I am using below script and it giving me an error #/bin/sh: 1: kpt: not found
FROM nginx
RUN apt update
RUN apt -y install git
RUN apt -y install curl
# install kpt package
RUN mkdir -p ~/bin
RUN curl -L https://github.com/GoogleContainerTools/kpt/releases/download/v1.0.0-beta.1/kpt_linux_amd64 --output ~/bin/kpt && chmod u+x ~/bin/kpt
RUN export PATH=${HOME}/bin:${PATH}
RUN SRC_REPO=https://github.com/kubeflow/manifests
RUN kpt pkg get $SRC_REPO/tf-training#v1.1.0 tf-training
But if I create the image using
FROM nginx
RUN apt update
RUN apt -y install git
RUN apt -y install curl
and perform
docker exec -it container_name bash
and manually do the task then I am able to install kpt package. Sharing below the screenshot of the process
The error changes if I provide the full path to /bin/kpt
Error: ambiguous repo/dir#version specify '.git' in argument
FROM nginx
RUN apt update
RUN apt -y install git
RUN apt -y install curl
RUN mkdir -p ~/bin
RUN curl -L https://github.com/GoogleContainerTools/kpt/releases/download/v1.0.0-beta.1/kpt_linux_amd64 --output ~/bin/kpt && chmod u+x ~/bin/kpt
RUN export PATH=${HOME}/bin:${PATH}
# Below line of code is to ensure that kpt is installed and working fine
RUN ~/bin/kpt pkg get https://github.com/ajinkya101/kpt-demo-repo.git/Packages/Nginx
RUN SRC_REPO=https://github.com/kubeflow/manifests
RUN ~/bin/kpt pkg get $SRC_REPO/tf-training#v1.1.0 tf-training
What is happening when I am using docker and not able to install it?
First, make sure SRC_REPO is declared as a Dockerfile environment variable
ENV SRC_REPO=https://github.com/kubeflow/manifests.git
^^^ ^^^^
And make sure the URL ends with .git.
As mentioned in kpt get:
In most cases the .git suffix should be specified to delimit the REPO_URI from the PKG_PATH, but this is not required for widely recognized repo prefixes.
Second, to be sure, specify the full path of kpt, without ~ or ${HOME}.
/root/bin/kpt
For testing, add a RUN id -a && pwd to be sure who and where you are when using the nginx image.
our app is nodejs based and needs to query Oracle DB, so we install NPM oracledb package. So our Docker image is based on oracle instant client, the Docker file looks like following:
FROM frolvlad/alpine-glibc
RUN apk update && apk add libaio
COPY instantclient_12_1.zip ./
RUN unzip instantclient_12_1.zip
RUN mv instantclient_12_1/ /usr/lib/
RUN rm instantclient_12_1.zip
RUN ln /usr/lib/instantclient_12_1/libclntsh.so.12.1 /usr/lib/libclntsh.so
RUN ln /usr/lib/instantclient_12_1/libocci.so.12.1 /usr/lib/libocci.so
RUN ln /usr/lib/instantclient_12_1/libociei.so /usr/lib/libociei.so
RUN ln /usr/lib/instantclient_12_1/libnnz12.so /usr/lib/libnnz12.so
ENV ORACLE_BASE /usr/lib/instantclient_12_1
ENV LD_LIBRARY_PATH /usr/lib/instantclient_12_1
ENV TNS_ADMIN /usr/lib/instantclient_12_1
ENV ORACLE_HOME /usr/lib/instantclient_12_1
RUN apk add nodejs npm
RUN mkdir -p /var/app
WORKDIR /var/app
ADD package.json /var/app
COPY . /var/app
CMD ["npm","start"]
But when our app starts using 'oracledb' NPM package, it got following error:
init() error: DPI-1047: Cannot locate a 64-bit Oracle Client library: "Error loading shared library libnsl.so.1: No such file or directory (needed by /usr/lib/libclntsh.so)". See https://oracle.github.io/odpi/doc/installation.html#linux for help Node-oracledb installation instructions: https://oracle.github.io/node-oracledb/INSTALL.html
You must have 64-bit Oracle client libraries in LD_LIBRARY_PATH, or configured with ldconfig.
If you do not have Oracle Database on this computer, then install the Instant Client Basic or Basic Light package from http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/topics/linuxx86-64soft-092277.html
So Oracle client couldn't find libnsl.so.1 even thought it should come with glibc, and I can see that it is under:
'/usr/glibc-compat/lib'.
Any ideas how to fix this? Thanks in Advance.
# 1. Install dependencies
FROM node:8.15 as cache-package
COPY package.json /srv/src/package.json
WORKDIR /srv/src
RUN yarn install
# 2.
FROM node:8.15 as builder
# 1. Update everything on the box
RUN apt-get update && \
apt-get install sudo
#RUN apk --update add libaio bc net-tools
RUN sudo apt-get install unzip
RUN sudo apt-get install wget
RUN sudo apt-get install git
# 3. Install oracle client
RUN mkdir -p /opt/oracle
# 3.1 Get oracle client
WORKDIR /opt/oracle
RUN wget -O /opt/oracle/instantclient_18_3_linux.zip http://YOUR_URL_TO_DOWNLOAD_THE_CLIENT/instantclient_18_3_linux.zip
RUN sudo unzip /opt/oracle/instantclient_18_3_linux.zip
# 3.2 Configure oracle client to work with node
RUN sudo sh -c "echo /opt/oracle/instantclient_18_3_linux > /etc/ld.so.conf.d/oracle-instantclient.conf"
RUN sudo cat /etc/ld.so.conf.d/oracle-instantclient.conf
FROM node:8.15
RUN apt-get update && \
apt-get install sudo
RUN sudo apt-get install libaio1
RUN mkdir -p /srv/src/logs
RUN mkdir -p /srv/logs
RUN mkdir -p /opt/oracle
# 4. Set the working directory
# 5. Copy our project & install our dependencies
COPY --from=cache-package /srv/src /srv/src
COPY --from=builder /opt/oracle/instantclient_18_3_linux /opt/oracle/instantclient_18_3_linux
COPY --from=builder /etc/ld.so.conf.d/oracle-instantclient.conf /etc/ld.so.conf.d/oracle-instantclient.conf
RUN sudo ldconfig
RUN ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/WET /etc/localtime
COPY . /srv/src
WORKDIR /srv/src
# 6. Start the app
CMD yarn start
Here is my dockerfile working fine, the srv/src is my directory where I have my code, just change for yours and it should work.
I have the same problem as you the past two days and now it works.
I am in the process of building a new Docker image and I'm looking to get NVM installed so I can manage nodejs.
Reading the docs on how to install NVM they mention that you need to source your .bashrc file in order to start using NVM.
I've tried to set this up in a Dockerfile, but so far building fails with the error:
"bash: nvm: command not found"
Here are the relevant lines from my Dockerfile:
ADD files/nvm_install.sh /root/
RUN chmod a+x /root/nvm_install.sh
RUN bash -c "/root/nvm_install.sh"
RUN bash -l -c "source /root/.bashrc"
RUN cd /root
RUN bash -l -c "nvm install 0.10.31"
Here is the output from trying to build:
docker build -t nginx_dock .
Step 0 : FROM ubuntu
---> 826544226fdc
Step 1 : MAINTAINER dficociello
---> Using cache
---> da3bc340fbb3
Step 2 : RUN apt-get update
---> Using cache
---> 6b6b611feb4f
Step 3 : RUN apt-get install nginx curl -y
---> Using cache
---> 159eb0b16d23
Step 4 : RUN touch /root/.bashrc
---> Using cache
---> 5e9e8216191b
Step 5 : ADD files/nginx.conf /etc/nginx/
---> Using cache
---> c4a4a11296a2
Step 6 : ADD files/nvm_install.sh /root/
---> Using cache
---> b37cba2a18ca
Step 7 : RUN chmod a+x /root/nvm_install.sh
---> Using cache
---> bb13e2a2893d
Step 8 : RUN bash -c "/root/nvm_install.sh"
---> Using cache
---> 149b49a8fc71
Step 9 : RUN bash -l -c "source /root/.bashrc"
---> Running in 75f353ed0d53
---> 0eae8eae7874
Removing intermediate container 75f353ed0d53
Step 10 : RUN cd /root
---> Running in feacbd998dd0
---> 284293ef46b0
Removing intermediate container feacbd998dd0
Step 11 : RUN bash -l -c "nvm install 0.10.31"
---> Running in 388514d11067
bash: nvm: command not found
2014/09/17 13:15:11 The command [/bin/sh -c bash -l -c "nvm install 0.10.31"] returned a non-zero code: 127
I'm pretty new to Docker so I may be missing something fundamental to writing Dockerfiles, but so far all the reading I've done hasn't shown me a good solution.
When you RUN bash... each time that runs in a separate process, anything set in the environment is not maintained. Here's how I install nvm:
# Replace shell with bash so we can source files
RUN rm /bin/sh && ln -s /bin/bash /bin/sh
# Set debconf to run non-interactively
RUN echo 'debconf debconf/frontend select Noninteractive' | debconf-set-selections
# Install base dependencies
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y -q --no-install-recommends \
apt-transport-https \
build-essential \
ca-certificates \
curl \
git \
libssl-dev \
wget \
&& rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
ENV NVM_DIR /usr/local/nvm # or ~/.nvm , depending
ENV NODE_VERSION 0.10.33
# Install nvm with node and npm
RUN curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.20.0/install.sh | bash \
&& . $NVM_DIR/nvm.sh \
&& nvm install $NODE_VERSION \
&& nvm alias default $NODE_VERSION \
&& nvm use default
ENV NODE_PATH $NVM_DIR/v$NODE_VERSION/lib/node_modules
ENV PATH $NVM_DIR/v$NODE_VERSION/bin:$PATH
Update 20/02/2020: This solution works if you're using a debian base image. If you're using ubuntu, see this answer.
Here is the cleanest way to install nvm that I have found:
SHELL ["/bin/bash", "--login", "-c"]
RUN curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.35.3/install.sh | bash
RUN nvm install 10.15.3
Explanation
The first line sets the Dockerfile's default shell to a bash login shell. Note: this means that every subsequent RUN, CMD, and ENTRYPOINT will be run under the current user (usually root), and source the ~/.bashrc file if run in the shell form.
The second line installs nvm with bash. When the script is run with bash, it appends to the ~/.bashrc file.
The third line installs a particular version of nodejs and uses it. The nvm, npm, and node commands are available because they are run via a bash login shell (see line 1).
To help everyone that are looking for a way to install the Node.js with NVM on Ubuntu (last version), I made the dockerfile below. I'm using the last version of Docker, Ubuntu, Node.js and the NVM is working properly (the $PATH was fixed). I'm using this in a production environment.
$ docker info \
Server Version: 1.9.1
Kernel Version: 4.1.13-boot2docker
Operating System: Boot2Docker 1.9.1 (TCL 6.4.1); master : cef800b - Fri Nov 20 19:33:59 UTC 2015
Node.js Version: stable 4.2.4 LTS
Ubuntu Version: 14.04.3
dockerfile:
FROM ubuntu:14.04.3
# Replace shell with bash so we can source files
RUN rm /bin/sh && ln -s /bin/bash /bin/sh
# make sure apt is up to date
RUN apt-get update --fix-missing
RUN apt-get install -y curl
RUN apt-get install -y build-essential libssl-dev
ENV NVM_DIR /usr/local/nvm
ENV NODE_VERSION 4.2.4
# Install nvm with node and npm
RUN curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.30.1/install.sh | bash \
&& source $NVM_DIR/nvm.sh \
&& nvm install $NODE_VERSION \
&& nvm alias default $NODE_VERSION \
&& nvm use default
ENV NODE_PATH $NVM_DIR/v$NODE_VERSION/lib/node_modules
ENV PATH $NVM_DIR/versions/node/v$NODE_VERSION/bin:$PATH
RUN mkdir /usr/app
RUN mkdir /usr/app/log
WORKDIR /usr/app
# log dir
VOLUME /usr/app/log
# Bundle app source
COPY . /usr/app
# Install app dependencies
RUN npm install
EXPOSE 3000
CMD ["node", "server.js"]
Nvm paths have changed since the accepted answer, so if you want to use a more up-to-date nvm version, you need to make a few changes. Also, it is not necessary to remap sh to make it work:
ENV NVM_DIR /usr/local/nvm
RUN curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.33.1/install.sh | bash
ENV NODE_VERSION v7.9.0
RUN /bin/bash -c "source $NVM_DIR/nvm.sh && nvm install $NODE_VERSION && nvm use --delete-prefix $NODE_VERSION"
ENV NODE_PATH $NVM_DIR/versions/node/$NODE_VERSION/lib/node_modules
ENV PATH $NVM_DIR/versions/node/$NODE_VERSION/bin:$PATH
Not sure if you will need the --delete-prefix option on the nvm use - I did, but that may be something strange about my base image.
Took me an hour or two to figure out the cleanest way to do it. --login doesn't seem to execute .bashrc so you have to supply -i to launch it in interactive mode. This causes Docker to yell at you for a bit so I only launch this way for the installation, then reset to my standard shell.
# Installing Node
SHELL ["/bin/bash", "--login", "-i", "-c"]
RUN curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.35.2/install.sh | bash
RUN source /root/.bashrc && nvm install 12.14.1
SHELL ["/bin/bash", "--login", "-c"]
Each RUN in a Dockerfile is executed in a different container. So if you source a file in a container, its content will not be available in the next one.
That is why when you install an application and you need to do several steps, you must do it in the same container.
With your example:
ADD files/nvm_install.sh /root/
RUN chmod a+x /root/nvm_install.sh && \
/root/nvm_install.sh && \
source /root/.bashrc && \
cd /root && \
nvm install 0.10.31
This is based on the top answer and works in 2018:
# Replace shell with bash so we can source files
RUN rm /bin/sh && ln -s /bin/bash /bin/sh
# Install base dependencies
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y -q --no-install-recommends \
apt-transport-https \
build-essential \
ca-certificates \
curl \
git \
libssl-dev \
wget
ENV NVM_DIR /usr/local/nvm
ENV NODE_VERSION 8.11.3
WORKDIR $NVM_DIR
RUN curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/master/install.sh | bash \
&& . $NVM_DIR/nvm.sh \
&& nvm install $NODE_VERSION \
&& nvm alias default $NODE_VERSION \
&& nvm use default
ENV NODE_PATH $NVM_DIR/versions/node/v$NODE_VERSION/lib/node_modules
ENV PATH $NVM_DIR/versions/node/v$NODE_VERSION/bin:$PATH
Note that nvm is not a bash command, it is an alias. This can screw you up if you're relying on $PATH.
Updated 2022
Just one answer put the curl installation but did not work the entire Dockerfile
Here my Dockerfile ready to copy/paste in which I install latest nvm 2022 version with latest Ubuntu
FROM ubuntu
# nvm requirements
RUN apt-get update
RUN echo "y" | apt-get install curl
# nvm env vars
RUN mkdir -p /usr/local/nvm
ENV NVM_DIR /usr/local/nvm
# IMPORTANT: set the exact version
ENV NODE_VERSION v16.17.0
RUN curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.39.1/install.sh | bash
RUN /bin/bash -c "source $NVM_DIR/nvm.sh && nvm install $NODE_VERSION && nvm use --delete-prefix $NODE_VERSION"
# add node and npm to the PATH
ENV NODE_PATH $NVM_DIR/versions/node/$NODE_VERSION/bin
ENV PATH $NODE_PATH:$PATH
RUN npm -v
RUN node -v
Log
Notes
Set the exact version of nodejs is mandatory because if you set nvm use v16, 16.17.0 will be downloaded and then there is no way to get the 16.17.0 from v16 to be set in the PATH
nvm force us to search last and specific version raw.githubusercontent../nvm/v0.39.1/install.sh of the script its readme https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm#install--update-script instead to have something like this: raw.githubusercontent../nvm/latest/install.sh
If your nodejsapp is classic and standard, don't use nvm. Instead use FROM node:16 directly
You could use this nvm snippet in another projects in which the base image is not a node:16. For example, I have a python docker image and nodejs was required.
Here is my working version
FROM ubuntu:14.04
# Declare constants
ENV NVM_VERSION v0.29.0
ENV NODE_VERSION v5.0.0
# Replace shell with bash so we can source files
RUN rm /bin/sh && ln -s /bin/bash /bin/sh
# Install pre-reqs
RUN apt-get update
RUN apt-get -y install curl build-essential
# Install NVM
RUN curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/${NVM_VERSION}/install.sh | bash
# Install NODE
RUN source ~/.nvm/nvm.sh; \
nvm install $NODE_VERSION; \
nvm use --delete-prefix $NODE_VERSION;
Took help from #abdulljibali and #shamisis answers.
Based upon the suggestion in #Kuhess answer, I replaced the source command with the following in my Dockerfile
RUN cat ~/.nvm/nvm.sh >> installnode.sh
RUN echo "nvm install 0.10.35" >> installnode.sh
RUN sh installnode.sh
25-Feb-2021
The main problem is with use of the 'source' directive, which is bash shell specific.
What worked for me was replacing 'source' with '.' for a Ubuntu 18 install.
My Dockerfile:
FROM ubuntu:bionic
RUN \
apt update && \
apt upgrade -y && \
apt install -y curl
ENV NVM_DIR /root/.nvm
ENV NODE_VERSION 14.16
# Install nvm with node and npm
RUN curl -sL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.35.3/install.sh | bash \
&& . $NVM_DIR/nvm.sh \
&& nvm install $NODE_VERSION
I must begin with the fact that I searched all over to get a working example of nvm inside docker and I found none. Even the answers in this thread did not work.
So, I spent quite some time and came up with one that works:
# install dependencies
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y \
curl \
npm \
nodejs \
git;
# compatibility fix for node on ubuntu
RUN ln -s /usr/bin/nodejs /usr/bin/node;
# install nvm
RUN curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.24.1/install.sh | sh;
# invoke nvm to install node
RUN cp -f ~/.nvm/nvm.sh ~/.nvm/nvm-tmp.sh; \
echo "nvm install 0.12.2; nvm alias default 0.12.2" >> ~/.nvm/nvm-tmp.sh; \
sh ~/.nvm/nvm-tmp.sh; \
rm ~/.nvm/nvm-tmp.sh;
Notice how I have installed nodejs via apt-get as well. I found that some packages don't get installed inside docker unless this is done.
A key difference between the attempt to get the nvm command in the question:
RUN bash -l -c "source /root/.bashrc"
which doesn't work and the attempt to do the same in the accepted answer:
source $NVM_DIR/nvm.sh
Is that the second version sources the nvm.sh script directly, whereas the original tries to do it via the .bashrc file.
The .bashrc file has a line in it early on which exits if it's being run in a non interactive shell:
# If not running interactively, don't do anything
case $- in
*i*) ;;
*) return;;
esac
So it never gets to the bit where it would have sourced nvm.sh which actually puts the nvm command in your shell.
I wouldn't be surprised if docker is running this stuff in a non interactive shell. This hadn't been explicitly pointed out, so I thought I would mention it as it's what caught me out when I was doing something similar with vagrant.
None of these worked for me, for my python3-onbuild container I had to force-create symbolic links to the nvm installation.
# Install npm and nodejs
RUN apt-get install -y build-essential libssl-dev
RUN mkdir /root/.nvm
ENV NVM_DIR /root/.nvm
ENV NODE_VERSION 8.9.4
RUN curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.33.9/install.sh | bash
RUN chmod +x $HOME/.nvm/nvm.sh
RUN . $HOME/.nvm/nvm.sh && nvm install $NODE_VERSION && nvm alias default $NODE_VERSION && nvm use default && npm install -g npm
RUN ln -sf /root/.nvm/versions/node/v$NODE_VERSION/bin/node /usr/bin/nodejs
RUN ln -sf /root/.nvm/versions/node/v$NODE_VERSION/bin/node /usr/bin/node
RUN ln -sf /root/.nvm/versions/node/v$NODE_VERSION/bin/npm /usr/bin/npm
This is what worked for me (I'm using debian buster):
RUN apt-get update
RUN apt-get install -y build-essential checkinstall libssl-dev
RUN curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.35.1/install.sh | bash
SHELL ["/bin/bash", "--login", "-c"]
You should now be able to do nvm install <version>.
This installs the lts-version of nodejs when extending image "php:7.4.15" (debian:buster-slim):
# Install nvm to install npm and node.js
ENV NVM_DIR /root/.nvm
ENV NODE_VERSION lts/*
RUN mkdir $HOME/.nvm && \
curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.37.2/install.sh | bash && \
chmod +x $HOME/.nvm/nvm.sh && \
. $HOME/.nvm/nvm.sh && \
nvm install --latest-npm "$NODE_VERSION" && \
nvm alias default "$NODE_VERSION" && \
nvm use default && \
DEFAULT_NODE_VERSION=$(nvm version default) && \
ln -sf /root/.nvm/versions/node/$DEFAULT_NODE_VERSION/bin/node /usr/bin/nodejs && \
ln -sf /root/.nvm/versions/node/$DEFAULT_NODE_VERSION/bin/node /usr/bin/node && \
ln -sf /root/.nvm/versions/node/$DEFAULT_NODE_VERSION/bin/npm /usr/bin/npm
nvm not found can result from it being installed for a different user than the one who is executing the container. You may need to prefix the installation with the custom user who is executing the container. The last USER statement defines the container user.
USER $USERNAME
RUN curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.39.1/install.sh | bash
Reason
Diving into a nvm install script, e. g. v0.39.1, one can see that is installed into $HOME of the current user. If you have not changed it, the default user of a ubuntu image is root. When starting the container with a different user however, nvm won't be found; hence make sure user of installation and execution align.
nvm_default_install_dir() {
[ -z "${XDG_CONFIG_HOME-}" ] && printf %s "${HOME}/.nvm" || printf %s "${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/nvm"
}
2022 update:
based off https://stackoverflow.com/a/60137919/2047472 I came up with:
FROM python:3.10
RUN touch .profile
SHELL ["/bin/bash", "--login", "-i", "-c"]
RUN curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.39.1/install.sh | bash
SHELL ["/bin/bash", "--login", "-c"]
RUN nvm install
RUN node -v
RUN npm -v
if you use .nvmrc and use source to init nvm, beware of a bug in nvm.sh causing it to exit with return code 3 when .nvmrc is present in current or parent directory
I had to touch .profile as it didn't exist, otherwise nvm is not activated in subsequent RUN commands
touch .bashrc didn't work
After testing most information here as well as other posts, turned out in my case it was related to permission issues, that lead to weird bugs, like failing to install a npm project unless run as root user, my setup was to run VueJs along a PHP CMS, the final portion that worked was:
ENV NVM_DIR $TMP_STORE/nvm
ENV NODE_VERSION 16.15.0
RUN chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/
USER www-data
RUN export XDG_CONFIG_HOME=$TMP_STORE \
&& curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.39.1/install.sh | bash
#RUN chown -R www-data:www-data $NVM_DIR
RUN source $NVM_DIR/nvm.sh \
&& nvm install $NODE_VERSION \
&& nvm alias default $NODE_VERSION \
&& nvm use default
ENV NODE_PATH $NVM_DIR/v$NODE_VERSION/lib/node_modules
ENV PATH $NVM_DIR/versions/node/v$NODE_VERSION/bin:$PATH
RUN npm install -g #vue/cli \
&& npm install -g vue
USER root
The whole docker configuration can be found here
Also had an oddly hard time for my docker file extending the CircleCI runner image - this worked for me:
FROM circleci/runner:launch-agent
SHELL ["/bin/bash", "--login", "-c"]
USER $USERNAME
RUN wget -qO- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.39.2/install.sh | bash;
ENV NODE_VERSION 18.12.1
ENV NVM_DIR $HOME/.nvm
RUN \
. ~/.nvm/nvm.sh \
&& nvm install $NODE_VERSION \
&& nvm alias default $NODE_VERSION \
&& nvm use default;
ENV NODE_PATH $NVM_DIR/v$NODE_VERSION/lib/node_modules
ENV PATH $NVM_DIR/versions/node/v$NODE_VERSION/bin:$PATH
RUN npm -v
RUN node -v
I had a really hard time getting NVM working properly on an alpine-based image. I ultimately just copied over a bunch of the shared directories from an official Node alpine image. Seems to be working quite well so far.
# Dockerfile
###############################################################################
# https://docs.docker.com/develop/develop-images/multistage-build/
# Builder Image
# This image is intended to build the app source code, not to run it.
###############################################################################
FROM node:16-alpine as builder
WORKDIR /build-tmp
COPY ./dist/src/yarn.lock .
COPY ./dist/src/package.json .
RUN yarn install --production
###############################################################################
# Execution image
# Nothing from the builder image is included here unless explicitly copied
###############################################################################
FROM osgeo/gdal:alpine-normal-3.4.2
# It's seemingly very difficult to build a specific version of node in an Alpine linux
# image, so let's copy node from the builder image into this execution image!
COPY --from=builder /usr/lib /usr/lib
COPY --from=builder /usr/local/share /usr/local/share
COPY --from=builder /usr/local/lib /usr/local/lib
COPY --from=builder /usr/local/include /usr/local/include
COPY --from=builder /usr/local/bin /usr/local/bin
...
CMD ["node", "main"]
Here is a solution I recently used:
# Install nvm/Node.js
ENV NVM_VERSION=0.39.1
ENV NODE_VERSION=16.17.1
RUN curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v$NVM_VERSION/install.sh | bash
RUN bash --login -c "nvm install $NODE_VERSION"
# Do whatever with nvm
RUN bash --login -c "nvm use $NODE_VERSION && npm [...]"
2023 to use as dev-container
I started to use the dev-contieners and to set up my enviroment I used the next Dockcerfile that works perfectly with the purpose I've described. I share this because spend a hard time to achive it.
FROM ubuntu:22.04
ENV HOME="/root"
ENV NVM_DIR="${HOME}/.nvm"
ENV NVM_VERSION=v0.39.3
ENV NODE_VERSION=18
RUN apt-get update \
&& apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends build-essential\
libssl-dev \
git \
curl \
ca-certificates \
&& git clone https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm.git "${NVM_DIR}"
WORKDIR "${NVM_DIR}"
RUN git checkout ${NVM_VERSION} \
&& \. "./nvm.sh" \
&& nvm install "${NODE_VERSION}" \
&& echo '[ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh"' >> "${HOME}/.bashrc" \
&& echo '[ -s "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion"' >> "${HOME}/.bashrc"
WORKDIR "${HOME}"
This is intended to work with bash (I don't have idea if works with another type of shell). The command that I used to run the image was:
docker run -ti --rm --name node_test <your-image-name | id-image> /bin/bash
This is the complete dockerfile
FROM ubuntu:12.04
# Create directory
RUN mkdir -p /dir/subdir
# Download wget
RUN apt-get install -y wget
# Make sure package is up to date
RUN apt-get update
# Install nodejs
WORKDIR /dir
RUN wget http://nodejs.org/dist/v0.10.26/node-v0.10.26-linux-x64.tar.gz
RUN tar -zxf node-v0.10.26-linux-x64.tar.gz
RUN cd /node-v0.10.26-linux-x64 && ./configure
RUN cd /node-v0.10.26-linux-x64 && make
RUN cd /node-v0.10.26-linux-x64 && make install
# Update again
RUN apt-get-update
# Copy all the files
ADD dir/subdir dir/subdir
EXPOSE 8080
CMD ["node", "/dir/subdir/index.js"]
This is part of the log where it gets an error
Step 6 : RUN tar -zxf node-v0.10.26-linux-x64.tar.gz
---> Running in xxxxxxx
---> xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Removing intermediate container xxxxxxxxxxxx
Step 7 : RUN cd /node-v0.10.26-linux-x64 && ./configure
---> Running in xxxxxxxx
[91m/bin/sh: 1: cd: can't cd to /node-v0.10.26-linux-x64
[0m
The command [/bin/sh -c cd /node-v0.10.26-linux-x64 && ./configure] returned a non-zero code: 2
Does anyone know what the error 2 means and how to fix it?
This time I tested it.
FROM ubuntu:12.04
# Create directory
RUN mkdir -p /dir/subdir
# Make sure package is up to date
RUN apt-get update
# Install dependencies
RUN apt-get install -y build-essential openssl libssl-dev pkg-config python
# Install nodejs
WORKDIR /dir
ADD http://nodejs.org/dist/v0.10.29/node-v0.10.29.tar.gz /dir/
RUN tar -zxf node-v0.10.29.tar.gz
WORKDIR /dir/node-v0.10.29
RUN ./configure && make && make install
WORKDIR /dir
# Copy all the files
ADD dir/subdir dir/subdir
EXPOSE 8080
CMD ["node", "/dir/subdir/index.js"]
Docker (v1.0.0) will use WORKDIR for subsequent RUN. cd /node-v0.10.26-linux-x64 won't work as the untar occured in /dir.