Skip to content

agt/proj-its-ai

Repository files navigation

Instructions on Building a Custom Image for DataHub/DSMLP

This guide is for advanced DSMLP users (both students and instructors) who want to add or modify applications on their working environment using a custom Docker container.

For CUDA-enabled images, checkout cuda.md.

Introduction

A Docker image is a snapshot of packaged applications, dependencies and the underlying operating system. Users can use the same Docker image anywhere on any machine running the Docker platform while having the same software functionality and behavior. Github Container Registry (GHCR) is a public container registry you can download ("pull") and upload ("push") Docker images located under the Packages section of this Github repo. In this guide, we will build a custom Docker image by modifying a Dockerfile, building the image on a desired platform, and publishing it on GHCR.

Docker Hub is also a public container registry you can download ("pull") and upload ("push") Docker images. In other words, Docker Hub hosts and distributes Docker images just like GHCR.

Building and maintaining a Docker image follows three essential steps: build, share and deploy/test. It's likely for you to go through these steps several times until it achieves what you want. You can find an official tutorial from docs.docker.com that demonstrates a general case, but this document is tailored specifically for DSMLP users.

Step 0: Prerequisites

  • A new public GitHub git repo using this as a template. Click "Use this template" at upper-right corner. You can also use an existing public repo by adding a Dockerfile at the repo's root level. The public visibility is to stay on the free plan that GitHub offers, which comes in to play later.
  • An optional Docker Hub account if following Option 1, Push

Step 1: Customize the Dockerfile

Step 1.1 Base Image

  • Choose the base container by uncommenting the corresponding line that sets the BASE_CONTAINER argument

  • Note: Although scipy-ml has more features, building an image on top of it will take longer. It's better to apply a minimal set of required tools to the base-notebook than for saving image size and reduce image build time.

Step 1.2 System Packages

  • Use USER root to gain root privileges for installing system packages. This line is already typed out for you.

  • Install system-level packages using apt-get

    • The example at line 19 installs a system utility called htop.
    • Specify more packages as extra arguments: apt-get -y install htop ping

Step 1.3 Python Libraries

  • Note: It is recommended to use pip instead of conda as much as possible. pip is more forgiving in resolving package conflicts, and generally much faster.

  • Install conda packages

    • Use RUN conda install --yes <package1> <package2> to install all required conda packages in one go
    • (Optional) Use RUN conda clean -tipy to reduce image size
  • Install pip packages

    • Only use pip after conda.
    • Use pip install --no-cache-dir <package>
    • Alternatively, you can provide a requirements.txt file in the project root and use pip install --no-cache-dir -r requirements.txt to reference it. List each package as a single line.
  • Leave the rest of the Dockerfile as is

Step 2: Build the Image

In this step you will build the image using the Dockerfile you created. Here you have two options:

  1. Install the Docker Client and build the image locally. This will require you have Docker Desktop installed on your local Windows PC/Mac or Docker Engine on Linux. You can also use a remote Linux server with Docker installed for building Docker Images and testing them. The commands will be the same, but if you don't have docker locally, you cannot develop locally, only on DSMLP. For development on Windows, I strongly recommend you to install the WSL 2 engine for a better experience.

  2. Setup a GitHub Actions configuration file inside your project. A template is provided and require minimum modification.

It is recommended to use both routes for easier debugging and shorter turnaround time on successful builds. Option 2 is much easier but to understand the basics, please go through Option 1 beforehand. Installing Docker on your local setup is sometimes a headache, however you can take advantage of the $100 DigitalOcean credit from the GitHub Student Developer Pack and launch a Docker Droplet there. Or use any remote Linux box you can find for free. Check out the resources in the Appendix.

Option 1: Use Docker Desktop/Docker Engine

After Docker is installed, launch a terminal and navigate to the your git directory containing the Dockerfile.

Make sure to double check the name of your GitHub/DockerHub account and the names of the GitHub repo and Docker Hub repo. The full image name, for when you pull the image from somewhere else, will be <dockerhub-username>/<dockerhub-repo-name>, with an optional :<tag> that immediately follows it. When the tag isn't supplied, it will use :latest as default. We will reference this full name as <image-fullname> for the commands that follow.

Step 2.1.1 Build

Type "docker build -t <image-fullname> ." and hit <Enter>, notice the "period/dot" at the end of the command, which denotes the current directory. Docker will then build the image in the current directory's context. The resulting image will be labeled <image-fullname>. Monitor the build process for errors.

Step 2.1.2 Debug

If the build fails, take note of the last command Docker that was run and start debugging from there. Run the build command again after editing the Dockerfile. Sometimes, it is better to launch the intermediate docker image that follows a step and launch the image from there and try a few commands. To do this, use the command in Step 2.1.3 Test Run.

This will help you find the name of the intermediate image. If Step 4 fails, look through the output and finds the image from Step 3, in the following example output, we will use the image 51a4d2ec5e16 to debug.

Step 3/14 : USER root           # Step count and command
 ---> Running in 4e32937f1e93   # temporary container
 ---> 51a4d2ec5e16              # result image (use this to debug)

Some commmon errors/mistakes here include:

  1. not supplying the default yes -y option to the install command, causing it to timeout.

  2. If the error message says it finds /r/n in one of your files, change the end of line sequence to from CRLF to LF. You can do this in an editor or use the utility dos2unix. This typically happens on Windows machines.

Step 2.1.3 Test Run

  • Once the image is successfully built, use docker run --rm -it <image-fullname> /bin/bash to enter the image. -it denotes interactive mode, and --rm tells docker to remove the container after exit. Check if it has all the functionality you want. Use exit to exit from the container. If something is wrong, go back to the build step and start over.

Step 2.1.4 Push

  • Log in to Docker Hub on the Docker Client. This can be done using the GUI or by using the command docker login <username>.

  • push the image docker push <image-fullname>, the tag will default to latest. If you want to push a different tag, add :<tag> at the end of the full name.

  • If you are using a remote pay-as-you-go Linux VM such as DigitalOcean, don't forget to remove the instance to save cost!

Option 2: Use Github Actions

After going through the previous option, you should be familiar with the entire workflow of building, testing, and pushing the Docker image. Now we can use Github Actions to automatically do these things for us.

  1. Follow the file at .github/workflows/docker.yml. Notice here the .github will be a hidden directory, which can be hidden graphically on Windows if you don't have that setting enabled. This workflow uses a standard action for building and pushing Docker images to GHCR

Note: this action will create a Docker tag based off the Git branch name, e.g., the "main" branch will create a Docker image:tag as ghcr.io/ucsd-ets/datahub-example-notebook:main

  1. Leave the rest of the content as is. You will find that it contains all the necessary steps in Option 1. If you are feeling confident, add more steps to augment the workflow.

  2. Commit and push the changes to GitHub. In the "Actions" tab, there will be a new workflow and under there, you can check the progress and output.

  3. If your Github action was successful, you'll see a newly created package under Packages

For more information, check out the syntax for Github Actions and relevant documentation, here.

Step 3: Launch a Pod on DSMLP

  • SSH to dsmlp-login.ucsd.edu

  • RUN launch-scipy-ml.sh -i <image-fullname> -P Always . The -P Always flag will force the docker host to sync, as it pulls the latest version of the image manifest. You will not need the -P Always flag once you are done with development. Note: a docker image name follows the format <user>/<image>:<tag>. The :<tag> part will be assumed to be :latest if you don't supply it to the launch script. Use tags like v1 or test in the build step to have control over different versions of the same docker image.

  • Wait for the node to download the image. Download time depends on the image size.

  • If it timeout/fails to launch, check kubectl logs <pod-name> or contact ETS service desk for help.

Tips

  • If you are repeatedly using the pod or sharing the custom image among a few other people within a day, use the same node to reduce spawn time (without download). You can do this by adding a -n <node-number> at the end of the launch command.

  • To disable launching jupyter notebook upon entry, override the default executable by adding CMD ["/bin/bash"] as the last layer (as last line in Dockerfile). You can always launch the notebook again and manually port-forward on dsmlp-login. kubectl port-forward pods/<POD_NAME> <DSMLP_PORT>:8888

Resources/Further Reading

Appendix

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages