/my-base-image'
credHelper = 'ecr-login'
}
to {
image = 'gcr.io/my-gcp-project/my-app'
credHelper = 'gcr'
}
}
You can specify credentials directly in the extension for the from
and/or to
images.
jib {
from {
image = 'aws_account_id.dkr.ecr.region.amazonaws.com/my-base-image'
auth {
username = USERNAME // Defined in 'gradle.properties'.
password = PASSWORD
}
}
to {
image = 'gcr.io/my-gcp-project/my-app'
auth {
username = 'oauth2accesstoken'
password = 'gcloud auth print-access-token'.execute().text.trim()
}
}
}
These credentials can be stored in gradle.properties
, retrieved from a command (like gcloud auth print-access-token
), or read in from a file.
For example, you can use a key file for authentication (for GCR, see Using a JSON key file):
jib {
to {
image = 'gcr.io/my-gcp-project/my-app'
auth {
username = '_json_key'
password = file('keyfile.json').text
}
}
}
If you don't set jib.container.entrypoint
, the default container entrypoint to launch your app will be basically java -cp <runtime classpath> <app main class>
. (The final java
command can be further configured by setting jib.container.{jvmFlags|args|extraClasspath|mainClass|expandClasspathDependencies}
.)
Sometimes, you'll want to set a custom entrypoint to use a shell to wrap the java
command. For example, to let sh
or bash
expand environment variables, or to have more sophisticated logic to construct a launch command. (Note, however, that running a command with a shell forks a new child process unless you run it with exec
like sh -c "exec java ..."
. Whether to run the JVM process as PID 1 or a child process of a PID-1 shell is a decision you should make carefully.) In this scenario, you will want to have a way inside a shell script to reliably know the default runtime classpath and the main class that Jib would use by default. To help this, Jib >= 3.1 creates two JVM argument files under /app
(the default app root) inside the built image.
/app/jib-classpath-file
: runtime classpath that Jib would use for default app launch/app/jib-main-class-file
: main class
Therefore, for example, the following commands will be able to launch your app:
- (Java 9+)
java -cp @/app/jib-classpath-file @/app/jib-main-class-file
- (with shell)
java -cp $( cat /app/jib-classpath-file ) $( cat /app/jib-main-class-file )
To ensure that a Jib build is reproducible, Jib sets the image creation time to the Unix epoch (00:00:00, January 1st, 1970 in UTC) and all file modification times to one second past the epoch by default. See the Jib FAQ for more details on reproducible builds.
Another, more complex way to achieve reproducible builds with stable creation times is to leverage commit timestamps from the project's SCM. For example, the gradle-git-properties plugin can be used to inject Git commit information into the current build. These can then be used to configure jib.container.creationTime
. Since the actual Git information is not yet available at the time the build is configured, it needs to be set through lazy configuration in Gradle, using a provider in build.gradle
:
jib {
container {
creationTime = project.provider { project.ext.git['git.commit.time'] }
}
}
This would build an image with the creation time set to the time of the latest commit from project.ext.git['git.commit.time']
.
The Jib build plugins have an extension framework that enables anyone to easily extend Jib's behavior to their needs. We maintain select first-party plugins for popular use cases like fine-grained layer control and Quarkus support, but anyone can write and publish an extension. Check out the jib-extensions repository for more information.
Jib also containerizes WAR projects. If the Gradle project uses the WAR Plugin, Jib will by default use jetty
as a base image to deploy the project WAR. No extra configuration is necessary other than using the WAR Plugin to make Jib build WAR images.
Note that Jib will work slightly differently for WAR projects from JAR projects:
container.mainClass
andcontainer.jvmFlags
are ignored.- The WAR will be exploded into
/var/lib/jetty/webapps/ROOT
, which is the expected WAR location for the Jetty base image.
To use a different Servlet engine base image, you can customize container.appRoot
, container.entrypoint
, and container.args
. If you do not set entrypoint
or args
, Jib will inherit the ENTRYPOINT
and CMD
of the base image, so in many cases, you may not need to configure them. However, you will most likely have to set container.appRoot
to a proper location depending on the base image. Here is an example of using a Tomcat image:
jib {
from.image = 'tomcat:8.5-jre8-alpine'
// For demonstration only: this directory in the base image contains a Tomcat default
// app (welcome page), so you may first want to delete this directory in the base image.
container.appRoot = '/usr/local/tomcat/webapps/ROOT'
}
When specifying a jetty
image yourself with from.image
, you may run into an issue (#3204) and need to override the entrypoint.
jib {
from.image = 'jetty:11.0.2-jre11'
container.entrypoint = ['java', '-jar', '/usr/local/jetty/start.jar']
}
Jib is an included builder in Skaffold. Jib passes build information to skaffold through special internal tasks so that skaffold understands when it should rebuild or synchronize files. For complex builds, the defaults may not be sufficient, so the jib
extension provides a skaffold
configuration closure which exposes:
Field | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
watch |
watch |
None | Additional configuration for file watching |
sync |
sync |
None | Additional configuration for file synchronization |
watch
is a closure with the following properties:
Field | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
buildIncludes |
List<String> |
None | Additional build files that skaffold should watch |
includes |
List<String> |
None | Additional project files or directories that skaffold should watch |
excludes |
List<String> |
None | Files and directories that skaffold should not watch |
sync
is a closure with the following properties:
Field | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
excludes |
List<String> |
None | Files and directories that skaffold should not sync |
A lot of questions are already answered!
For usage questions, please ask them on Stack Overflow.
See the Privacy page.
See Milestones for planned features. Get involved with the community for the latest updates.
See the Jib project README.
This is not an officially supported Google product.