-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 246
Developer's Guide
Eric Marti edited this page Dec 6, 2020
·
4 revisions
Before you try to build, ensure that you have docker installed and running:
$ docker version
Client: Docker Engine - Community
Cloud integration: 1.0.2
Version: 19.03.13
API version: 1.40
Go version: go1.13.15
Git commit: 4484c46d9d
Built: Wed Sep 16 16:58:31 2020
OS/Arch: darwin/amd64
Experimental: true
Server: Docker Engine - Community
Engine:
Version: 19.03.13
API version: 1.40 (minimum version 1.12)
Go version: go1.13.15
Git commit: 4484c46d9d
Built: Wed Sep 16 17:07:04 2020
OS/Arch: linux/amd64
Experimental: false
containerd:
Version: v1.3.7
GitCommit: 8fba4e9a7d01810a393d5d25a3621dc101981175
runc:
Version: 1.0.0-rc10
GitCommit: dc9208a3303feef5b3839f4323d9beb36df0a9dd
docker-init:
Version: 0.18.0
GitCommit: fec3683
If you see an Error response from daemon: dial unix docker.raw.sock: connect: connection refused error, please see this support page: Docker Docs
To speed up the build process, pull the latest image from Docker Hub:
$ docker pull ericjmarti/inventory-hunter:latest
Finally, to build your own Docker image, run the following command from the inventory-hunter directory:
$ docker build -t my-inventory-hunter .
Note: The docker build command may take a while to complete. If you experience errors during the build, check to see if there is sufficient memory available on your build host.
By default, the docker_run.bash and docker_run.ps1 scripts use the official image from Docker Hub. To start a container with your newly-built image, run:
# Bash:
$ ./docker_run.bash -i my-inventory-hunter ...
# PowerShell:
PS C:\dev\inventory-hunter> .\docker_run.ps1 -Image my-inventory-hunter ...