Update rust guide (#17702)

* update rust guide

Signed-off-by: Craig Osterhout <craig.osterhout@docker.com>
Co-authored-by: Stephanie Aurelio <133041642+stephaurelio@users.noreply.github.com>
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Craig Osterhout 2023-07-25 08:01:38 -07:00 committed by GitHub
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@ -96,13 +96,88 @@ For the sample application, you'll use a variation of the backend from the react
? What port does your server listen on? 8000 ? What port does your server listen on? 8000
``` ```
3. In the cloned repository's directory, run `docker build` to build the image. 3. In the cloned repository's directory, open the `Dockerfile` in an IDE or text editor to update it.
`docker init` handled creating most of the instructions in the Dockerfile, but you'll need to update it for your unique application. In addition to a `src` directory, this application includes a `migrations` directory to initialize the database. Add a bind mount for the `migrations` directory to the build stage in the Dockerfile. The following is the updated Dockerfile.
```dockerfile
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:1
# Comments are provided throughout this file to help you get started.
# If you need more help, visit the Dockerfile reference guide at
# https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/
################################################################################
# Create a stage for building the application.
ARG RUST_VERSION=1.70.0
ARG APP_NAME=react-rust-postgres
FROM rust:${RUST_VERSION}-slim-bullseye AS build
ARG APP_NAME
WORKDIR /app
# Build the application.
# Leverage a cache mount to /usr/local/cargo/registry/
# for downloaded dependencies and a cache mount to /app/target/ for
# compiled dependencies which will speed up subsequent builds.
# Leverage a bind mount to the src directory to avoid having to copy the
# source code into the container. Once built, copy the executable to an
# output directory before the cache mounted /app/target is unmounted.
RUN --mount=type=bind,source=src,target=src \
--mount=type=bind,source=Cargo.toml,target=Cargo.toml \
--mount=type=bind,source=Cargo.lock,target=Cargo.lock \
--mount=type=cache,target=/app/target/ \
--mount=type=cache,target=/usr/local/cargo/registry/ \
--mount=type=bind,source=migrations,target=migrations \
<<EOF
set -e
cargo build --locked --release
cp ./target/release/$APP_NAME /bin/server
EOF
################################################################################
# Create a new stage for running the application that contains the minimal
# runtime dependencies for the application. This often uses a different base
# image from the build stage where the necessary files are copied from the build
# stage.
#
# The example below uses the debian bullseye image as the foundation for running the app.
# By specifying the "bullseye-slim" tag, it will also use whatever happens to be the
# most recent version of that tag when you build your Dockerfile. If
# reproducability is important, consider using a digest
# (e.g., debian@sha256:ac707220fbd7b67fc19b112cee8170b41a9e97f703f588b2cdbbcdcecdd8af57).
FROM debian:bullseye-slim AS final
# Create a non-privileged user that the app will run under.
# See https://docs.docker.com/develop/develop-images/dockerfile_best-practices/ #user
ARG UID=10001
RUN adduser \
--disabled-password \
--gecos "" \
--home "/nonexistent" \
--shell "/sbin/nologin" \
--no-create-home \
--uid "${UID}" \
appuser
USER appuser
# Copy the executable from the "build" stage.
COPY --from=build /bin/server /bin/
# Expose the port that the application listens on.
EXPOSE 8000
# What the container should run when it is started.
CMD ["/bin/server"]
```
4. In the cloned repository's directory, run `docker build` to build the image.
```console ```console
$ docker build -t rust-backend-image . $ docker build -t rust-backend-image .
``` ```
4. Run `docker run` to run the image as a container on the same network as the database. 5. Run `docker run` with the following options to run the image as a container on the same network as the database.
```console ```console
$ docker run \ $ docker run \
@ -114,12 +189,12 @@ For the sample application, you'll use a variation of the backend from the react
-e PG_HOST=db \ -e PG_HOST=db \
-e PG_USER=postgres \ -e PG_USER=postgres \
-e PG_PASSWORD=mysecretpassword \ -e PG_PASSWORD=mysecretpassword \
-e ADDRESS=0.0.0.0:8000\ -e ADDRESS=0.0.0.0:8000 \
-e RUST_LOG=debug \ -e RUST_LOG=debug \
rust-backend-image rust-backend-image
``` ```
5. Curl the application to verify that it connects to the database. 6. Curl the application to verify that it connects to the database.
```console ```console
$ curl http://localhost:3001/users $ curl http://localhost:3001/users