$ oc start-build <buildconfig_name>
The following sections provide instructions for basic build operations including starting and canceling builds, deleting BuildConfigs, viewing build details, and accessing build logs.
You can manually start a new build from an existing build configuration in your current project.
To manually start a build, enter the following command:
$ oc start-build <buildconfig_name>
You can manually re-run a build using the --from-build
flag.
To manually re-run a build, enter the following command:
$ oc start-build --from-build=<build_name>
You can specify the --follow
flag to stream the build’s logs in stdout
.
To manually stream a build’s logs in stdout
, enter the following command:
$ oc start-build <buildconfig_name> --follow
You can specify the --env
flag to set any desired environment variable for the build.
To specify a desired environment variable, enter the following command:
$ oc start-build <buildconfig_name> --env=<key>=<value>
Rather than relying on a Git source pull
or a Dockerfile
for a build, you can also start a build by directly pushing your source, which could be the contents of a Git or SVN working directory, a set of pre-built binary artifacts you want to deploy, or a single file. This can be done by specifying one of the following options for the start-build
command:
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Specifies a directory that will be archived and used as a binary input for the build. |
|
Specifies a single file that will be the only file in the build source. The file is placed in the root of an empty directory with the same file name as the original file provided. |
|
Specifies a path to a local repository to use as the binary input for a build. Add the |
When passing any of these options directly to the build, the contents are streamed to the build and override the current build source settings.
Builds triggered from binary input will not preserve the source on the server, so rebuilds triggered by base image changes will use the source specified in the build configuration. |
Start a build from a source using the following command to send the contents of a local Git repository as an archive from the tag v2
:
$ oc start-build hello-world --from-repo=../hello-world --commit=v2
You can cancel a build using the web console, or with the following CLI command.
To manually cancel a build, enter the following command:
$ oc cancel-build <build_name>
You can cancel multiple builds with the following CLI command.
To manually cancel multiple builds, enter the following command:
$ oc cancel-build <build1_name> <build2_name> <build3_name>
You can delete a BuildConfig
using the following command.
To delete a BuildConfig
, enter the following command:
$ oc delete bc <BuildConfigName>
This also deletes all builds that were instantiated from this BuildConfig
.
To delete a BuildConfig
and keep the builds instatiated from the BuildConfig
, specify the --cascade=false
flag when you enter the following command:
$ oc delete --cascade=false bc <BuildConfigName>
You can view build details with the web console or by using the oc describe
CLI command.
This displays information including:
The build source.
The build strategy.
The output destination.
Digest of the image in the destination registry.
How the build was created.
If the build uses the
Docker
or
Source
strategy, the oc describe
output also includes information about the source revision used for the build, including the commit ID, author, committer, and message.
To view build details, enter the following command:
$ oc describe build <build_name>
You can access build logs using the web console or the CLI.
To stream the logs using the build directly, enter the following command:
$ oc describe build <build_name>
You can access BuildConfig
logs using the web console or the CLI.
To stream the logs of the latest build for a BuildConfig
, enter the following command:
$ oc logs -f bc/<buildconfig_name>
You can access logs for a given version build for a BuildConfig
using the web console or the CLI.
To stream the logs for a given version build for a BuildConfig
, enter the following command:
$ oc logs --version=<number> bc/<buildconfig_name>
You can enable a more verbose output by passing the BUILD_LOGLEVEL
environment variable as part of the sourceStrategy
or dockerStrategy
in a BuildConfig
.
An administrator can set the default build verbosity for the entire OKD instance by configuring |
Available log levels for source builds are as follows:
Level 0 |
Produces output from containers running the |
Level 1 |
Produces basic information about the executed process. |
Level 2 |
Produces very detailed information about the executed process. |
Level 3 |
Produces very detailed information about the executed process, and a listing of the archive contents. |
Level 4 |
Currently produces the same information as level 3. |
Level 5 |
Produces everything mentioned on previous levels and additionally provides docker push messages. |
To enable more verbose output, pass the BUILD_LOGLEVEL
environment variable as part of the sourceStrategy
or dockerStrategy
in a BuildConfig
:
sourceStrategy:
...
env:
- name: "BUILD_LOGLEVEL"
value: "2" (1)
1 | Adjust this value to the desired log level. |