# Multi-stage builder to avoid polluting users environment with wrong # architecture binaries. Since this binary is used in an alpine container, # we're explicitly compiling for 'linux/amd64' ARG VERSION=1.16.7 FROM golang:${VERSION} AS builder ARG CGO_ENABLED=0 ARG BUILD_TAGS WORKDIR /go/src/github.com/hashicorp/vault COPY . . RUN make bootstrap \ && CGO_ENABLED=$CGO_ENABLED BUILD_TAGS="${BUILD_TAGS}" VAULT_DEV_BUILD=1 XC_OSARCH='linux/amd64' sh -c "'./scripts/build.sh'" # Docker Image FROM alpine:3.13 # Create a vault user and group first so the IDs get set the same way, # even as the rest of this may change over time. RUN addgroup vault && \ adduser -S -G vault vault # Set up certificates, our base tools, and Vault. RUN set -eux; \ apk add --no-cache ca-certificates libcap su-exec dumb-init tzdata COPY --from=builder /go/bin/vault /bin/vault # /vault/logs is made available to use as a location to store audit logs, if # desired; /vault/file is made available to use as a location with the file # storage backend, if desired; the server will be started with /vault/config as # the configuration directory so you can add additional config files in that # location. RUN mkdir -p /vault/logs && \ mkdir -p /vault/file && \ mkdir -p /vault/config && \ chown -R vault:vault /vault # Expose the logs directory as a volume since there's potentially long-running # state in there VOLUME /vault/logs # Expose the file directory as a volume since there's potentially long-running # state in there VOLUME /vault/file # 8200/tcp is the primary interface that applications use to interact with # Vault. EXPOSE 8200 # The entry point script uses dumb-init as the top-level process to reap any # zombie processes created by Vault sub-processes. # # For production derivatives of this container, you should add the IPC_LOCK # capability so that Vault can mlock memory. COPY ./scripts/docker/docker-entrypoint.sh /usr/local/bin/docker-entrypoint.sh ENTRYPOINT ["docker-entrypoint.sh"] # By default you'll get a single-node development server that stores everything # in RAM and bootstraps itself. Don't use this configuration for production. CMD ["server", "-dev"]