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I checked out some of the examples and saw one that used my "classic" blog post on multi-stage builds. Note: If you're a RedHat customer and paying for support, then you really should use their entire toolchain to get the best value for your money. Out of all the options, I think that I like k3c the most, but it is very nascient and bundles everything into one binary which is likely to conflict with other software, at present it runs its own embedded containerd and buildkit binaries.
#Docker inspect format go template range update#
Update for Nov 2020: anyone using Docker's set of official base-images should also read: Preparing for the Docker Hub Rate Limits Alternatives to Docker
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The main Docker CLI has become a lot more than build/ship/run, and also lugs around several years of baggage, it now comes bundled with Docker Swarm and EE features. Nothing as such, Docker runs well on armhf, arm64, and on x86_64.
#Docker inspect format go template range how to#
I'll then wrap things up and let you know how to get in touch with suggestions, feedback and your own stories around wants and needs in container tooling. This post covers tooling which can build an image from a Dockerfile, and so anything which limits the user to only Java (jib) or Go (ko) for instance is out of scope. The first option in the post will show how to use the built-in buildkit option for Docker's CLI, then buildkit stand-alone (on Linux only), followed by Google's container builder, Kaniko.
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The easiest way to think about OpenFaaS is as a CaaS platform for Kubernetes which can run microservices, and add in FaaS and event-driven tooling for free. I'll use OpenFaaS as the case-study, which uses OCI-format container images for its workloads. In this post I'll outline several ways to build containers without the need for Docker itself.