28 Apr 2018

Building Oracle Jet applications with Docker Hub

In this post I am going to show a simple CI solution for an Oracle Jet application basing on Docker Hub Automated Builds feature. The solution is container native meaning that Docker Hub is going to automatically build a Docker image according to a Docker file. The image is going to be stored in Docker Hub registry. A Docker file is a set of instructions on how to build a Docker image and those instructions may contain any actions including building an Oracle Jet application. So, what we need to do is to create a proper Docker file and set up Docker Hub Automated Build.
I am going to build an Oracle Jet application with OJet CLI, so I have created a Docker image having OJet CLI installed and serving as an actual builder. The image is built with the following Dockerfile:

FROM node
RUN npm install -g @oracle/ojet-cli

By running this command:
docker built -t eugeneflexagon/ojetbuilder .

Having done that we can use this builder image in a Dockerfile to build our Jet application:
# Create an image from a "builder" Docker image
FROM eugeneflexagon/ojetbuilder

# Copy all sources inside the new image
COPY . .

# Build the appliaction. As a result this will produce web folder.
RUN ojet build


# Create another Docker image which runs Jet application
# It contains Nginx on top of Alpine and our Jet appliction (web folder)
# This image is the result of the build and it is going to be stored in Docker Hub
FROM nginx:1.10.2-alpine
COPY --from=0 web /usr/share/nginx/html
EXPOSE 80

Here we are using the multi-stage build Docker feature when we actually create two Docker images: one for building and one for running, and only the last one is going to be saved as the final image. So, I added this Docker file to my source code on GitHub.

The next step is to configure Docker Hub Automated Build:









That was easy. Now we can change the source code and once it is pushed to GutHub the build is automatically queued:



Once the build is finished we can pull and run the container locally:


docker run -it -p 8082:80 eugeneflexagon/ojetdevops:latest

And see the result at http://localhost:8082


That's it!

18 Apr 2018

Containers, Serverless and Functions in a nutshell

In this post I would like to thank everyone, who managed to attend my session "Containers, Serverless and Functions in a nutshell" at Oracle Code conference in Boston. Thank you guys for coming to listen to me, to learn something new and to ask a lot of interesting questions. 

I promised at the session that the presentation would be available for download. 
The presentation is available here:


That's it!