Building a Base Image Containing Enterprise Test Server

This topic outlines the steps that a Dockerfile must carry out to create a base image for Enterprise Test Server.

By far the easiest, and the recommended, way to create a base image for Enterprise Test Server is to use the container demonstration as described in The Container Demonstration for the Enterprise Test Server Base Image. If you do use the container demonstration, you do not need to perform any of the steps described in this topic because the container demonstration does them all for you. The information in this topic is provided if you choose to write your own Dockerfile to create an Enterprise Test Server base image.

Note: A separate document, Best Practices for Moving Your COBOL Applications to Containers, is available that describes best practices that Micro Focus recommends you adopt when moving an existing COBOL application to run in a containerized environment. See Micro Focus: Best Practices for Moving Your COBOL Applications to Containers for more information.

Once you have built your Enterprise Test Server base image you can then build additional images, based on the base image, that include your COBOL applications as well as Enterprise Test Server. For more information on creating those additional images see Building an Image Containing an Application to Run under Enterprise Test Server.

Note: Remember that Enterprise Developer is a development and test environment so not for use in production situations. If you want to run COBOL applications in containers in a production environment you must use containers that contain Enterprise Test Server.

Before building a base image for Enterprise Test Server you need to ensure that you have available the following:

To build a base image that includes Enterprise Test Server your Dockerfile needs to perform the following steps:

  1. Specify a base image to work from. This will typically be microsoft/dotnet-framework.
  2. Define metadata for your image. This will make it easier to establish significant details of the image when you use the docker inspect command.
  3. Define any variables for filenames and folder locations.
    Note: If you will be using this image to run applications under Enterprise Server, you need to set the MFDS_EXTERNAL_ADDR environment variable to specify a resolvable external address string. This is to enable client browsers to resolve the URLs used by ESMAC and other utilities in Enterprise Server Administration.

    The value that you specify for this environment variable is used to replace the internal container address in the URL.

  4. Copy the installable executable file for Enterprise Test Server (ets_70.exe ) from your host machine to a temporary folder in the image's filesystem, then run it to install Enterprise Test Server.

    When running ets_70.exe you need to specify the following parameters:

    /q
    to run the installaton silently; that is non-interactively with no user interface, using defaults for any values that are not specified elsewhere on the command line.
    InstallFolder=installation-location
    to specify the name of the folder into which you want to install Enterprise Test Server. This a folder that you must have created on the image's filesystem.
    /l log-file-name
    to create a log file of the installation.
    accepteula=yes
    to indicate that you accept the terms of the Micro Focus End User License Agreement (EULA).
  5. Check the log file produced by the installation to ensure that the installation was successful.
  6. Perform any required clean-up. This includes tasks such as resetting variables and deleting temporary folders.
  7. Set the working directory to be the folder into which you installed Enterprise Test Server.
Note: Micro Focus recommends that in addition to having a Dockerfile that performs the above steps you have additional Dockerfiles to create platform-specific versions of the Enterprise Test Server base image. These additional Dockerfiles will be very simple, using the Enterprise Test Server base image as their base then running commands to ensure that the correct (32-bit or 64-bit) environment is set up.