A simple Docker image for running a Jenkins agent alongside its very own Docker daemon. This is useful if you're trying to run Jenkins agents on a Mesos cluster, and you also want to build and push Docker images using your CI system.
For full documentation on how to use this Docker image, please refer to https://docs.mesosphere.com/latest/usage/service-guides/jenkins/.
Try it out locally by running the following command:
docker run --privileged mesosphere/jenkins-dind:0.5.0-alpine \
wrapper.sh "java -version && docker run hello-world"
You'll need to configure the Mesos plugin on your Jenkins master to use this
image. You'll probably also want to give it a special slave label, so that you
don't unnecessarily run builds using the dind image. A relevant snippet of the
Mesos plugin within the Jenkins master's config.xml
follows:
<org.jenkinsci.plugins.mesos.MesosSlaveInfo>
<slaveCpus>0.1</slaveCpus>
<slaveMem>512</slaveMem>
<executorCpus>0.1</executorCpus>
<maxExecutors>2</maxExecutors>
<executorMem>128</executorMem>
<remoteFSRoot>jenkins</remoteFSRoot>
<idleTerminationMinutes>3</idleTerminationMinutes>
<jvmArgs>
-Xms16m -XX:+UseConcMarkSweepGC -Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true
</jvmArgs>
<jnlpArgs/>
<containerInfo>
<type>DOCKER</type>
<dockerImage>mesosphere/jenkins-dind:0.6.0-alpine</dockerImage>
<networking>BRIDGE</networking>
<useCustomDockerCommandShell>true</useCustomDockerCommandShell>
<customDockerCommandShell>wrapper.sh</customDockerCommandShell>
<dockerPrivilegedMode>true</dockerPrivilegedMode>
<dockerForcePullImage>false</dockerForcePullImage>
</containerInfo>
<mode>NORMAL</mode>
<labelString>dind</labelString>
</org.jenkinsci.plugins.mesos.MesosSlaveInfo>