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title | tags | date | aliases | |
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Demo post | 2021-01-03T18:08:52.170212+00:00 |
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This is a paragraph and should look like it. It is probably left align, not justified. After all, we're on the web not in a book.
[TOC]
Heading 1
Heading 2
Heading 3
Heading 4
Heading 5
Heading 6
This is a link.
Here's an abbreviation: HTML.
*[HTML]: Hyper Text Markup Language
Here's a button
- Bold text
- Italic text
- Underlined text
- Highlighted text
Inline code
- Alt + F4
!!! info "Info" This is an info admonition.
!!! success "Success" This is a success admonition.
!!! warning "Warning" This is a warning admonition.
!!! danger "Danger" This is a danger admonition.
# main.py
def main():
print("Hello world")
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
- Unordered
- list
- of items
Breaking paragraph
- Ordered
- list
- of items
This quote was told by someone very famous.
- Somewone very famous
This should be an image:
Spoiler alert!
Some text. 🙂
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Now onto a somewhat real example:
Notice the second FROM
instruction? It tells Docker to start again from a new image, like at the beginning of a build, except that it will have access to the last layers of all the previous stages.
Then, the COPY --from
is used to retrieve the built binary from the first stage.
In this extreme case, the final image weighs nothing more than the binary itself since scratch
is a special empty image with no operating system.
Link to another section: link
🐍 Applying to Python & Poetry
Install the dependencies
Let's start with a basic Dockerfile with a single stage that will just install this blog's dependencies and run the project.1
Basically a multi-stage build allows you to sequentially use multiple images in one Dockerfile and pass data between them.
This is especially useful for projects in statically compiled languages such as Go, in which the output is a completely standalone binary: you can use an image containing the Go toolchain to build your project and copy your binary to a barebones image to distribute it.
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The source code is available on sourcehut. ↩︎