Key features:
- Automatically generate a docker image from your Poetry application.
- Highly configurable. You can configure the image by adding a section in the
pyproject.toml
configuration file.
In order to install the plugin you need to have installed a poetry version >=1.2.0
and type:
poetry self add poetry-dockerize-plugin@latest
No configuration needed! Just type:
poetry dockerize
>Building image: poetry-sample-app:latest
>Successfully built image: poetry-sample-app:latest
docker run --rm -it poetry-sample-app:latest
>hello world!
You just need to run the quickstart command in your GitHub Actions workflow:
name: Build and publish latest
on:
push:
branches: main
jobs:
login:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Install Poetry
uses: snok/install-poetry@v1
- name: Install poetry-dockerize-plugin
run: poetry self add poetry-dockerize-plugin@latest
- name: Build and package
run: |
poetry install
poetry run pytest
poetry dockerize
- name: Login to Docker Hub
uses: docker/login-action@v3
with:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_TOKEN }}
- name: Push to Docker Hub
run: docker push my-app:latest
To customize some options, you can add a [tool.dockerize]
section in your pyproject.toml
file. For example to change the image name:
[tool.dockerize]
name = "myself/myproject-app"
You can also pass any option via environment variable by prefixing the key with DOCKERIZE_
. For example, to set the entrypoint
you can use the DOCKERIZE_ENTRYPOINT
environment variable:
export DOCKERIZE_ENTRYPOINT="python -m myapp"
poetry dockerize
or use a .env file which will be loaded by the plugin:
echo "DOCKERIZE_ENTRYPOINT=python -m myapp" > .env
poetry dockerize
For dicts such as env
and labels
, you can set multiple values by adding multiple variables:
export DOCKERIZE_ENV_MY_VAR="my_value"
export DOCKERIZE_ENV_MY_OTHER_VAR="my_other_value"
export DOCKERIZE_LABELS_MY_LABEL="label1"
poetry dockerize
This examples shows a complete configuration of the docker image:
[tool.dockerize]
name = "alternative-image-name"
python = "3.12"
base-image = "python:3.12-slim"
tags = ["latest-dev"]
entrypoint = ["python", "-m", "whatever"]
ports = [5000]
env = {"MY_APP_ENV" = "dev"}
labels = {"MY_APP_LABEL" = "dev"}
apt-packages = ["curl"]
extra-run-instructions = ["RUN curl https://huggingface.co/transformers/"]
# Only for build docker layer
build-apt-packages = ["gcc"]
extra-build-instructions = ["RUN poetry config http-basic.foo <username> <password>"]
build-poetry-install-args = ["-E", "all", "--no-root"]
name
customizes the docker image name.python
python version to use. If not specified, will try to be extracted fromtool.poetry.dependencies.python
. Default is3.11
base-image
customizes the base image. If not defined, the default base image ispython:<python-version>-slim-bookworm
.tags
declares a list of tags for the image.entrypoint
customizes the entrypoint of the image. If not provided, the default entrypoint is retrieved from thepackages
configuration.ports
exposes portsenv
declares environment variables inside the docker image.labels
append labels to the docker image. Default labels are added following the opencontainers specification.apt-packages
installs apt packages inside the docker image.extra-run-instructions
adds extra instructions to the docker run (after poetry install). Any modification to the filesystem will be kept after the poetry install.
For the build step:
build-apt-packages
installs apt packages inside the build docker container.extra-build-instructions
adds extra instructions to the docker build (before poetry install). Any modification to the filesystem will be lost after the poetry install. If you need to add files to the image, use theextra-run-instructions
.build-poetry-install-args
adds additional arguments to thepoetry install
command in the build step.
All command line options provided by the poetry-dockerize-plugin
may be accessed by typing:
poetry dockerize --help
To troubleshoot the plugin, you can use the --debug
flag to get more information about the execution.
poetry dockerize --debug
To only generate the Dockerfile, you can use the --generate
flag.
poetry dockerize --generate
Then you can store the Dockerfile on the repository and use it as a template and customize it as you need.
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.