diff --git a/content/docs/for-app-developers/concepts/build.md b/content/docs/for-app-developers/concepts/build.md index 5cafcdf9e..f43baea68 100644 --- a/content/docs/for-app-developers/concepts/build.md +++ b/content/docs/for-app-developers/concepts/build.md @@ -23,5 +23,4 @@ Builders provide a convenient way to distribute buildpacks. [build-time base image]: /docs/for-app-developers/concepts/base-images/build/ [builder]: /docs/for-platform-operators/concepts/builder [buildpack]: /docs/for-app-developers/concepts/buildpack/ -[lifecycle]: /docs/for-platform-operators/concepts/lifecycle/ [runtime base image]: /docs/for-app-developers/concepts/base-images/run/ diff --git a/content/docs/for-app-developers/concepts/experimental-features.md b/content/docs/for-app-developers/concepts/experimental-features.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a989a05e5 --- /dev/null +++ b/content/docs/for-app-developers/concepts/experimental-features.md @@ -0,0 +1,36 @@ ++++ +title="What are experimental features?" +weight=8 ++++ + +Certain features are considered `experimental` and susceptible to change in future API versions. + + + +This means users will need to enable the `experimental` mode in order to use one of these features. + +If using `pack`, run `pack config experimental true`, or add `experimental = true` to your `~/.pack/config.toml` file to enable experimental features. + +If using the `lifecycle` directly, set the `CNB_EXPERIMENTAL_MODE` [environment variable](https://github.com/buildpacks/spec/blob/main/platform.md#experimental-features). + +The following features are experimental for `pack`: + +* building for [Windows containers][windows] +* exporting to [OCI layout][oci-layout] format on disk +* Interacting with the [buildpack registry][registry] +* `pack manifest` commands +* `pack buildpack --flatten` +* `pack build --interactive` +* When building, reading project metadata version & source URL from [project.toml][project-descriptor] + +The following features are experimental for `lifecycle`: + +* Building for [Windows containers][windows] +* Exporting to [OCI layout][oci-layout] format on disk + +For more information and to look at an example of how this might be valuable, see [Export to OCI layout format on disk][oci-layout]. + +[oci-layout]: https://buildpacks.io/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/special-cases/export-to-oci-layout/ +[project-descriptor]: https://buildpacks.io/docs/reference/config/project-descriptor/ +[registry]: https://buildpacks.io/docs/for-buildpack-authors/how-to/distribute-buildpacks/publish-buildpack/ +[windows]: https://buildpacks.io/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/special-cases/build-for-windows/ diff --git a/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-inputs/specify-default-launch-process.md b/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-inputs/specify-default-launch-process.md index e8a737933..955319548 100644 --- a/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-inputs/specify-default-launch-process.md +++ b/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-inputs/specify-default-launch-process.md @@ -4,6 +4,15 @@ weight=99 summary="Buildpacks can define multiple processes for an application image. Specify which process should be the default." +++ -This page is a stub! The CNB project is applying to [Google Season of Docs](https://developers.google.com/season-of-docs/docs/timeline) to receive support for improving our documentation. Please check back soon. +While buildpacks usually define the default process type for an application, end users may specify the desired default process. -If you are familiar with this content and would like to make a contribution, please feel free to open a PR :) +To specify the default process: + +* You first need to know what named process types might be contributed by the buildpacks in your build; for more information, see docs for [running the application][Run the application] +* Append the following flag to the `pack build` command: + +```bash +pack build --default-process ` # must be a valid process name +``` + +[Run the application]: https://buildpacks.io/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/specify-launch-process/ diff --git a/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/inspect-app.md b/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/inspect-app.md index b09364ce9..b1967f764 100644 --- a/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/inspect-app.md +++ b/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/inspect-app.md @@ -8,15 +8,19 @@ Buildpacks-built images contain metadata that allow you to audit both the image Information includes: + * The process types that are available and the commands associated with them * The run-image the app image was based on * The buildpacks were used to create the app image * Whether the run-image can be rebased with a new version through the `Rebasable` label or not * And more...! +`pack` offers a command to help you inspect the application image and view some of its contents as shown below: + ```bash pack inspect-image test-node-js-app ``` + You should see the following: ```text @@ -35,4 +39,25 @@ Processes: Apart from the above standard metadata, buildpacks can also populate information about the dependencies they have provided in form of a `Software Bill-of-Materials` or [SBOM]. +Buildpacks-built images are constructed in a way that’s easy to understand, with each of the layers being meaningful and independent of all other layers. You can get more details about each layer and how it was created to better understand how the [build] actually worked. + +There are a number of available tools that can help you achieve this and understand what is contained in your `OCI` image; a popular one is [dive]. + +`Dive` can help you inspect `OCI` images and view their layers and each layer's details. If you were to build an `OCI` image following the [multi process app] example and run `dive` on the generated image, you'll be presented with some detailed information about all of the image layers and the contents of each layer. + +You can use `dive` as follows: + +```bash +dive multi-process-app +``` + +The output should look similar to the following: + +PLACEHOLDER + +As seen in the output above, you're presented with `Layers`, `Layer Details`, `Image Details`, and `Current Layer Contents`. To view the contents or explore the file tree of any layer, you need to select the layer on the left using the arrow keys. + [SBOM]: /docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/download-sbom +[build]: https://buildpacks.io/docs/for-app-developers/concepts/build/ +[Dive]: https://github.com/wagoodman/dive +[multi process app]: https://buildpacks.io/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/specify-launch-process/#build-a-multi-process-app diff --git a/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/specify-launch-process.md b/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/specify-launch-process.md index 562cb0d2e..419f35f99 100644 --- a/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/specify-launch-process.md +++ b/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/specify-launch-process.md @@ -1,4 +1,3 @@ - +++ title="Run the application" aliases=[ @@ -15,7 +14,8 @@ Buildpacks-built images can contain multiple process types. For this example we will use the `hello-processes` buildpack from our [samples][samples] repo so make sure you have it cloned locally. Let's build the app. -``` + +```bash pack build multi-process-app \ --builder cnbs/sample-builder:alpine \ --buildpack samples/java-maven \ @@ -26,14 +26,14 @@ pack build multi-process-app \ If you inspect the app image with `pack`, you will see multiple process types defined: -``` +```bash pack inspect-image multi-process-app ``` The output should look similar to the below: -``` +```text Inspecting image: multi-process-app REMOTE: @@ -76,16 +76,18 @@ The `launcher` will source any profile scripts (for `non-direct` processes) and If you would like to run the default process, you can simply run the app image without any additional arguments: -``` +```bash docker run --rm -p 8080:8080 multi-process-app ``` +>As an app developer, you can specify what the default process is; see the [specify default launch process][default-process] page for more information. + #### Default process type with additional arguments If you would like to pass additional arguments to the default process, you can run the app image with the arguments specified in the command: -``` +```bash docker run --rm -p 8080:8080 multi-process-app --spring.profiles.active=mysql ``` @@ -94,7 +96,7 @@ docker run --rm -p 8080:8080 multi-process-app --spring.profiles.active=mysql To run a non-default process type, set the process type as the entrypoint for the run container: -``` +```bash docker run --rm --entrypoint sys-info multi-process-app ``` @@ -103,7 +105,7 @@ docker run --rm --entrypoint sys-info multi-process-app You can pass additional arguments to a non-default process type: -``` +```bash docker run --rm --entrypoint sys-info multi-process-app --spring.profiles.active=mysql ``` @@ -112,21 +114,24 @@ docker run --rm --entrypoint sys-info multi-process-app --spring.profiles.active You can even override the buildpack-defined process types: -``` +```bash docker run --rm --entrypoint launcher -it multi-process-app bash ``` -Now let's exit this shell and run an alternative entrypoint - -``` +Now let's exit this shell and run an alternative entrypoint - + +```bash exit ``` -``` + +```bash docker run --rm --entrypoint launcher -it multi-process-app echo hello "$WORLD" # $WORLD is evaluated on the host machine ``` -``` + +```bash docker run --rm --entrypoint launcher -it multi-process-app echo hello '$WORLD' # $WORLD is evaluated in the container after profile scripts are sourced ``` @@ -135,7 +140,7 @@ docker run --rm --entrypoint launcher -it multi-process-app echo hello '$WORLD' An entire script may be provided as a single argument: -``` +```bash docker run --rm --entrypoint launcher -it multi-process-app 'for opt in $JAVA_OPTS; do echo $opt; done' ``` @@ -145,7 +150,7 @@ docker run --rm --entrypoint launcher -it multi-process-app 'for opt in $JAVA_OP By passing `--` before the command, we instruct the `launcher` to start the provided process without `bash`. Note that while buildpack-provided environment variables will be set in the execution environment, no profile scripts will be sourced (as these require `bash`): -``` +```text docker run --rm --entrypoint launcher multi-process-app -- env # output will include buildpack-provided env vars docker run --rm --entrypoint launcher multi-process-app -- echo hello "$WORLD" # $WORLD is evaluated on the host machine docker run --rm --entrypoint launcher multi-process-app -- echo hello '$WORLD' # $WORLD is not evaluated, output will include string literal `$WORLD` @@ -155,7 +160,7 @@ docker run --rm --entrypoint launcher multi-process-app -- echo hello '$WORLD' # You can bypass the launcher entirely by setting a new entrypoint for the run container: -``` +```bash docker run --rm --entrypoint bash -it multi-process-app # profile scripts have NOT been sourced and buildpack-provided env vars are NOT set in this shell ``` @@ -163,3 +168,4 @@ docker run --rm --entrypoint bash -it multi-process-app # profile scripts have N To learn more about the launcher, see the [platform spec](https://github.com/buildpacks/spec/blob/main/platform.md#launcher). [samples]: https://github.com/buildpacks/samples +[default-process]: https://buildpacks.io/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-inputs/specify-default-launch-process/ diff --git a/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/understand-failures.md b/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/understand-failures.md index 4c35fe79b..3146be9c5 100644 --- a/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/understand-failures.md +++ b/content/docs/for-app-developers/how-to/build-outputs/understand-failures.md @@ -4,6 +4,35 @@ weight=99 summary="How to troubleshoot when things go wrong." +++ -This page is a stub! The CNB project is applying to [Google Season of Docs](https://developers.google.com/season-of-docs/docs/timeline) to receive support for improving our documentation. Please check back soon. +While `Buildpacks` help developers transform source code into container images that can run on any cloud, creating an error-free experience remains far from achieved. -If you are familiar with this content and would like to make a contribution, please feel free to open a PR :) +This guide catalogs some commonly reported issues that may prevent image build completion and provides troubleshooting tips to help end-users navigate these issues. + +If you would like to report an issue, please open a PR against this page using the included template (see bottom of page in Markdown). + +#### Issue: `ERROR: failed to build: failed to fetch base layers: saving image with ID "sha256:" from the docker daemon: Error response from daemon: unable to create manifests file: NotFound: content digest sha256:: not found` + +**Occurs when**: building and saving to a docker daemon +**Analysis**: this seems to indicate a problem with the underlying image store in `Docker` +**Remediation**: remove existing images with `docker image prune` (potentially, from multiple storage drivers if switching between `overlay2` and `containerd`) +**Related error messages**: + +* `ERROR: failed to initialize analyzer: getting previous image: get history for image "test": Error response from daemon: NotFound: snapshot sha256: does not exist: not found` +* `ERROR: failed to export: saving image: failed to fetch base layers: open /tmp/imgutil.local.image./blobs/sha256/: no such file or directory` + +**For more information**: + +* [Issue link on GitHub](https://github.com/buildpacks/pack/issues/2270) +* [Slack thread](https://cloud-native.slack.com/archives/C0331B61A1Y/p1717422902392339?thread_ts=1717185700.984459&cid=C0331B61A1Y) +* [Another Slack thread](https://cloud-native.slack.com/archives/C033DV8D9FB/p1730243369203799) + + \ No newline at end of file