Build arguments and variables

Introduction

One of the core features of Earthly is support for build arguments. Build arguments are declared with ARG and can be used to dynamically set environment variables inside the context of RUN commands.

Build arguments can be passed between targets or from the command line. They encourage writing generic Earthfiles and ultimately promote greater code-reuse.

Another closely related primitive that Earthly offers is the variable (declared with LET). Variables are similar to build arguments, except that they cannot be used as parameters.

A Quick Example

Arguments are declared either with the ARG keyword.

Let's consider a "hello world" example that allows us to change who is being greeted (e.g. hello banana, hello eggplant etc). We will create a hello target that accepts the name argument:

VERSION 0.8
FROM alpine:latest

hello:
    ARG name
    RUN echo "hello $name"

Then we will specify a value for the name argument on the command line when we invoke earthly:

earthly +hello --name=world

This will output

    buildkitd | Found buildkit daemon as docker container (earthly-buildkitd)
alpine:latest | --> Load metadata linux/arm64
         +foo | --> FROM alpine:latest
         +foo | 100% resolve docker.io/library/alpine:latest@sha256:21a3deaa0d32a8057914f36584b5288d2e5ecc984380bc0118285c70fa8c9300
         +foo | name=world
         +foo | --> RUN echo "hello $name"
         +foo | hello world
       output | --> exporting outputs

If we re-run earthly +hello --name=world, we will see that the echo command is cached (and won't re-display the hello world text):

+foo | *cached* --> RUN echo "hello $name"

Default values

Arguments may also have default values, which may be either constant or dynamic. For example, the following target will greet the name identified by the arg name (which has a default value of John), with the current time:

hello:
   ARG time=$(date +%H:%M)
   ARG name=John
   RUN echo "hello $name, it is $time"
alpine:latest | --> Load metadata linux/arm64
        +base | --> FROM alpine:latest
        +base | 100% resolve docker.io/library/alpine:latest@sha256:21a3deaa0d32a8057914f36584b5288d2e5ecc984380bc0118285c70fa8c9300
       +hello | --> ARG time = RUN $(date +%H:%M)
       +hello | --> RUN echo "hello $name, it is $time"
       +hello | hello John, it is 23:21
       output | --> exporting outputs

If an arg has no default value, then the default value is the empty string.

Overriding Argument Values

Argument values can be set multiple ways:

  1. On the command line

    The value can be directly specified on the command line (as shown in the previous example):

    earthly +hello --HELLO=world --FOO=bar
  2. From environment variables

    Similar to above, except that the value is an environment variable:

    export HELLO="world"
    export FOO="bar"
    earthly +hello --HELLO="$HELLO" --FOO="$FOO"
  3. Via the EARTHLY_BUILD_ARGS environment variable

    The value can also be set via the EARTHLY_BUILD_ARGS environment variable.

    export EARTHLY_BUILD_ARGS="HELLO=world,FOO=bar"
    earthly +hello

    This may be useful if you have a set of build args that you'd like to always use and would prefer not to have to specify them on the command line every time. The EARTHLY_BUILD_ARGS environment variable may also be stored in your ~/.bashrc file, or some other shell-specific startup script.

  4. From an .arg file

    It is also possible to create an .arg file to contain the build arguments to pass to earthly. First create an .arg file with:

    name=eggplant

    Then simply run earthly:

    earthly +hello

Passing Argument values to targets

Build arguments can also be set when calling build targets.

greeting:
   BUILD +hello --name=world

hello:
    ARG name
    RUN echo "hello $name"

Arg overrides within the same Earthfile are passed automatically to each other. In the example below, if you are calling earthly +greeting --name=world, the --name=world override will be passed to +hello as well.

greeting:
   BUILD +hello

hello:
   ARG name
   RUN echo "hello $name"

This behavior does not apply to references to other Earthfiles. In order to pass arguments to other Earthfiles, you must either explicitly pass the argument. For example:

ARG name
BUILD +hello --name=$name

Or you can use the --pass-args flag to pass all arguments to the target:

BUILD --pass-args +hello

Matrix builds

If multiple build arguments values are defined for the same argument name, Earthly will build the target for each value; this makes it easy to configure a "build matrix" within Earthly.

For example, we can create a new greetings target which calls +hello multiple times:

greetings:
    BUILD +hello \
        --name=world \
        --name=banana \
        --name=eggplant

Then when we call earthly +greetings, earthly will call +hello three times:

     buildkitd | Found buildkit daemon as docker container (earthly-buildkitd)
 alpine:latest | --> Load metadata linux/amd64
         +base | --> FROM alpine:latest
         +base | resolve docker.io/library/alpine:latest@sha256:69e70a79f2d41ab5d637de98c1e0b055206ba40a8145e7bddb55ccc04e13cf8f ... 100%
        +hello | name=banana
        +hello | --> RUN echo "hello $name"
        +hello | name=eggplant
        +hello | --> RUN echo "hello $name"
        +hello | name=world
        +hello | --> RUN echo "hello $name"
        +hello | hello banana
        +hello | hello eggplant
        +hello | hello world
        output | --> exporting outputs

In addition to the BUILD command, build args can also be used with FROM, COPY, WITH DOCKER --load and a number of other commands:

BUILD +hello --name=world
COPY (+hello/file.txt --name=world) ./
FROM +hello --name=world
WITH DOCKER --load=(+hello --name=world)
  ...
END

Another way to pass build args is by specifying a dynamic value, delimited by $(...). For example, in the following, the value of the arg name will be set as the output of the shell command echo world (which, of course is simply world):

BUILD +hello --name=$(echo world)

Variables

Variables are similar to build arguments, except that they cannot be used as parameters. You can think of variables as "private" build arguments (or local variables). To declare a variable, you can use the LET command.

Variables can also be mutated via the SET command. For example:

hello:
   LET name = "world"
   RUN echo "hello $name"
   SET name = "banana"
   RUN echo "hello $name"

This can be useful when you would like to decide on the value of a variable based on an IF condition, or if you would like to construct the value of the variable via a FOR loop.

For more information on LET see the LET Earthfile reference.

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