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Introduction

It focuses on two major aspects:

  • Building and pushing Docker images which contain build artifacts
  • Starting and stopping Docker containers for integration testing and development

Docker images are the central entity which can be configured. Containers, on the other hand, are more or less volatile. They are created and destroyed on the fly from the configured images and are completely managed internally.

Building docker images

One purpose of this plugin is to create docker images holding the actual application. This is done with the docker:build goal. It is easy to include build artifacts and their dependencies into an image. Therefore, this plugin uses the assembly descriptor format from the maven-assembly-plugin to specify the content which will be added from a sub-directory in the image (/maven by default). Images that are built with this plugin can be pushed to public or private Docker registries with docker:push.

Running containers

With this plugin it is possible to run completely isolated integration tests so you don't need to take care of shared resources. Ports can be mapped dynamically and made available as Maven properties to your integration test code.

Multiple containers can be managed at once, which can be linked together or share data via volumes. Containers are created and started with the docker:start goal and stopped and destroyed with the docker:stop goal. For integration tests, both goals are typically bound to the pre-integration-test and post-integration-test phase, respectively. It is recommended to use the maven-failsafe-plugin for integration testing in order to stop the docker container even when the tests fail.

For proper isolation, container exposed ports can be dynamically and flexibly mapped to localhost ports. It is easy to specify a Maven property which will be filled in with a dynamically assigned port after a container has been started. This can then be used as a parameter for integration tests to connect to the application.

Configuration

The plugin configuration contains a general part and a list of image-specific configurations, one for each image.

The general part contains global configuration like the Docker URL or the path to the SSL certificates for communication with the Docker Host.

Then, each specific image configuration has three parts:

  • A general image part containing the image's name and alias.
  • A <build> configuration specifying how images are built.
  • A <run> configuration describing how containers should be created and started.

The <build> and <run> parts are optional and can be omitted.

Let's look at a plugin configuration example:

<configuration>
  <images>
    <image>
      <alias>service</alias>
      <name>fabric8/docker-demo:${project.version}</name>

      <build>
         <from>java:8</from>
         <assembly>
           <descriptor>docker-assembly.xml</descriptor>
         </assembly>
         <ports>
           <port>8080</port>
         </ports>
         <cmd>
            <shell>java -jar /maven/service.jar</shell>
         </cmd>
      </build>

      <run>
         <ports>
           <port>tomcat.port:8080</port>
         </ports>
         <wait>
           <http>
              <url>http://localhost:${tomcat.port}/access</url>
           </http>
           <time>10000</time>
         </wait>
         <links>
           <link>database:db</link>
         </links>
       </run>
    </image>

    <image>
      <alias>database</alias>
      <name>postgres:9</name>
      <run>
        <wait>
          <log>database system is ready to accept connections</log>
          <time>20000</time>
        </wait>
      </run>
    </image>
  </images>
</configuration>

Here, two images are specified. One is the official PostgreSQL 9 image from Docker Hub, which internally is referenced as "database" (<alias>). It only has a <run> section which declares that the startup should wait until the given text pattern is matched in the log output. Next is a "service" image, which is specified in the <build> section. It creates an image which has artifacts and dependencies in the /maven directory (and which are specified with an assembly descriptor). Additionally it specifies the startup command for the container, which in this example fires up a microservice from a jar file copied over via the assembly descriptor. It also exposes port 8080. In the <run> section this port is dynamically mapped to a dynamically chosen port, and then assigned to the Maven property ${tomcat.port}. This property could be used, for example, by an integration test to access this microservice. An important part is the <links> section which indicates that the image with the alias of "database" is linked into the "service" container, which can access the internal ports in the usual Docker way (via environment variables prefixed with DB_).

Images can be specified in any order and the plugin will take care of the proper startup order (and will bail out if it detects circular dependencies).

Other highlights

Some other highlights in random order (and not complete):

  • Auto pulling of images (with a progress indicator)
  • Waiting for a container to startup based on time, the reachability of an URL, or a pattern in the log output
  • Support for SSL authentication (since Docker 1.3)
  • Specification of encrypted registry passwords for push and pull in ~/.m2/settings.xml (i.e., outside the pom.xml)
  • Color output ;-)

Why another Maven Plugin ?

If you search on GitHub you will find a whole cosmos of Maven Docker plugins (As of November 2014: 12 (!) plugins which 4 actively maintained). On the one hand, variety is a good thing, but on the other hand for users it is hard to decide which one to choose. So, you might wonder why you should choose this one.

There s a dedicated shootout project which compares the four most active plugins. It contains a simple demo project with a database and a microservice image, along with an integration test. Each plugin is configured to create images and run the integration test (if possible). Although it might be a bit biased, it can be useful for figuring out which plugin suits you best.

The high-level design goals and initial motivation for this plugin are:

  • A flexible, dynamic port mapping from container to host ports so that truly isolated builds could be made. This should work on indirect setups with VMs like boot2docker or docker-machine for running on OS X/Windows.

  • It should be possible to pull images on the fly to get self-contained and repeatable builds with the only requirement to have Docker installed.

  • The configuration of the plugin should be simple, since developers don't want to be forced to dive into specific Docker details only to start a container. So, only a handful options should be exposed, which needs not necessarily map directly to docker config setup.

  • There should be as few dependencies as possible for this plugin. So it does not use the Java Docker API docker-java which is external to docker and has a different lifecycle than Docker's remote API. Since this plugin needs only a small subset of the whole API, it is OK to do the REST calls directly. That way the plugin has to deal only with Docker peculiarities and not docker-java's as well. As a side-effect, it has fewer transitive dependencies. FYI: There are other Docker Java/Groovy client libraries out, which might be suitable for plugins like this: fabric/fabric-docker-api, spotify/docker-client or gesellix-docker/docker-client. Can you see the pattern ;-) ?

So, final words: Enjoy this plugin, and please use the issue tracker for anything that hurts, or when you have a wish list.