appendlayer

Append a tarball to an existing image in a container registry – without having to pull down the image locally.

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Append layer

This standalone utility appends a tarball to an existing image in a container registry – without having to pull down the image locally.

It supports any registry that implements the OCI Distribution Spec.

Why

The basic use-case for this utility is when you have a base image that is already available in a container registry, and you simply need to add one or more files, then push the result back to the same registry.

In this case, you can do no better in terms of network transfer than this utility. It does the minimum amount of work in order to get the job done.

With the Docker ADD command, you'd have to download the existing image and start up a build process in order to run the ADD command.

FROM apache/airflow:2.3.2
ADD your_tar_file.tar.gz /opt/airflow/dag

The resulting image would be exactly the same, but there is no special optimization in Docker that would avoid downloading the base image (although theoretically, it could be done but it would require bigger changes in the data model in order to support lazy referencing of layer data).

Incidentally, the script was designed exactly with Apache Airflow in mind.

Note that Buildkit will have support for this from v0.10 but it's not clear how this will be supported in a Dockerfile.

Installation

Install the tool using pip:

$ pip install appendlayer

This makes available "appendlayer" as a script in your environment.

Alternatively, download the appendlayer.py script and run it using Python directly:

$ python appendlayer.py

The script has no external dependencies, using only what's included already with Python.

Usage

Pipe in the layer contents using a tarball and provide the repository (or image) name and the old and new tags:

$ echo "Hello world" > test.txt
$ tar cvf - test.txt | appendlayer <host> <repository> <old-tag> <new-tag>

Alternatively, qualify source and destination using image syntax:

$ tar cvf - test.txt | appendlayer <host> <old-repository>:<old-tag> <new-repository>:<new-tag>

Or even across different hosts:

$ tar cvf - test.txt | appendlayer <old-host>/<old-repository>:<old-tag> <new-host>/<new-repository>:<new-tag>

For Azure Container Registry (ACR) for example, the host is typically <registry-name>.azurecr.io.

Authentication

The script uses OAuth2 to authorize requests to the container registry.

This is configured using either the ACCESS_TOKEN or REFRESH_TOKEN environment variable, or by extracting authentication details from the Docker configuration file (located based on the DOCKER_CONFIG environment variable).

For example, for Azure Container Registry, to authorize to a specific container registry.

$ export REFRESH_TOKEN=$( \
      az acr login -t --name <registry-name>.azurecr.io \
      --expose-token --output tsv --query accessToken)

To authorize across multiple registries, use an access token:

$ export ACCESS_TOKEN=$( \
       az account get-access-token --query accessToken --output tsv)