Table of Contents
- Why use Earthly?
- Where Does Earthly Fit?
- How Does It Work?
- Installation
- Quick Start
- Features
- FAQ
- Contributing
- Licensing
Why Use Earthly?
🔁 Reproduce CI failures
Earthly builds are self-contained, isolated and repeatable. Regardless of whether Earthly runs in your CI or on your laptop, there is a degree of guarantee that the build will run the same way. This allows for faster iteration on the build scripts and easier debugging when something goes wrong. No more git commit -m "try again"
.
🤲 Builds that run the same for everyone
Repeatable builds also mean that your build will run the same on your colleagues' laptop without any additional project-specific or language-specific setup. This fosters better developer collaboration and mitigates works-for-me type of issues.
🚀 From zero to working build in minutes
Jump from project to project with ease, regardless of the language they are written in. Running the project's test suites is simply a matter of running an Earthly target (without fiddling with project configuration to make it compile and run on your system). Contribute across teams with confidence.
📦 Reusability
A simple, yet powerful import system allows for reusability of builds across directories or even across repositories. Importing other builds does not have hidden environment-specific implications - it just works.
❤️ It's like Makefile and Dockerfile had a baby
Taking some of the best ideas from Makefiles and Dockerfiles, Earthly combines two build specifications into one.
Where Does Earthly Fit?
Earthly is meant to be used both on your development machine and in CI. It can run on top of popular CI systems (like Jenkins, Circle, GitHub Actions). It is typically the layer between language-specific tooling (like maven, gradle, npm, pip, go build) and the CI build spec.
How Does It Work?
In short: containers, layer caching and complex build graphs!
Earthly executes builds in containers, where execution is isolated. The dependencies of the build are explicitly specified in the build definition, thus making the build self-sufficient.
We use a target-based system to help users break up complex builds into reusable parts. Nothing is shared between targets other than clearly declared dependencies. Nothing shared means no unexpected race conditions. In fact, the build is executed in parallel whenever possible, without any need for the user to take care of any locking or unexpected environment interactions.
Earthfiles might seem very similar to Dockerfile multi-stage builds. In fact, the same technology is used underneath. However, a key difference is that Earthly is designed to be a general-purpose build system, not just a Docker image specification. Read more about how Earthly is different from Dockerfiles. |
---|
Installation
See installation instructions.
To build from source, check the contributing page.
Quick Start
Here are some resources to get you started with Earthly
🏁 Getting started guide👀 Examples🔍 Explore Earthly's own build✔️ Best practices
See also the full documentation.
Reference pages
A simple example (for Go)
# Earthfile
VERSION 0.6
FROM golang:1.15-alpine3.13
RUN apk --update --no-cache add git
WORKDIR /go-example
all:
BUILD +lint
BUILD +docker
build:
COPY main.go .
RUN go build -o build/go-example main.go
SAVE ARTIFACT build/go-example AS LOCAL build/go-example
lint:
RUN go get golang.org/x/lint/golint
COPY main.go .
RUN golint -set_exit_status ./...
docker:
COPY +build/go-example .
ENTRYPOINT ["/go-example/go-example"]
SAVE IMAGE go-example:latest
// main.go
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Println("hello world")
}
Invoke the build using earthly +all
.
Examples for other languages are available in the examples dir.
Features
📦 Modern import system
Earthly can be used to reference and build targets from other directories or even other repositories. For example, if we wanted to build an example target from the github.com/earthly/earthly
repository, we could issue
# Try it yourself! No need to clone.
earthly github.com/earthly/earthly/examples/go:main+docker
# Run the resulting image.
docker run --rm earthly/examples:go
🔨 Reference other targets using +
Use +
to reference other targets and create complex build inter-dependencies.
Examples
-
Same directory (same Earthfile)
BUILD +some-target FROM +some-target COPY +some-target/my-artifact ./
-
Other directories
BUILD ./some/local/path+some-target FROM ./some/local/path+some-target COPY ./some/local/path+some-target/my-artifact ./
-
Other repositories
BUILD github.com/someone/someproject:v1.2.3+some-target FROM github.com/someone/someproject:v1.2.3+some-target COPY github.com/someone/someproject:v1.2.3+some-target/my-artifact ./
💾 Caching that works the same as Docker builds
Cut down build times in CI through Shared Caching.
🛠 Multi-platform support
Build for multiple platforms in parallel.
VERSION 0.6
all:
BUILD \
--platform=linux/amd64 \
--platform=linux/arm64 \
--platform=linux/arm/v7 \
--platform=linux/arm/v6 \
+build
build:
FROM alpine:3.15
CMD ["uname", "-m"]
SAVE IMAGE multiplatform-image
⛓ Parallelization that just works
Whenever possible, Earthly automatically executes targets in parallel.
🤲 Make use of build tools that work everywhere
No need to ask your team to install protoc
, a specific version of Python, Java 1.6 or the .NET Core ecosystem. You only install once, in your Earthfile, and it works for everyone. Or even better, you can just make use of the rich Docker Hub ecosystem.
VERSION 0.6
FROM golang:1.15-alpine3.13
WORKDIR /proto-example
proto:
FROM namely/protoc-all:1.29_4
COPY api.proto /defs
RUN --entrypoint -- -f api.proto -l go
SAVE ARTIFACT ./gen/pb-go /pb AS LOCAL pb
build:
COPY go.mod go.sum .
RUN go mod download
COPY +proto/pb pb
COPY main.go ./
RUN go build -o build/proto-example main.go
SAVE ARTIFACT build/proto-example
See full example code.
🔑 Cloud secrets support built-in
Secrets are never stored within an image's layers and they are only available to the commands that need them.
earthly set /user/github/token 'shhh...'
release:
RUN --push --secret GITHUB_TOKEN=+secrets/user/github/token github-release upload file.bin
FAQ
How is Earthly different from Dockerfiles?
Dockerfiles were designed for specifying the make-up of Docker images and that's where Dockerfiles stop. Earthly takes some key principles of Dockerfiles (like layer caching), but expands on the use-cases. For example, Earthly can output regular artifacts, run unit and integration tests, and create several Docker images at a time - all outside the scope of Dockerfiles.
It is possible to use Dockerfiles in combination with other technologies (e.g., Makefiles or bash files) to solve such use-cases. However, these combinations are difficult to parallelize, challenging to scale across repositories as they lack a robust import system and also they often vary in style from one team to another. Earthly does not have these limitations as it was designed as a general-purpose build system.
For example, Earthly introduces a richer target, artifact and image referencing system, allowing for better reuse in complex builds spanning a single large repository or multiple repositories. Because Dockerfiles are only meant to describe one image at a time, such features are outside the scope of applicability of Dockerfiles.
How do I tell apart classical Dockerfile commands from Earthly commands?
Check out the Earthfile reference doc page. It has all the commands there and specifies which commands are the same as Dockerfile commands and which are new.
Can Earthly build Dockerfiles?
Yes! You can use the command FROM DOCKERFILE
to inherit the commands in an existing Dockerfile.
build:
FROM DOCKERFILE .
SAVE IMAGE some-image:latest
You may also optionally port your Dockerfiles to Earthly entirely. Translating Dockerfiles to Earthfiles is usually a matter of copy-pasting and making minor adjustments. See the getting started page for some Earthfile examples.
How is Earthly different from Bazel?
Bazel is a build tool developed by Google to optimize the speed, correctness, and reproducibility of their internal monorepo codebase. Earthly draws inspiration from some of the principles of Bazel (mainly the idea of repeatable builds), but it is different in a few key ways:
- Earthly does not replace language-specific tools, like Maven, Gradle, Webpack, etc. Instead, it leverages and integrates with them. Adopting Bazel usually means that all build files need to be completely rewritten. This is not the case with Earthly, as it mainly acts as the glue between builds.
- The learning curve of Earthly is more accessible, especially if the user already has experience with Dockerfiles. Bazel, on the other hand, introduces some completely new concepts.
- Bazel has a purely descriptive specification language. Earthly is a mix of descriptive and imperative language.
- Bazel uses tight control of compiler toolchains to achieve true hermetic builds, whereas Earthly uses containers and well-defined inputs.
Overall, compared to Bazel, Earthly sacrifices some correctness and reproducibility in favor of significantly better usability and composability with existing open-source technologies.
Contributing
- Please report bugs as GitHub issues.
- Join us on Slack!
- Questions via GitHub issues are welcome!
- PRs welcome! But please give a heads-up in a GitHub issue before starting work. If there is no GitHub issue for what you want to do, please create one.
- To build from source, check the contributing page.
Licensing
Earthly is licensed under the Mozilla Public License Version 2.0. See LICENSE.