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Update zlib version |
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examples | ||
hooks | ||
cargo-config.toml | ||
Dockerfile | ||
Dockerfile.example | ||
LICENSE-APACHE.txt | ||
LICENSE-MIT.txt | ||
README.md | ||
sudoers | ||
test-image |
rust-musl-builder
: Docker container for easily building static Rust binaries
Do you want to compile a completely static Rust binary with no external dependencies? If so, try:
alias rust-musl-builder='docker run --rm -it -v "$(pwd)":/home/rust/src ekidd/rust-musl-builder'
rust-musl-builder cargo build --release
This command assumes that $(pwd)
is readable and writable by uid 1000,
gid 1000. It will output binaries in
target/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/release
. At the moment, it doesn't
attempt to cache libraries between builds, so this is best reserved for
making final release builds.
Deploying your Rust application
With a bit of luck, you should be able to just copy your application binary
from target/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/release
, and install it directly on
any reasonably modern x86_64 Linux machine. In particular, you should be
able to copy your Rust application into an
Alpine Linux container.
How it works
rust-musl-builder
uses musl-libc, musl-gcc, and the new
rustup target
support. It includes static versions of several
libraries:
- The standard
musl-libc
libraries. - OpenSSL, which is needed by many Rust applications.
Adding more C libraries
If you're using Docker crates which require specific C libraries to be
installed, you can create a Dockerfile based on this one, and use
musl-gcc
to compile the libraries you need. For example:
FROM ekidd/rust-musl-builder
RUN VERS=1.2.8 && \
cd /home/rust/libs && \
curl -LO http://zlib.net/zlib-$VERS.tar.gz && \
tar xzf zlib-$VERS.tar.gz && cd zlib-$VERS && \
CC=musl-gcc ./configure --static --prefix=/usr/local/musl && \
make && sudo make install && \
cd .. && rm -rf zlib-$VERS.tar.gz zlib-$VERS
This usually involves a bit of experimentation for each new library, but it seems to work well for most simple, standalone libraries.
If you need an especially common library, please feel free to submit a pull
request adding it to the main Dockerfile
! We'd like to support popular
Rust crates out of the box.
Making static releases with Travis CI and GitHub
These instructions are inspired by rust-cross.
First, read the Travis CI: GitHub Releases Uploading page, and
run travis setup releases
as instructed. Then add the following lines to
your existing .travis.yml
file, replacing myapp
with the name of your
package:
language: rust
sudo: required
os:
- linux
- osx
rust:
- stable
services:
- docker
before_deploy: "./build-release myapp ${TRAVIS_TAG}-${TRAVIS_OS_NAME}"
deploy:
provider: releases
api_key:
secure: "..."
file_glob: true
file: "myapp-${TRAVIS_TAG}-${TRAVIS_OS_NAME}.*"
skip_cleanup: true
on:
rust: stable
tags: true
Next, copy build-release
into your project
and run chmod +x build-release
.
When you push a new tag to your project, build-release
will automatically
build new Linux binaries using rust-musl-builder
, and new Mac binaries
with Cargo, and it will upload both to the GitHub releases page for your
repository.
For a working example, see faradayio/conductor.
Development notes
After modifying the image, run ./test-image
to make sure that everything
works.
MAINTAINERS ONLY: After making changes, they must be pushed to the stable
branch to build the official stable
and latest
images on Docker Hub.
Tagged versions of Rust (such as 1.11
) must be given their own branches
and manually configured on Docker Hub.
git push origin master:stable
git push origin master:rust-$(rustc --version | awk '{ print $2 }')
License
Either the Apache 2.0 license, or the MIT license.