convert docker images to rootfs
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Undocker

Converts a Docker image (a bunch of layers) to a flattened "rootfs" tarball.

Why?

Docker images seems to be the lingua franca of distributing application containers. These are very wide-spread. However, is Docker the best runtime environment? Not for everyone.

Undocker bridges the gap between application images (in docker image format) and container runtimes: now you can run a Docker image with systemd-nspawn and/or lxc, without doing the docker pull; docker start; docker export dance.

Usage -- extract docker image

Download nginx docker image from docker hub and convert it to a rootfs:

skopeo copy docker://docker.io/nginx:latest docker-archive:nginx.tar
undocker rootfs nginx.tar - | tar -xv

(the same can be done with docker pull and docker save)

Usage -- systemd-nspawn example

Once the image is converted to a root file-system, it can be started using classic utilities which expect a rootfs:

systemd-nspawn -D $PWD nginx -g 'daemon off;'

Usage -- lxc example

Preparing the image for use with lxc:

undocker rootfs nginx.tar - | xz -T0 > nginx.tar.xz
undocker lxcconfig nginx.tar config
tar -cJf meta.tar.xz config

Import it to lxc and run it:

lxc-create -n bb -t local -- -m meta.tar.xz -f nginx.tar.xz
lxc-start -F -n bb -s lxc.net.0.type=none
lxc-start -F -n bb -s lxc.net.0.type=none -- /docker-entrypoint.sh nginx -g "daemon off;"

Note: automatic entrypoint does not work well with parameters with spaces; not sure what lxc expects here to make it work.

About the implementation

Extracting docker image layers may be harder than you have thought. See rootfs/doc.go for more details.

The rootfs code is dependency-free (it uses Go's stdlib alone). The existing project dependencies are convenience-only.

Contributions

I will accept pull request for code (including tests) and documentation. I am unlikely to react to bug reports without a patch.