Dear packager.
If you are looking to make docker available on your favorite software distribution, this document is for you. It summarizes the requirements for building and running docker.
We really want to help you package Docker successfully. Before anything, a good first step is to introduce yourself on the docker-dev mailing list , explain what you‘‘re trying to achieve, and tell us how we can help. Don’’t worry, we don''t bite! There might even be someone already working on packaging for the same distro!
You can also join the IRC channel - #docker and #docker-dev on Freenode are both active and friendly.
If possible, your package should be called “docker”. If that name is already taken, a second choice is “lxc-docker”.
The Docker project maintains its own build and release toolchain. It is pretty neat and entirely based on Docker (surprise!). This toolchain is the canonical way to build Docker, and the only method supported by the development team. We encourage you to give it a try, and if the circumstances allow you to use it, we recommend that you do.
You might not be able to use the official build toolchain - usually because your distribution has a toolchain and packaging policy of its own. We get it! Your house, your rules. The rest of this document should give you the information you need to package Docker your way, without denaturing it in the process.
To build docker, you will need the following system dependencies
All Go dependencies are vendored under ./vendor. They are used by the official build, so the source of truth for the current version is whatever is in ./vendor.
To use the vendored dependencies, simply make sure the path to ./vendor is included in $GOPATH.
If you would rather package these dependencies yourself, take a look at ./hack/vendor.sh for an easy-to-parse list of the exact version for each.
NOTE: if you''re not able to package the exact version (to the exact commit) of a given dependency, please get in touch so we can remediate! Who knows what discrepancies can be caused by even the slightest deviation. We promise to do our best to make everybody happy.
Make sure to disable CGO on your system, and then recompile the standard library on the build machine:
export CGO_ENABLED=0 cd /tmp && echo 'package main' > t.go && go test -a -i -v
To build the docker binary, run the following command with the source checkout as the working directory:
./hack/make.sh binary
This will create a static binary under ./bundles/$VERSION/binary/docker-$VERSION, where $VERSION is the contents of the file ./VERSION.
You are encouraged to use ./hack/make.sh without modification. If you must absolutely write your own script (are you really, really sure you need to? make.sh is really not that complicated), then please take care the respect the following:
You may be tempted to tweak these settings. In particular, being a rigorous maintainer, you may want to disable static linking. Please don''t! Docker needs to be statically linked to function properly. You would do the users of your distro a disservice and “void the docker warranty” by changing the flags.
A good comparison is Busybox: all distros package it as a statically linked binary, because it just makes sense. Docker is the same way.
Before releasing your binary, make sure to run the tests! Run the following command with the source checkout as the working directory:
./hack/make.sh test
The test suite includes both live integration tests and unit tests, so you will need all runtime dependencies to be installed (see below).
The test suite will also download a small test container, so you will need internet connectivity.
To run properly, docker needs the following software to be installed at runtime:
Docker in daemon mode has specific kernel requirements. For details, see http://docs.docker.io/en/latest/installation/kernel/
Note that Docker also has a client mode, which can run on virtually any linux kernel (it even builds on OSX!).
Docker expects to run as a daemon at machine startup. Your package will need to include a script for your distro''s process supervisor of choice.
Docker should be run as root, with the following arguments:
docker -d