Building and Deploying Docker Containers Using GitLab CI Pipelines
Learn how to set up a GitLab CI pipeline to automate the building and deployment of Docker containers, saving you time and effort.
Join the DZone community and get the full member experience.
Join For FreeAs part of migrating this blog to Docker containers to move to a different VPS provider (here, here and here), I found myself repeating a number of steps manually, which always a good indication that there's an opportunity to automate some or all of those steps.
Each time I made a change in the configuration or changed the content to be deployed, I found myself rebuilding the Docker image and either running locally, pushing to my test server, and eventually pushing to my prod VPS and running there.
I'm using a locally running GitLab for my version control, so to use its build pipeline features was a natural next step. I talked about setting up a GitLab runner previously here - this is what performs the work for your pipeline.
You configure your pipeline with a .gitlab-ci.yml file in the root of your repo. I defined 2 stages, build and deploy:
stages:
- build
- deploy
For my build stage, I have a single task which is to build my images using my docker-compose.yml:
build:
stage: build
script:
- docker-compose build
tags:
- docker-test
For my deploy steps, I defined one for deploying to my test server, and one for deploying to my production VPS. This is the deploy to my locally running Docker server. It changes DOCKER_HOST to point to my test server, and then uses the docker-compose.yml again to bring down the running containers, and bring up the new containers with the updated images:
deploy-containers:
stage: deploy
script:
- export DOCKER_HOST=tcp://192.x.x.x:2375
- docker-compose down
- docker-compose up -d
tags:
- docker-test
And one for my deploy to production. Note that this step is defined with 'when: manual' which tells GitLab the task is only run manually (when you click on the '>' run icon):
prod-deploy-containers:
stage: deploy
script:
- pwd && ls -l
- ./docker-compose-vps-down.sh
- ./docker-compose-vps-up.sh
when: manual
tags:
- docker-prod
Here's what the complete pipeline looks like in GitLab:
With this in place, now any changes committed to the repo result in a new image created and pushed to my test server automatically, and when I've completed testing the changes I can optionally deploy the changes to my prod VPS hosted server.
Published at DZone with permission of Kevin Hooke, DZone MVB. See the original article here.
Opinions expressed by DZone contributors are their own.
Comments