Checking your build configuration

Introduced in version 0.15.0

Build checks are a feature introduced in Dockerfile 1.8. It lets you validate your build configuration and conduct a series of checks prior to executing your build. Think of it as an advanced form of linting for your Dockerfile and build options, or a dry-run mode for builds.

You can find the list of checks available, and a description of each, in the Build checks reference.

How build checks work

Typically, when you run a build, Docker executes the build steps in your Dockerfile and build options as specified. With build checks, rather than executing the build steps, Docker checks the Dockerfile and options you provide and reports any issues it detects.

Build checks are useful for:

  • Validating your Dockerfile and build options before running a build.
  • Ensuring that your Dockerfile and build options are up-to-date with the latest best practices.
  • Identifying potential issues or anti-patterns in your Dockerfile and build options.

Build with checks

Build checks are supported in:

Invoking a build runs the checks by default, and displays any violations in the build output. For example, the following command both builds the image and runs the checks:

$ docker build .
[+] Building 3.5s (11/11) FINISHED
...

1 warning found (use --debug to expand):
  - Lint Rule 'JSONArgsRecommended': JSON arguments recommended for CMD to prevent unintended behavior related to OS signals (line 7)

In this example, the build ran successfully, but a JSONArgsRecommended warning was reported, because CMD instructions should use JSON array syntax.

With the GitHub Actions, the checks display in the diff view of pull requests.

name: Build and push Docker images
on:
  push:

jobs:
  build:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - name: Build and push
        uses: docker/build-push-action@v6.6.0
GitHub Actions build check annotations

More verbose output

Check warnings for a regular docker build display a concise message containing the rule name, the message, and the line number of where in the Dockerfile the issue originated. If you want to see more detailed information about the checks, you can use the --debug flag. For example:

$ docker --debug build .
[+] Building 3.5s (11/11) FINISHED
...

 1 warning found:
 - JSONArgsRecommended: JSON arguments recommended for CMD to prevent unintended behavior related to OS signals (line 4)
JSON arguments recommended for ENTRYPOINT/CMD to prevent unintended behavior related to OS signals
More info: https://docs.docker.com/go/dockerfile/rule/json-args-recommended/
Dockerfile:4
--------------------
   2 |
   3 |     FROM alpine
   4 | >>> CMD echo "Hello, world!"
   5 |
--------------------

With the --debug flag, the output includes a link to the documentation for the check, and a snippet of the Dockerfile where the issue was found.

Check a build without building

To run build checks without actually building, you can use the docker build command as you typically would, but with the addition of the --check flag. Here's an example:

$ docker build --check .

Instead of executing the build steps, this command only runs the checks and reports any issues it finds. If there are any issues, they will be reported in the output. For example:

Output with --check
[+] Building 1.5s (5/5) FINISHED
=> [internal] connecting to local controller
=> [internal] load build definition from Dockerfile
=> => transferring dockerfile: 253B
=> [internal] load metadata for docker.io/library/node:22
=> [auth] library/node:pull token for registry-1.docker.io
=> [internal] load .dockerignore
=> => transferring context: 50B
JSONArgsRecommended - https://docs.docker.com/go/dockerfile/rule/json-args-recommended/
JSON arguments recommended for ENTRYPOINT/CMD to prevent unintended behavior related to OS signals
Dockerfile:7
--------------------
5 |
6 |     COPY index.js .
7 | >>> CMD node index.js
8 |
--------------------

This output with --check shows the verbose message for the check.

Unlike a regular build, if any violations are reported when using the --check flag, the command exits with a non-zero status code.

Fail build on check violations

Check violations for builds are reported as warnings, with exit code 0, by default. You can configure Docker to fail the build when violations are reported, using a check=error=true directive in your Dockerfile. This will cause the build to error out when after the build checks are run, before the actual build gets executed.

Dockerfile
1
2
3
4
5
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:1
# check=error=true

FROM alpine
CMD echo "Hello, world!"

Without the # check=error=true directive, this build would complete with an exit code of 0. However, with the directive, build check violation results in non-zero exit code:

$ docker build .
[+] Building 1.5s (5/5) FINISHED
...

 1 warning found (use --debug to expand):
 - JSONArgsRecommended: JSON arguments recommended for CMD to prevent unintended behavior related to OS signals (line 5)
Dockerfile:1
--------------------
   1 | >>> # syntax=docker/dockerfile:1
   2 |     # check=error=true
   3 |
--------------------
ERROR: lint violation found for rules: JSONArgsRecommended
$ echo $?
1

You can also set the error directive on the CLI by passing the BUILDKIT_DOCKERFILE_CHECK build argument:

$ docker build --check --build-arg "BUILDKIT_DOCKERFILE_CHECK=error=true" .

Skip checks

By default, all checks are run when you build an image. If you want to skip specific checks, you can use the check=skip directive in your Dockerfile. The skip parameter takes a CSV string of the check IDs you want to skip. For example:

Dockerfile
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:1
# check=skip=JSONArgsRecommended,StageNameCasing

FROM alpine AS BASE_STAGE
CMD echo "Hello, world!"

Building this Dockerfile results in no check violations.

You can also skip checks by passing the BUILDKIT_DOCKERFILE_CHECK build argument with a CSV string of check IDs you want to skip. For example:

$ docker build --check --build-arg "BUILDKIT_DOCKERFILE_CHECK=skip=JSONArgsRecommended,StageNameCasing" .

To skip all checks, use the skip=all parameter:

Dockerfile
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:1
# check=skip=all

Combine error and skip parameters for check directives

To both skip specific checks and error on check violations, pass both the skip and error parameters separated by a semi-colon (;) to the check directive in your Dockerfile or in a build argument. For example:

Dockerfile
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:1
# check=skip=JSONArgsRecommended,StageNameCasing;error=true
Build argument
$ docker build --check --build-arg "BUILDKIT_DOCKERFILE_CHECK=skip=JSONArgsRecommended,StageNameCasing;error=true" .

Experimental checks

Before checks are promoted to stable, they may be available as experimental checks. Experimental checks are disabled by default. To see the list of experimental checks available, refer to the Build checks reference.

To enable all experimental checks, set the BUILDKIT_DOCKERFILE_CHECK build argument to experimental=all:

$ docker build --check --build-arg "BUILDKIT_DOCKERFILE_CHECK=experimental=all" .

You can also enable experimental checks in your Dockerfile using the check directive:

Dockerfile
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:1
# check=experimental=all

To selectively enable experimental checks, you can pass a CSV string of the check IDs you want to enable, either to the check directive in your Dockerfile or as a build argument. For example:

Dockerfile
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:1
# check=experimental=JSONArgsRecommended,StageNameCasing

Note that the experimental directive takes precedence over the skip directive, meaning that experimental checks will run regardless of the skip directive you have set. For example, if you set skip=all and enable experimental checks, the experimental checks will still run:

Dockerfile
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:1
# check=skip=all;experimental=all

Further reading

For more information about using build checks, see: