A build configuration describes a single build definition and a set of triggers for when a new build is created. Build configurations are defined by a BuildConfig
, which is a REST object that can be used in a POST to the API server to create a new instance.
A build configuration, or BuildConfig
, is characterized by a build strategy
and one or more sources. The strategy determines the process, while the sources provide its input.
Depending on how you choose to create your application using OpenShift Dedicated, a BuildConfig
is typically generated automatically for you if you use the web console or CLI, and it can be edited at any time. Understanding the parts that make up a BuildConfig
and their available options can help if you choose to manually change your configuration later.
The following example BuildConfig
results in a new build every time a container image tag or the source code changes:
BuildConfig
object definition
kind: BuildConfig
apiVersion: build.openshift.io/v1
metadata:
name: "ruby-sample-build" (1)
spec:
runPolicy: "Serial" (2)
triggers: (3)
-
type: "GitHub"
github:
secret: "secret101"
- type: "Generic"
generic:
secret: "secret101"
-
type: "ImageChange"
source: (4)
git:
uri: "https://github.com/openshift/ruby-hello-world"
strategy: (5)
sourceStrategy:
from:
kind: "ImageStreamTag"
name: "ruby-20-centos7:latest"
output: (6)
to:
kind: "ImageStreamTag"
name: "origin-ruby-sample:latest"
postCommit: (7)
script: "bundle exec rake test"
1 |
This specification creates a new BuildConfig named ruby-sample-build . |
2 |
The runPolicy field controls whether builds created from this build configuration can be run simultaneously. The default value is Serial , which means new builds run sequentially, not simultaneously. |
3 |
You can specify a list of triggers, which cause a new build to be created. |
4 |
The source section defines the source of the build. The source type determines the primary source of input, and can be either Git , to point to a code repository location,
Dockerfile , to build from an inline Dockerfile,
or Binary , to accept binary payloads. It is possible to have multiple sources at once. See the documentation for each source type for details. |
5 |
The strategy section describes the build strategy used to execute the build. You can specify a Source
, Docker , or Custom
strategy here. This example uses the ruby-20-centos7 container image that Source-to-image (s2i) uses for the application build. |
6 |
After the container image is successfully built, it is pushed into the repository described in the output section. |
7 |
The postCommit section defines an optional build hook. |