Skip to content

Docker image that contains SBCL, Quicklisp, and some QL libraries.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

rigetti/docker-lisp

Repository files navigation

docker-lisp

docker pulls

Docker image that contains the latest version of Steel Bank Common Lisp, the most recent distribution of the library manager Quicklisp, and some of the third-party libraries used at Rigetti. It is built on top of Debian Buster.

Running the Docker image

The rigetti/lisp image is available on DockerHub, so running docker run -it rigetti/lisp will download it and drop you into an SBCL REPL with Quicklisp available and the libraries preloaded.

Updating the contents of the Docker image

Once updating the source code, you can test your changes locally by running make from the command line. Additionally, when you open a PR with your changes, the CI system will run make and build the Docker image, but will not push it to DockerHub. There are four things that you might want to change in the Docker image:

  1. To update the version of SBCL to use in the Docker build, simply edit the VERSION-SBCL.txt file.

  2. To update the version of Quicklisp to use in the Docker build, simply edit the VERSION-QUICKLISP.txt file.

  3. To include additional Quicklisp libraries that are used by downstream dependencies, simply add them to quicklisp-libraries.txt

  4. Currently, this image only contains SBCL, but it is named rigetti/lisp because in the future one could imagine adding downstream support for additional Lisp implementations (like ECL or CCL). In order to do so, the Dockerfile would need to be updated to install these other flavors of Lisp.

Pushing a new Docker image

The images on DockerHub are tagged by the version of Quicklisp available in them. Thus, rigetti/lisp:2019-07-11 would have the Quicklisp distribution that was released on July 11th, 2019. The version of SBCL is not represented explicitly in the image tag, but corresponds to the contents of VERSION-SBCL.txt when the image was built. This was an intentional design decision to reduce upgrade complexity, but can be rethought if necessary.

Once you have selected the version of SBCL and Quicklisp that you would like to build an image for, commit your changes to VERSION-SBCL.txt and VERSION-QUICKLISP.txt and open a pull request. After this PR has been merged into mainline, the CI system will build a new version of the image tagged with the Quicklisp version, and push it to DockerHub. For example, if VERSION-SBCL.txt contains 1.5.4 and VERSION-QUICKLISP.txt contains 2019-07-11, this will trigger a build on GitLab CI that creates the rigetti/lisp:2019-07-11 image and pushes it to DockerHub. Additionally, this will update the rigetti/lisp:latest image, which is the default image if no tag is specified.

Overwriting an existing Docker image

If you make changes to the source code without incrementing the number in VERSION-QUICKLISP.txt, when these changes hit master, the rigetti/lisp image that is tagged by the number in VERSION-QUICKLISP.txt will be overwritten by whatever is built in that master build. For example, if you update the SBCL version or add new QL libraries, this will overwrite the most recent non-latest tag, as well as update the latest tag.

Nightly rebuilds of the Docker image

In addition to the builds that are triggered by merging changes into master, there is a scheduled nightly build (at 4:00am PT) that rebuilds the Docker image associated with the most recent non-latest tag, as well as the latest tag. This is done so that we are always picking up the latest Debian security patches, and to avoid other issues that arise when using a stale distribution.

Downstream dependencies

The following Docker images depend on rigetti/lisp:

A newly pushed rigetti/lisp will NOT trigger these downstream dependencies to rebuild automatically. Thus, once you have released a new version of this image, make sure to update the tag your downstream images are referencing (if the image tag is specified) or re-run your downstream builds to pick up the new image (if you are using the latest tag).