Note that this answer applies to drone version 0.5
You can use the Docker plugin to build and publish a Docker image as a step in your build pipeline. In the example .drone.yml
file below I've added a publish step that uses the docker plugin. Note that you will need to replace foo/bar
with the name of the DockerHub repository you intend to publish to.
pipeline:
build:
image: golang
commands:
- go build
- go test
publish:
image: plugins/docker
repo: foo/bar
In many cases you will want to limit execution of the this step to certain branches. This can be done by adding runtime conditions:
publish:
image: plugins/docker
repo: foo/bar
when:
branch: master
You will need to provide drone with credentials to your Docker registry in order for drone to publish. These credentials can be declared directly in the yaml file, although storing these values in plain text in the yaml is generally not recommended:
publish:
image: plugins/docker
repo: foo/bar
username: johnsmith
password: pa55word
when:
branch: master
You can alternatively provide your credentials using the built-in secret store. Secrets can be added to the secret store on a per-repository basis using the Drone command line utility:
export DRONE_SERVER=http://drone.server.address.com
export DRONE_TOKEN=...
drone secret add --image plugins/docker \
octocat/hello-world DOCKER_USERNAME johnsmith
drone secret add --image plugins/docker \
octocat/hello-world DOCKER_PASSWORD pa55word
In the above example the --image
flag is used to limit which secrets we expose our Docker credentials to, which we set to the docker plugin. The octocat/hello-world
parameter represents your GitHub repository name and should be replaced with the correct value.
Mouting Voumes (alternate approach)
You also asked if it were possible to mount the Docker socket into your build environment. This is possible, but will require some additional permissions (mark your build as trusted in the UI)
pipeline:
build:
image: docker
commands:
- docker build ...
- docker run ...
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
The only issue with this approach is if your build fails you may not be able to cleanup images or containers that were created during your build.
In addition you should not use this approach if your repository is public and accepts pull requests. Exposing your host machine Docker socket to your build environment could be exploited by malicious pull requests, allowing access to your host machine.