You might want to investigate how i3wm has solved a similar problem.
The main developer has written on the design behind his Travis CI workflow. Quoting the relevant part:
The basic idea is to build a Docker container based on Debian testing
and then run all build/test commands inside that container. Our
Dockerfile installs compilers, formatters and other development tools
first, then installs all build dependencies for i3 based on the
debian/control
file, so that we don’t need to duplicate build
dependencies for Travis and for Debian.
This solves the immediate issue nicely, but comes at a significant
cost: building a Docker container adds quite a bit of wall clock time
to a Travis run, and we want to give our contributors quick feedback.
The solution to long build times is caching: we can simply upload the
Docker container to the Docker Hub and make subsequent builds use the
cached version.
We decided to cache the container for a month, or until inputs to the
build environment (currently the Dockerfile
and debian/control
)
change. Technically, this is implemented by a little shell script
called ha.sh (get it? hash!) which prints the SHA-256 hash of the
input files. This hash, appended to the current month, is what we use
as tag for the Docker container, e.g. 2016-03-3d453fe1
.
See our .travis.yml for how to plug it all together.