To make it a bit more easier to trigger a build, there also is a `bake.sh` script.<br>
This script calls `docker buildx bake` with all the right parameters and also generates the `SOURCE_COMMIT` and `SOURCE_VERSION` variables.<br>
This script can be called from both the repo root or within the docker directory.
So, if you want to build a Multi Arch Alpine container pushing to your localhost registry you can run this from within the docker directory. (Just make sure you executed the initialization steps above first)
Or if you want to just build a Debian container from the repo root, you can run this.
```bash
docker/bake.sh
```
You can append both `alpine` and `debian` with `-amd64`, `-arm64`, `-armv7` or `-armv6`, which will trigger a build for that specific platform.<br>
This will also append those values to the tag so you can see the builded container when running `docker images`.
You can also append extra arguments after the target if you want. This can be useful for example to print what bake will use.
```bash
docker/bake.sh alpine-all --print
```
### Testing baked images
To test these images you can run these images by using the correct tag and provide the platform.<br>
For example, after you have build an arm64 image via `./bake.sh debian-arm64` you can run:
```bash
docker run --rm -it \
-e DISABLE_ADMIN_TOKEN=true \
-e I_REALLY_WANT_VOLATILE_STORAGE=true \
-p8080:80 --platform=linux/arm64 \
vaultwarden/server:testing-arm64
```
## Using the `podman-bake.sh` script
To also make building easier using podman, there is a `podman-bake.sh` script.<br>
This script calls `podman buildx build` with the needed parameters and the same as `bake.sh`, it will generate some variables automatically.<br>
This script can be called from both the repo root or within the docker directory.
**NOTE:** Unlike the `bake.sh` script, this only supports a single `CONTAINER_REGISTRIES`, and a single `BASE_TAGS` value, no comma separated values. It also only supports building separate architectures, no Multi Arch containers.
To build an Alpine arm64 image with only sqlite support and mimalloc, run this:
```bash
DB="sqlite,enable_mimalloc" \
./podman-bake.sh alpine-arm64
```
Or if you want to just build a Debian container from the repo root, you can run this.
```bash
docker/podman-bake.sh
```
You can append extra arguments after the target if you want. This can be useful for example to disable cache like this.
```bash
./podman-bake.sh alpine-arm64 --no-cache
```
For the podman builds you can, just like the `bake.sh` script, also append the architecture to build for that specific platform.<br>
### Testing podman builded images
The command to start a podman built container is almost the same as for the docker/bake built containers. The images start with `localhost/`, so you need to prepend that.
| CARGO_PROFILE | null | Which cargo profile to use. `null` means what is defined in the Dockerfile |
| DB | null | Which `features` to build. `null` means what is defined in the Dockerfile |
| SOURCE_REPOSITORY_URL | null | The source repository form where this build is triggered |
| SOURCE_COMMIT | null | The commit hash of the current commit for this build |
| SOURCE_VERSION | null | The current exact tag of this commit, else the last tag and the first 8 chars of the source commit |
| BASE_TAGS | testing | Tags to be used. Can be a comma separated value like "latest,1.29.2" |
| CONTAINER_REGISTRIES | vaultwarden/server | Comma separated value of container registries. Like `ghcr.io/dani-garcia/vaultwarden,docker.io/vaultwarden/server` |
| VW_VERSION | null | To override the `SOURCE_VERSION` value. This is also used by the `build.rs` code for example |