This is a template repository for creating dedicated user images for 2i2c hubs.
The overall workflow is to:
Fork this repository to create your image repository
Hook your image repository to quay.io
Customize the image by editing repo2docker files in your image repository.
Changes can either be done by direct commits to main on your image repository, or through a pull request from a fork of your image repository. Direct commits will build the image and push it to Quay.io. PRs will build the image and offer a link to test it using Binder. Merging the PR will cause a commit on main and therefore trigger a build and push to Quay.io.
Configure your Hub to use this new image
Checkout the 2i2c docs for an in-depth guide on how to use this template repository to create a custom user image and use it for your hub :arrow_right: https://docs.2i2c.org/en/latest/admin/howto/environment/hub-user-image-template-guide.html.
This template repository enables jupyterhub/repo2docker-action. This GitHub action builds a Docker image using the contents of this repo and pushes it to the Quay.io registry.
It provides an example of a environment.yml
conda configuration file for repo2docker to use.
This file can be used to list all the conda packages that need to be installed by repo2docker
in your environment.
The repo2docker-action
will update the base repo2docker conda environment with the packages listed in this environment.yml
file.
Note: A complete list of possible configuration files that can be added to the repository and be used by repo2docker to build the Docker image, can be found in the repo2docker docs.
This template repository provides two GitHub workflows that can build and push the image to quay.io when configured.
This workflow is triggered by every pushed commit on the main branch of the repo (including when a PR is merged). It builds the image and pushes it to the registry.
This workflow is triggerd by every Pull Request commit and it builds the image, but it doesn't push it to the registry, unless explicitly configured to do so. Checkout this section on how to enable image pushes on Pull Requests.
This workflow posts a comment inside a pull request, every time a pull request gets opened. The comment contains a "Test this PR on Binder" badge, which can be used to access the image defined by the PR in mybinder.org.