This repository contains the source for building .NET Core apps as reproducible Docker images using source-to-image. The resulting image can be run using Docker.
.NET Core versions currently provided are:
- [RETIRED] 1.0 (RHEL 7, CentOS 7)
- [RETIRED] 1.1 (RHEL 7)
- [RETIRED] 2.0 (RHEL 7, CentOS 7)
- 2.1 (RHEL 7, RHEL 8, CentOS 7)
- [RETIRED] 2.2 (RHEL 7, CentOS 7)
- 3.0 (RHEL 7, RHEL 8)
- 3.1 (RHEL 7, RHEL 8, CentOS 7, Fedora)
$ git clone https://github.com/redhat-developer/s2i-dotnetcore.git
$ sudo VERSIONS=3.1 ./build.sh
Note: to build RHEL 7 based images, you need to run the build on a properly subscribed RHEL 7 machine. On RHEL 8 systems, RHEL 8 images are built by default. On non-RHEL, building CentOS images is the default.
To override the default basis of the image, set IMAGE_OS to the desired base system, such as IMAGE_OS=CENTOS or IMAGE_OS=RHEL8.
The image streams can be installed using the dotnet_imagestreams_*.json
files with the OpenShift client oc
.
This repo contains a script that helps install/upgrade/remove the imagestreams.
script: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/redhat-developer/s2i-dotnetcore/master/install-imagestreams.sh
For example, to install the rhel7
based images and add a secret for authenticating against the registry.redhat.io
registry:
$ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/redhat-developer/s2i-dotnetcore/master/install-imagestreams.sh
$ chmod +x install-imagestreams.sh
$ ./install-imagestreams.sh --os rhel7 -u <subscription_username> -p <subscription_password>
You can run ./install-imagestreams.sh --help
for more information.
script: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/redhat-developer/s2i-dotnetcore/master/install-imagestreams.ps1
For example, to install the rhel7
based images and add a secret for authenticating against the registry.redhat.io
registry:
PS > Invoke-WebRequest https://raw.githubusercontent.com/redhat-developer/s2i-dotnetcore/master/install-imagestreams.ps1 -UseBasicParsing -OutFile install-imagestreams.ps1
PS > .\install-imagestreams.ps1 -OS rhel7 -User <subscription_username> -Password <subscription_password>
Running scripts may be prohibited by the ExecutionPolicy
, you can relax the policy by running: Set-ExecutionPolicy -Scope Process -ExecutionPolicy Bypass -Force
You can run Get-Help .\install-imagestreams.ps1
for more information.
For information about usage of Docker image for .NET Core 3.1, see 3.1 builder usage documentation and 3.1 runtime usage documentation.
For information about usage of Docker image for .NET Core 3.0, see 3.0 builder usage documentation and 3.0 runtime usage documentation.
For information about usage of Docker image for .NET Core 2.2, see 2.2 builder usage documentation and 2.2 runtime usage documentation.
For information about usage of Docker image for .NET Core 2.1, see 2.1 builder usage documentation and 2.1 runtime usage documentation.
For information about usage of Docker image for .NET Core 2.0, see 2.0 builder usage documentation and 2.0 runtime usage documentation.
For information about usage of Docker image for .NET Core 1.1, see 1.1 usage documentation.
For information about usage of Docker image for .NET Core 1.0, see 1.0 usage documentation.
- Platform name: 'dotnetcore' for 1.x, 'dotnet' for 2.0+
- Platform version (without dots)
- Base image: 'rhel7' or 'centos7'
Examples: dotnet/dotnetcore-10-rhel7
, dotnet/dotnet-21-centos7
The templates
folder contains OpenShift templates. Some of these will be shipped with OpenShift.
Templates under the templates/community
folder are provided and maintained by the community.
They are not supported or kept up-to-date by the maintainers of this repository and may fail when
used with newer versions of .NET Core.
If a template is not on your OpenShift installation, you can import it:
oc create -f <template.json>
To instantiate a template you can use the oc new-app
command:
oc new-app --template=<template>
The template can also be instantiated using the OpenShift web console. Login to the console and navigate to the desired project. Click the Add to Project button. Search and select the desired template by it's name (e.g. dotnet-example). Next, click Create to start a build and deploy the sample application. Once the build has and deployment have completed, you can browse to the application using the url you find in project overview.
dotnet-example
The dotnet-example template can be used to create a new .NET Core service in OpenShift. It provides parameters for all the environment variables of the s2i-dotnetcore builder. It also includes a liveness and a readiness probe.
dotnet-runtime-example
The dotnet-runtime-example template can be used to create a new .NET Core service in OpenShift. It is meant to serve as an example of how to create a 'chained build' where one image is used to build an application but the runtime image is used to deploy the application.
For more information on build chaining in OpenShift, please see this doc.
dotnet-pgsql-persistent
The dotnet-pgsql-persistent creates a .NET Core service with a PostgreSQL backend. It provides parameters for all the environment
variables of the s2i-dotnetcore builder and variables to setup the database. The database connection information is passed to the
.NET application via the ConnectionString
environment variable.
aspnet-2.x.json
Provides aspnet:2.1
image streams that are built on top of dotnet:2.1
using a Docker
strategy and include
ASP.NET Core NuGet packages. Using these streams results in improved build speed, because the NuGet packages no longer need to be downloaded.
You can add these imagestreams by running:
oc create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/redhat-developer/s2i-dotnetcore/master/templates/aspnet-2.x.json
After the file is imported in OpenShift, OpenShift will build the aspnet:2.1
images. This will take a few minutes. Once that is
complete, they can be used as replacements for the dotnet:2.1
image streams. For example:
oc new-app --name=myapp aspnet:2.1~https://github.com/redhat-developer/s2i-dotnetcore-ex#dotnetcore-2.1 --build-env DOTNET_STARTUP_PROJECT=app
note: dotnet:3.0
+ image streams include ASP.NET Core build dependencies by default.
community/dotnet-baget.json
Provides templates for deploying a persistent, or ephemeral NuGet Server on OpenShift. These templates use BaGet, an open-source NuGet server implementation. Source code for BaGet can be found at: https://github.com/loic-sharma/BaGet.git.