How to build and push a Docker image with Cloud Build

If you want to create a serverless service, you’ll want to check out Cloud Build. 

Cloud Build is a popular Google Cloud service that allows you to execute your builds on Google Cloud. Cloud Build can import source code from various repositories or cloud storage spaces, execute a build to your specifications, and produce artifacts such as Docker containers or Java archives. Cloud Build is serverless, which means it scales up and down with no infrastructure to set up, upgrade, or scale. In this blog post, Cloud Build will learn how to build and push a Docker image with Cloud Build.

Step 1

The first step is to create a new project, we’ll use an existing project called “test-ctd” and enable Google Cloud APIs like Cloud Build API, Artifact Registry API. If you have billing enabled and or are in your free trial mode you’ll be able to enable the necessary APIs. 

Enable APIs In Google Cloud Project

Step 2

The second step is to prepare the source files. We’ll open the Cloud Shell, where we’ll be able to create a directory called “quickstart-docker” with the commands in the image below

Create Quickstart Directory

Running this command brings us to the Cloud Shell Editor, where Cloud Build will create a file named quickstart.sh in the quickstart-docker folder we previously created. The file will hold a small command, which you’ll see in the image below. 

Creating Quickstart.sh File

Make sure to save the file, by clickingFile > Save in the top navigation bar.

How To Save Quickstart.sh File

Next Cloud Build will create the Dockerfile, which Cloud build will execute. In the dockerfile we’ll add a small script to run quickstart.sh. Make sure to save this file as well. 

Create Dockerfile

Cloud Build will return to the terminal where Cloud Build will run the command in the image below, to make quickstart.sh executable. 

Command To Quickstart.sh Executable

Step 3

Cloud Build will move on to the third step, which is to create a new Docker repository in the repository in Artifact Registry.

Cloud Build will start by creating a new Docker repo named quickstart-docker-repo in the location us-west2 with the description “Docker repository”. The command to run this action is depicted below

Add File To Artifact Registry

Next Cloud Build will verify that the repository was created by running the command below. After running the command Cloud Build see quickstart-docker repo is in the Artifact Registry. 

Check Files in Artifact Registry

Step 4

Next Cloud Build will navigate to Cloud Build > History to see the build Cloud Build executed. If you click on the particular build you’ll be able to see the details of the build summary like the build log, execution details, and build artifacts. 

Build History

Step 5

For the final step, Cloud Build will delete the resources created to prevent incurring charges. Go back to the navigation bar and visit Artifact Registry Next we’ll select our recently created quickstart-docker-repo and click DELETE.

Delete Resource

In Conclusion

There you have it! Now you’ve learned how easy it is to build and push a Docker image with Cloud Build.

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