cimg/postgres
</p> <h1>CircleCI Convenience Images => PostgreSQL</h1> <h3>A Continuous Integration focused PostgreSQL Docker image built to run on CircleCI</h3>
 pre-installed.
The PostGIS variant can be used by appending -postgis to the end of an existing cimg/postgres tag.
yamljobs: build: docker: - image: cimg/go:1.17 - image: cimg/postgres:13.1-postgis steps: - checkout - run: echo "Do things"
The legacy version of this image, circleci/postgres had a RAM variant.
This is no longer the case.
We're determining how much of a performance increase does this variant actually give before we decide to bring it back.
If you used the legacy PostgreSQL image and you have data on the ram vs non-ram variant build times, please open a GitHub Issue and let us know.
This image has the following tagging scheme:
cimg/postgres:<pg-version>
<pg-version> - The version of PostgreSQL to use.
Images can be built and run locally with this repository. This has the following requirements:
Fork this repository on GitHub.
When you get your clone URL, you'll want to add --recurse-submodules to the clone command in order to populate the Git submodule contained in this repo.
It would look something like this:
bashgit clone --recurse-submodules <my-clone-url>
If you missed this step and already cloned, you can just run git submodule update --recursive to populate the submodule.
Then you can optionally add this repo as an upstream to your own:
bashgit remote add upstream [***]
Clone the project with the following command so that you populate the submodule:
bashgit clone --recurse-submodules ***:CircleCI-Public/cimg-postgres.git
Dockerfiles can be generated for a specific PostgreSQL version using the gen-dockerfiles.sh script.
For example, to generate the Dockerfile for v13.2, you would run the following from the root of the repo:
bash./shared/gen-dockerfiles.sh 13.2
The generated Dockerfile will be located at ./13.2/Dockefile.
To build this image locally and try it out, you can run the following:
bashcd 13.2 docker build -t test/postgres:13.2 . docker run -it test/postgres:13.2 bash
To build the Docker images locally as this repository does, you'll want to run the build-images.sh script:
bash./build-images.sh
This would need to be run after generating the Dockerfiles first. When releasing proper images for CircleCI, this script is run from a CircleCI pipeline and not locally.
The individual scripts (above) can be used to create the correct files for an image, and then added to a new git branch, committed, etc. A release script is included to make this process easier. To make a proper release for this image, let's use the fake PostgreSQL version of v9.99, you would run the following from the repo root:
bash./shared/release.sh 9.99
This will automatically create a new Git branch, generate the Dockerfile(s), stage the changes, commit them, and push them to GitHub.
The commit message will end with the string [release].
This string is used by CircleCI to know when to push images to Docker Hub.
All that would need to be done after that is:
The main branch build will then publish a release.
How changes are incorporated into this image depends on where they come from.
build scripts - Changes within the ./shared submodule happen in its own repository.
For those changes to affect this image, the submodule needs to be updated.
Typically like this:
bashcd shared git pull cd .. git add shared git commit -m "Updating submodule for foo."
parent image - By design, when changes happen to a parent image, they don't appear in existing PostgreSQL images. This is to aid in "determinism" and prevent breaking customer builds. New Go images will automatically pick up the changes.
If you really want to publish changes from a parent image into the PostgreSQL image, you have to build a specific image version as if it was a new image. This will create a new Dockerfile and once published, a new image.
PostgreSQL specific changes - Editing the Dockerfile.template file in this repo will modify the PostgreSQL image specifically.
Don't forget that to see any of these changes locally, the gen-dockerfiles.sh script will need to be run again (see above).
We encourage issues and pull requests against this repository. In order to value your time, here are some things to consider:
CircleCI Docs - The official CircleCI Documentation website.
CircleCI Configuration Reference - From CircleCI Docs, the configuration reference page is one of the most useful pages we have.
It will list all of the keys and values supported in .circleci/config.yml.
Docker Docs - For simple projects this won't be needed but if you want to dive deeper into learning Docker, this is a great resource.
This repository uses upstream resources from the Docker library, specifically, the docker-entrypoint
This repository is licensed under the MIT license. The license can be found here.



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