Build a Container
build
is the “Swiss army knife” of container creation. You can use
it to download and assemble existing containers from external resources
like Docker Hub and other OCI registries.
You can use it to convert containers between the formats supported by
Apptainer. And you can use it in conjunction with a Apptainer definition file to create a container from scratch and
customized it to fit your needs.
Overview
The build
command accepts a target as input and produces a container
as output.
The target defines the method that build
uses to create the
container. It can be one of the following:
URI beginning with docker:// to build from Docker Hub
URI beginning with oras:// to build from an OCI registry that supports OCI Artifacts
URI beginning with library:// to build from the Container Library
URI beginning with shub:// to build from Singularity Hub
path to a existing container on your local machine
path to a directory to build from a sandbox
path to a Apptainer definition file
build
can produce containers in two different formats that can be
specified as follows.
compressed read-only Singularity Image File (SIF) format suitable for production (default)
writable (ch)root directory called a sandbox for interactive development (
--sandbox
option)
Because build
can accept an existing container as a target and
create a container in either supported format you can convert existing
containers from one format to another.
Downloading an existing container from Docker Hub
You can use build
to download layers from Docker Hub and assemble
them into Apptainer containers.
$ sudo apptainer build alpine.sif docker://alpine
Downloading an existing container from a Library API Registry
You can use the build command to download a container from the Container Library.
$ sudo apptainer build lolcow.sif library://lolcow
The first argument (lolcow.sif
) specifies a path and name for your
container. The second argument (library://lolcow
) gives the
Container Library URI from which to download. By default the container
will be converted to a compressed, read-only SIF. If you want your
container in a writable format use the --sandbox
option.
Creating writable --sandbox
directories
If you wanted to create a container within a writable directory (called
a sandbox) you can do so with the --sandbox
option. It’s possible to
create a sandbox without root privileges, but to ensure proper file
permissions it is recommended to do so as root.
$ sudo apptainer build --sandbox alpine/ docker://alpine
The resulting directory operates just like a container in a SIF file. To
make changes within the container, use the --writable
flag when you
invoke your container. It’s a good idea to do this as root to ensure you
have permission to access the files and directories that you want to
change.
$ sudo apptainer shell --writable alpine/
Converting containers from one format to another
If you already have a container saved locally, you can use it as a
target to build a new container. This allows you convert containers from
one format to another. For example if you had a sandbox container called
development/
and you wanted to convert it to SIF container called
production.sif
you could:
$ sudo apptainer build production.sif development/
Use care when converting a sandbox directory to the default SIF format. If changes were made to the writable container before conversion, there is no record of those changes in the Apptainer definition file rendering your container non-reproducible. It is a best practice to build your immutable production containers directly from an Apptainer definition file instead.
Building containers from Apptainer definition files
Of course, Apptainer definition files can be used as the target when
building a container. For detailed information on writing Apptainer
definition files, please see the Container Definition docs. Let’s say you already have the following container
definition file called lolcow.def
, and you want to use it to build a
SIF container.
Bootstrap: docker
From: ubuntu:16.04
%post
apt-get -y update
apt-get -y install cowsay lolcat
%environment
export LC_ALL=C
export PATH=/usr/games:$PATH
%runscript
date | cowsay | lolcat
You can do so with the following command.
$ sudo apptainer build lolcow.sif lolcow.def
The command requires sudo
just as installing software on your local
machine requires root privileges.
Note
Beware that it is possible to build an image on a host and have the
image not work on a different host. This could be because of the
default compressor supported by the host. For example, when building
an image on a host in which the default compressor is xz
and then
trying to run that image on a CentOS 6 node, where the only
compressor available is gzip
.
Building encrypted containers
With Apptainer it is possible to build and run encrypted containers. The containers are decrypted at runtime entirely in kernel space, meaning that no intermediate decrypted data is ever present on disk or in memory. See encrypted containers for more details.
Build options
--encrypt
Specifies that Apptainer should use a secret saved in either the
APPTAINER_ENCRYPTION_PASSPHRASE
or
APPTAINER_ENCRYPTION_PEM_PATH
environment variable to build an
encrypted container. See encrypted containers for
more details.
--fakeroot
Gives users a way to build containers completely unprivileged. See the fakeroot feature for details.
--force
The --force
option will delete and overwrite an existing
Apptainer image without presenting the normal interactive prompt.
--json
The --json
option will force Apptainer to interpret a given
definition file as a json.
--library
This command allows you to set a different library. Look here for more information.
--notest
If you don’t want to run the %test
section during the container
build, you can skip it with the --notest
option. For instance, maybe
you are building a container intended to run in a production environment
with GPUs. But perhaps your local build resource does not have GPUs. You
want to include a %test
section that runs a short validation but you
don’t want your build to exit with an error because it cannot find a GPU
on your system.
--passphrase
This flag allows you to pass a plaintext passphrase to encrypt the container file system at build time. See encrypted containers for more details.
--pem-path
This flag allows you to pass the location of a public key to encrypt the container file system at build time. See encrypted containers for more details.
--sandbox
Build a sandbox (chroot directory) instead of the default SIF format.
--section
Instead of running the entire definition file, only run a specific
section or sections. This option accepts a comma delimited string of
definition file sections. Acceptable arguments include all
, none
or any combination of the following: setup
, post
, files
,
environment
, test
, labels
.
Under normal build conditions, the Apptainer definition file is
saved into a container’s meta-data so that there is a record showing how
the container was built. Using the --section
option may render this
meta-data useless, so use care if you value reproducibility.
--update
You can build into the same sandbox container multiple times (though the results may be unpredictable and it is generally better to delete your container and start from scratch).
By default if you build into an existing sandbox container, the
build
command will prompt you to decide whether or not to overwrite
the container. Instead of this behavior you can use the --update
option to build _into_ an existing container. This will cause
Apptainer to skip the header and build any sections that are in the
definition file into the existing container.
The --update
option is only valid when used with sandbox containers.
--nv
This flag allows you to mount the Nvidia CUDA libraries of your host
into your build environment. Libraries are mounted during the execution
of post
and test
sections.
Note
This option can’t be set via the environment variable APPTAINER_NV. Apptainer will attempt to bind binaries listed in APPTAINER_CONFDIR/nvliblist.conf, if the mount destination doesn’t exist inside the container, they are ignored.
--rocm
This flag allows you to mount the AMD Rocm libraries of your host into
your build environment. Libraries are mounted during the execution of
post
and test
sections.
Note
This option can’t be set via the environment variable APPTAINER_ROCM. Apptainer will attempt to bind binaries listed in APPTAINER_CONFDIR/rocmliblist.conf, if the mount destination doesn’t exist inside the container, they are ignored.
--bind
This flag allows you to mount a directory, a file or an image during
build, it works the same way as --bind
for shell
, exec
and
run
and can be specified multiple times, see user defined bind
paths. Bind mount occurs during the execution
of post
and test
sections.
Note
This option can’t be set via the environment variables APPTAINER_BIND and APPTAINER_BINDPATH
Beware that the mount points must exist in the built image prior to executing post
and test
.
So if you want to bind --bind /example
and it doesn’t exist in the bootstrap image, you have to
workaround that by adding a setup
section:
%setup
mkdir $APPTAINER_ROOTFS/example
Note
Binding your directory to /mnt is another workaround, as this directory is often present in distribution images and is intended for that purpose, you could avoid the directory creation in the definition file.
--writable-tmpfs
This flag will run the %test
section of the build with a writable
tmpfs overlay filesystem in place. This allows the tests to create
files, which will be discarded at the end of the build. Other portions
of the build do not use this temporary filesystem.
More Build topics
If you want to customize the cache location (where Docker layers are downloaded on your system), specify Docker credentials, or any custom tweaks to your build environment, see build environment.
If you want to make internally modular containers, check out the getting started guide here
If you want to build a container with an encrypted file system look here.