Build drivers are configurations for how and where the BuildKit backend runs. Driver settings are customizable and allows fine-grained control of the builder. Buildx supports the following drivers:
docker
: uses the BuildKit library bundled into the Docker daemon.docker-container
: creates a dedicated BuildKit container using Docker.kubernetes
: creates BuildKit pods in a Kubernetes cluster.remote
: connects directly to a manually managed BuildKit daemon.
Different drivers support different use cases. The default docker
driver
prioritizes simplicity and ease of use. It has limited support for advanced
features like caching and output formats, and isn't configurable. Other drivers
provide more flexibility and are better at handling advanced scenarios.
The following table outlines some differences between drivers.
Feature | docker |
docker-container |
kubernetes |
remote |
---|---|---|---|---|
Automatically load image | ✅ | |||
Cache export | ✓* | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
Tarball output | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | |
Multi-arch images | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | |
BuildKit configuration | ✅ | ✅ | Managed externally |
* The docker
driver doesn't support all cache export options.
See Cache storage backends for more information.
Loading to local image store#
Unlike when using the default docker
driver, images built using other drivers
aren't automatically loaded into the local image store. If you don't specify an
output, the build result is exported to the build cache only.
To build an image using a non-default driver and load it to the image store,
use the --load
flag with the build command:
console
$ docker buildx build --load -t <image> --builder=container .
...
=> exporting to oci image format 7.7s
=> => exporting layers 4.9s
=> => exporting manifest sha256:4e4ca161fa338be2c303445411900ebbc5fc086153a0b846ac12996960b479d3 0.0s
=> => exporting config sha256:adf3eec768a14b6e183a1010cb96d91155a82fd722a1091440c88f3747f1f53f 0.0s
=> => sending tarball 2.8s
=> importing to docker
With this option, the image is available in the image store after the build finishes:
console
$ docker image ls
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
<image> latest adf3eec768a1 2 minutes ago 197MB
Load by default#
{ { < introduced buildx 0.14.0 > } }
You can configure the custom build drivers to behave in a similar way to the
default docker
driver, and load images to the local image store by default.
To do so, set the default-load
driver option when creating the builder:
$ docker buildx create --driver-opt default-load=true
Note that, just like with the docker
driver, if you specify a different
output format with --output
, the result will not be loaded to the image store
unless you also explicitly specify --output type=docker
or use the --load
flag.
What's next#
Read about each driver: