A matrix strategy lets you fork a single target into multiple different variants, based on parameters that you specify. This works in a similar way to Matrix strategies for GitHub Actions. You can use this to reduce duplication in your Bake definition.
The matrix attribute is a map of parameter names to lists of values. Bake builds each possible combination of values as a separate target.
Each generated target must have a unique name. To specify how target names should resolve, use the name attribute.
The following example resolves the app target to app-foo
and app-bar
. It
also uses the matrix value to define the target build stage.
target "app" {
name = "app-${tgt}"
matrix = {
tgt = ["foo", "bar"]
}
target = tgt
}
$ docker buildx bake --print app
[+] Building 0.0s (0/0)
{
"group": {
"app": {
"targets": [
"app-foo",
"app-bar"
]
},
"default": {
"targets": [
"app"
]
}
},
"target": {
"app-bar": {
"context": ".",
"dockerfile": "Dockerfile",
"target": "bar"
},
"app-foo": {
"context": ".",
"dockerfile": "Dockerfile",
"target": "foo"
}
}
}
Multiple axes#
You can specify multiple keys in your matrix to fork a target on multiple axes. When using multiple matrix keys, Bake builds every possible variant.
The following example builds four targets:
app-foo-1-0
app-foo-2-0
app-bar-1-0
app-bar-2-0
target "app" {
name = "app-${tgt}-${replace(version, ".", "-")}"
matrix = {
tgt = ["foo", "bar"]
version = ["1.0", "2.0"]
}
target = tgt
args = {
VERSION = version
}
}
Multiple values per matrix target#
If you want to differentiate the matrix on more than just a single value, you can use maps as matrix values. Bake creates a target for each map, and you can access the nested values using dot notation.
The following example builds two targets:
app-foo-1-0
app-bar-2-0
target "app" {
name = "app-${item.tgt}-${replace(item.version, ".", "-")}"
matrix = {
item = [
{
tgt = "foo"
version = "1.0"
},
{
tgt = "bar"
version = "2.0"
}
]
}
target = item.tgt
args = {
VERSION = item.version
}
}