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A perfect way to Dockerize your Python application

sourcery.ai

3 points by brendanator 6 years ago · 4 comments

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itamarst 6 years ago

1. It's not perfect if it's insecure. You really don't want to run your Docker images as root: https://pythonspeed.com/articles/root-capabilities-docker-se...

2. It's not perfect to include gcc; it's certainly OK, but it's possible to do better with multi-stage builds, as someone else commented.

3. You probably want PYTHONFAULTHANDLER=1 so segfaults gets tracebacks.

Etc..

Going from "it works" to "it's production-ready" is quite a bit of effort!

  • brendanatorOP 6 years ago

    Thank you for all these suggestions, I've updated the article.

    Your website is an excellent source of knowledge!

dastx 6 years ago

If you think having something like pipenv or gcc in your image is a "perfect way" of doing things, you're sorely mistaken.

Neither of those are needed. Use multi stage docker files to avoid such unnecessary and potentially dangerous dependencies.

In addition, why do you need to disable byte code writing? You're unnecessarily disabling optimizations done by python.

  • brendanatorOP 6 years ago

    Multi stage builds do indeed seem much better, thanks

    Regarding writing bytecode - this slows down the first load of a file, in exchange for speeding up subsequent loads of a file. It has no effect on runtime speed. Given that python code is only loaded once when a Docker image is run, it is better to disable this.

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