OpenShift Build Operations
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Internal
Overview
Create a Build Configuration
Source Build
oc new-build --binary=false
Create a build configuration based on source code in the current git repository. The --binary=false says the build should expect source.
Binary Build
oc new-build --binary=true --name=some-binary -i=redhat-openjdk18-openshift
--binary=true makes sure that restrictions associated with binary builds are enforced.
Source Clone Secret
oc set build-secret --source bc/<build-configuration-name'> <secret-name>
Then the secret can be added to the build configuration:
oc new-build .../example.git --build-secret <secret-name>
Manually Start the Build Process
oc start-build <buildConfig-name>
The name of a previous build can be specified - it will be used as a starting point.
Options:
- --from-file
- --from-dir
- --from-repo
- --from-archive
View Builds for Project
oc get builds
NAME TYPE FROM STATUS STARTED DURATION bookstore-1 Source Git@ad0abda Failed (AssembleFailed) About an hour ago 2m43s bookstore-2 Source Git@ad0abda Failed (AssembleFailed) 12 minutes ago 2m16s
Each build has an associated build pod, whose names can be obtained with:
oc get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE bookstore-1-build 0/1 Error 0 57m bookstore-2-build 0/1 Error 0 13m
View Build Logs
View build logs associated with a build object:
oc logs [-f] builds/<build-name>
If -f|--follow is used, it specifies that the logs should be streamed.
Viewing the build logs in this manner is similar to following the build pod's logs.
Stop a Build in Progress
oc cancel-build
Delete a Build
oc delete build/<build-name>
where the build name is among those returned by oc get builds.