Multi-Architecture Container Images
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
External
- https://cloud.google.com/kubernetes-engine/docs/how-to/build-multi-arch-for-arm
- https://www.docker.com/blog/multi-arch-build-and-images-the-simple-way/
- https://cloud.google.com/kubernetes-engine/docs/tutorials/migrate-x86-to-multi-arch-arm
Internal
Overview
A container image is represented by a manifest, which is JSON-encoded content representing the image's layers, the corresponding size, the hash of the image, etc. For more details, see:
This format allows putting multiple container images, each supporting a different architecture, behind the same tag.
This is done with a manifest that contains a list of manifests, so the container engine can pick the one that it matches its runtime. This type of manifest is called a manifest list, and contains a list of different images, one for each architecture.
{
"mediaType": "application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.list.v2+json",
"schemaVersion": 2,
"manifests": [
{
"mediaType": "application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json",
"digest": "sha256:5...5",
"size": 4804,
"platform": {
"architecture": "amd64",
"os": "linux"
}
},
{
"mediaType": "application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json",
"digest": "sha256:4...5",
"size": 4803,
"platform": {
"architecture": "arm64",
"os": "linux"
}
}
]
}
Building Multi-Architecture Images
The process consists in building and pushing the images for each architecture, then combining them with podman buildx
.
podman buildx build --push --platform linux/arm64,linux/amd64 --tag docker.my.org/example/multiarch-example:1.0.0