# ADR 0034: Build container-action Dockerfiles with Kaniko **Date**: 2023-01-09 **Status**: In Progress # Background [Building Dockerfiles in k8s using Kaniko](https://github.com/actions/runner-container-hooks/issues/23) has been on the radar since the beginning of container hooks. Currently, it is only possible in ARC using a [dind/docker-in-docker](https://github.com/actions-runner-controller/actions-runner-controller/blob/master/runner/actions-runner-dind.dockerfile) sidecar container. This container needs to be launched using `--privileged`, which presents a security vulnerability. As an alternative tool, a container running [Kaniko](https://github.com/GoogleContainerTools/kaniko) can be used to build these files instead. Kaniko doesn't need to be `--privileged`. Whether using dind/docker-in-docker sidecar or Kaniko, in this ADR I will refer to these containers as '**builder containers**' # Guiding Principles - **Security:** running a Kaniko builder container should be possible without the `--privileged` flag - **Feature parity with Docker:** Any 'Dockerfile' that can be built with vanilla Docker should also be possible to build using a Kaniko build container - **Ease of Use:** The customer should be able to build and push Docker images with minimal configuration ## Interface The user will set `containerMode:kubernetes`, because this is a change to the behaviour of our k8s hooks The user will set two ENVs: - `ACTIONS_RUNNER_CONTAINER_HOOKS_K8S_REGISTRY_HOST`: e.g. `ghcr.io/OWNER` or `dockerhandle`. - `ACTIONS_RUNNER_CONTAINER_HOOKS_K8S_REGISTRY_SECRET_NAME`: e.g. `docker-secret`: the name of the `k8s` secret resource that allows you to authenticate against the registry with the given handle above The workspace is used as the image name. The image tag is a random generated string. To execute a container-action, we then run a k8s job by loading the image from the specified registry ENVs `ACTIONS_RUNNER_CONTAINER_HOOKS_K8S_REGISTRY_HOST_PUSH` and `ACTIONS_RUNNER_CONTAINER_HOOKS_K8S_REGISTRY_HOST_PULL` will be preferred if set. Users may want to use different URLs for push and pull as they will be invoked by different machines on different networks. - The Kaniko build container pushes the image after building is a pod that belongs to the runner pod. - The kubelet then pulls the image. The above two might not resolve all host names 100% the same (k8s services, nodeports etc) so it makes sense to allow different push and pull URLs. ## Limitations - The user needs to provide a local Docker Registry within the k8s cluster or config for a remote registry (like ghcr or dockerhub) - Potential incompatibilities / inconsistencies between Docker and Kaniko, none is known at this time ## Consequences - Users build container-actions with a local Dockerfile in their k8s cluster without a privileged docker builder container