No environment variable displayed through kubectl - linux

To display some environment variables in a pod on Kubernetes, I tried it in two ways.
(1) Connecting inside a pod
I connected to shell in a pod and I executed 'echo' command like below..
kubectl exec -it <pod-name> /bin/bash
then...
echo $KUBERNETES_SERVICE_HOST
I saw correct result as I expected.
(2) Send a command to a pod
kubectl exec <pod-name> -- echo $KUBERNETES_SERVICE_HOST
In this case, there is no output.
you can see the screenshot what I did.
What is the problem here?
What is difference between two situations?
Thanks you :)

In the second case, '$' DOllar in the command references to your local host envrionment variables. And there is no such variable KUBERNETES_SERVICE_HOST on local host, the command that goes looks like below
kubectl exec -- echo
use below instead
kubectl exec c-hub-admin-app-systest-6dc46bb776-tvb99 -- printenv | grep KUBERNETES_SERVICE_HOST

Related

Different environment variables with ssh or kubectl exec

We have a service in our cluster that we call via ssh (test environment etc.). In this container we have different environment variables when we connect with ssh or we connect with kubectl.
Can someone explain me what else is set here with the kubectl exec command?
As an example a small excerpt from both environments.
kubectl exec: (printenv | grep KU)
KUBERNETES_SERVICE_PORT_HTTPS=443
KUBERNETES_SERVICE_PORT=443
KUBERNETES_PORT_443_TCP=tcp://10.4.0.1:443
KUBERNETES_PORT_443_TCP_PROTO=tcp
KUBERNETES_PORT_443_TCP_ADDR=10.4.0.1
KUBERNETES_SERVICE_HOST=10.4.0.1
KUBERNETES_PORT=tcp://10.4.0.1:443
KUBERNETES_PORT_443_TCP_PORT=443
ssh into the same container: (printenv | grep KU)
dev-xxxxx:~$ printenv | grep KU
dev-xxxxx:~$
The kubectl exec command allows you to remotely run arbitrary commands inside an existing container of a pod. kubectl exec isn’t much different from using SSH to execute commands on a remote system. SSH and kubectl should both work well with 99% of CLI applications. The only difference I could find when it comes to environment variables is that:
kubectl will always set the environment variables provided to the container at startup
SSH relies mostly on the system login shell configuration (but can also accept user’s environment via PermitUserEnvironment or SendEnv/AcceptEnv)
Answering your question:
Can someone explain me what else is set here with the kubectl exec
command?
They should result with the same output (assuming that you have typed both commands correctly and execute them on the same container).
Below you will find some useful resources regarding the kubectl exec command:
Get a Shell to a Running Container
kubectl-commands#exec docs
How does 'kubectl exec' work?
EDIT:
If you wish to learn some more regarding the differences between kubectl exec and SSH I recommend this article. It covers the topics of:
Authn/z
Shell UX
Non-shell features, and
Performance

How to callculate the free space on a host machine and get the information inside a docker container [duplicate]

How to control host from docker container?
For example, how to execute copied to host bash script?
This answer is just a more detailed version of Bradford Medeiros's solution, which for me as well turned out to be the best answer, so credit goes to him.
In his answer, he explains WHAT to do (named pipes) but not exactly HOW to do it.
I have to admit I didn't know what named pipes were when I read his solution. So I struggled to implement it (while it's actually very simple), but I did succeed.
So the point of my answer is just detailing the commands you need to run in order to get it working, but again, credit goes to him.
PART 1 - Testing the named pipe concept without docker
On the main host, chose the folder where you want to put your named pipe file, for instance /path/to/pipe/ and a pipe name, for instance mypipe, and then run:
mkfifo /path/to/pipe/mypipe
The pipe is created.
Type
ls -l /path/to/pipe/mypipe
And check the access rights start with "p", such as
prw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 mypipe
Now run:
tail -f /path/to/pipe/mypipe
The terminal is now waiting for data to be sent into this pipe
Now open another terminal window.
And then run:
echo "hello world" > /path/to/pipe/mypipe
Check the first terminal (the one with tail -f), it should display "hello world"
PART 2 - Run commands through the pipe
On the host container, instead of running tail -f which just outputs whatever is sent as input, run this command that will execute it as commands:
eval "$(cat /path/to/pipe/mypipe)"
Then, from the other terminal, try running:
echo "ls -l" > /path/to/pipe/mypipe
Go back to the first terminal and you should see the result of the ls -l command.
PART 3 - Make it listen forever
You may have noticed that in the previous part, right after ls -l output is displayed, it stops listening for commands.
Instead of eval "$(cat /path/to/pipe/mypipe)", run:
while true; do eval "$(cat /path/to/pipe/mypipe)"; done
(you can nohup that)
Now you can send unlimited number of commands one after the other, they will all be executed, not just the first one.
PART 4 - Make it work even when reboot happens
The only caveat is if the host has to reboot, the "while" loop will stop working.
To handle reboot, here what I've done:
Put the while true; do eval "$(cat /path/to/pipe/mypipe)"; done in a file called execpipe.sh with #!/bin/bash header
Don't forget to chmod +x it
Add it to crontab by running
crontab -e
And then adding
#reboot /path/to/execpipe.sh
At this point, test it: reboot your server, and when it's back up, echo some commands into the pipe and check if they are executed.
Of course, you aren't able to see the output of commands, so ls -l won't help, but touch somefile will help.
Another option is to modify the script to put the output in a file, such as:
while true; do eval "$(cat /path/to/pipe/mypipe)" &> /somepath/output.txt; done
Now you can run ls -l and the output (both stdout and stderr using &> in bash) should be in output.txt.
PART 5 - Make it work with docker
If you are using both docker compose and dockerfile like I do, here is what I've done:
Let's assume you want to mount the mypipe's parent folder as /hostpipe in your container
Add this:
VOLUME /hostpipe
in your dockerfile in order to create a mount point
Then add this:
volumes:
- /path/to/pipe:/hostpipe
in your docker compose file in order to mount /path/to/pipe as /hostpipe
Restart your docker containers.
PART 6 - Testing
Exec into your docker container:
docker exec -it <container> bash
Go into the mount folder and check you can see the pipe:
cd /hostpipe && ls -l
Now try running a command from within the container:
echo "touch this_file_was_created_on_main_host_from_a_container.txt" > /hostpipe/mypipe
And it should work!
WARNING: If you have an OSX (Mac OS) host and a Linux container, it won't work (explanation here https://stackoverflow.com/a/43474708/10018801 and issue here https://github.com/docker/for-mac/issues/483 ) because the pipe implementation is not the same, so what you write into the pipe from Linux can be read only by a Linux and what you write into the pipe from Mac OS can be read only by a Mac OS (this sentence might not be very accurate, but just be aware that a cross-platform issue exists).
For instance, when I run my docker setup in DEV from my Mac OS computer, the named pipe as explained above does not work. But in staging and production, I have Linux host and Linux containers, and it works perfectly.
PART 7 - Example from Node.JS container
Here is how I send a command from my Node.JS container to the main host and retrieve the output:
const pipePath = "/hostpipe/mypipe"
const outputPath = "/hostpipe/output.txt"
const commandToRun = "pwd && ls-l"
console.log("delete previous output")
if (fs.existsSync(outputPath)) fs.unlinkSync(outputPath)
console.log("writing to pipe...")
const wstream = fs.createWriteStream(pipePath)
wstream.write(commandToRun)
wstream.close()
console.log("waiting for output.txt...") //there are better ways to do that than setInterval
let timeout = 10000 //stop waiting after 10 seconds (something might be wrong)
const timeoutStart = Date.now()
const myLoop = setInterval(function () {
if (Date.now() - timeoutStart > timeout) {
clearInterval(myLoop);
console.log("timed out")
} else {
//if output.txt exists, read it
if (fs.existsSync(outputPath)) {
clearInterval(myLoop);
const data = fs.readFileSync(outputPath).toString()
if (fs.existsSync(outputPath)) fs.unlinkSync(outputPath) //delete the output file
console.log(data) //log the output of the command
}
}
}, 300);
Use a named pipe.
On the host OS, create a script to loop and read commands, and then you call eval on that.
Have the docker container read to that named pipe.
To be able to access the pipe, you need to mount it via a volume.
This is similar to the SSH mechanism (or a similar socket-based method), but restricts you properly to the host device, which is probably better. Plus you don't have to be passing around authentication information.
My only warning is to be cautious about why you are doing this. It's totally something to do if you want to create a method to self-upgrade with user input or whatever, but you probably don't want to call a command to get some config data, as the proper way would be to pass that in as args/volume into docker. Also, be cautious about the fact that you are evaling, so just give the permission model a thought.
Some of the other answers such as running a script. Under a volume won't work generically since they won't have access to the full system resources, but it might be more appropriate depending on your usage.
The solution I use is to connect to the host over SSH and execute the command like this:
ssh -l ${USERNAME} ${HOSTNAME} "${SCRIPT}"
UPDATE
As this answer keeps getting up votes, I would like to remind (and highly recommend), that the account which is being used to invoke the script should be an account with no permissions at all, but only executing that script as sudo (that can be done from sudoers file).
UPDATE: Named Pipes
The solution I suggested above was only the one I used while I was relatively new to Docker. Now in 2021 take a look on the answers that talk about Named Pipes. This seems to be a better solution.
However, nobody there mentioned anything about security. The script that will evaluate the commands sent through the pipe (the script that calls eval) must actually not use eval for the whole pipe output, but to handle specific cases and call the required commands according to the text sent, otherwise any command that can do anything can be sent through the pipe.
That REALLY depends on what you need that bash script to do!
For example, if the bash script just echoes some output, you could just do
docker run --rm -v $(pwd)/mybashscript.sh:/mybashscript.sh ubuntu bash /mybashscript.sh
Another possibility is that you want the bash script to install some software- say the script to install docker-compose. you could do something like
docker run --rm -v /usr/bin:/usr/bin --privileged -v $(pwd)/mybashscript.sh:/mybashscript.sh ubuntu bash /mybashscript.sh
But at this point you're really getting into having to know intimately what the script is doing to allow the specific permissions it needs on your host from inside the container.
My laziness led me to find the easiest solution that wasn't published as an answer here.
It is based on the great article by luc juggery.
All you need to do in order to gain a full shell to your linux host from within your docker container is:
docker run --privileged --pid=host -it alpine:3.8 \
nsenter -t 1 -m -u -n -i sh
Explanation:
--privileged : grants additional permissions to the container, it allows the container to gain access to the devices of the host (/dev)
--pid=host : allows the containers to use the processes tree of the Docker host (the VM in which the Docker daemon is running)
nsenter utility: allows to run a process in existing namespaces (the building blocks that provide isolation to containers)
nsenter (-t 1 -m -u -n -i sh) allows to run the process sh in the same isolation context as the process with PID 1.
The whole command will then provide an interactive sh shell in the VM
This setup has major security implications and should be used with cautions (if any).
Write a simple server python server listening on a port (say 8080), bind the port -p 8080:8080 with the container, make a HTTP request to localhost:8080 to ask the python server running shell scripts with popen, run a curl or writing code to make a HTTP request curl -d '{"foo":"bar"}' localhost:8080
#!/usr/bin/python
from BaseHTTPServer import BaseHTTPRequestHandler,HTTPServer
import subprocess
import json
PORT_NUMBER = 8080
# This class will handles any incoming request from
# the browser
class myHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler):
def do_POST(self):
content_len = int(self.headers.getheader('content-length'))
post_body = self.rfile.read(content_len)
self.send_response(200)
self.end_headers()
data = json.loads(post_body)
# Use the post data
cmd = "your shell cmd"
p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, shell=True)
p_status = p.wait()
(output, err) = p.communicate()
print "Command output : ", output
print "Command exit status/return code : ", p_status
self.wfile.write(cmd + "\n")
return
try:
# Create a web server and define the handler to manage the
# incoming request
server = HTTPServer(('', PORT_NUMBER), myHandler)
print 'Started httpserver on port ' , PORT_NUMBER
# Wait forever for incoming http requests
server.serve_forever()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
print '^C received, shutting down the web server'
server.socket.close()
If you are not worried about security and you're simply looking to start a docker container on the host from within another docker container like the OP, you can share the docker server running on the host with the docker container by sharing it's listen socket.
Please see https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/security/#docker-daemon-attack-surface and see if your personal risk tolerance allows this for this particular application.
You can do this by adding the following volume args to your start command
docker run -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock ...
or by sharing /var/run/docker.sock within your docker compose file like this:
version: '3'
services:
ci:
command: ...
image: ...
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
When you run the docker start command within your docker container,
the docker server running on your host will see the request and provision the sibling container.
credit: http://jpetazzo.github.io/2015/09/03/do-not-use-docker-in-docker-for-ci/
As Marcus reminds, docker is basically process isolation. Starting with docker 1.8, you can copy files both ways between the host and the container, see the doc of docker cp
https://docs.docker.com/reference/commandline/cp/
Once a file is copied, you can run it locally
docker run --detach-keys="ctrl-p" -it -v /:/mnt/rootdir --name testing busybox
# chroot /mnt/rootdir
#
I have a simple approach.
Step 1: Mount /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock (So you will be able to execute docker commands inside your container)
Step 2: Execute this below inside your container. The key part here is (--network host as this will execute from host context)
docker run -i --rm --network host -v /opt/test.sh:/test.sh alpine:3.7
sh /test.sh
test.sh should contain the some commands (ifconfig, netstat etc...) whatever you need.
Now you will be able to get host context output.
You can use the pipe concept, but use a file on the host and fswatch to accomplish the goal to execute a script on the host machine from a docker container. Like so (Use at your own risk):
#! /bin/bash
touch .command_pipe
chmod +x .command_pipe
# Use fswatch to execute a command on the host machine and log result
fswatch -o --event Updated .command_pipe | \
xargs -n1 -I "{}" .command_pipe >> .command_pipe_log &
docker run -it --rm \
--name alpine \
-w /home/test \
-v $PWD/.command_pipe:/dev/command_pipe \
alpine:3.7 sh
rm -rf .command_pipe
kill %1
In this example, inside the container send commands to /dev/command_pipe, like so:
/home/test # echo 'docker network create test2.network.com' > /dev/command_pipe
On the host, you can check if the network was created:
$ docker network ls | grep test2
8e029ec83afe test2.network.com bridge local
In my scenario I just ssh login the host (via host ip) within a container and then I can do anything I want to the host machine
I found answers using named pipes awesome. But I was wondering if there is a way to get the output of the executed command.
The solution is to create two named pipes:
mkfifo /path/to/pipe/exec_in
mkfifo /path/to/pipe/exec_out
Then, the solution using a loop, as suggested by #Vincent, would become:
# on the host
while true; do eval "$(cat exec_in)" > exec_out; done
And then on the docker container, we can execute the command and get the output using:
# on the container
echo "ls -l" > /path/to/pipe/exec_in
cat /path/to/pipe/exec_out
If anyone interested, my need was to use a failover IP on the host from the container, I created this simple ruby method:
def fifo_exec(cmd)
exec_in = '/path/to/pipe/exec_in'
exec_out = '/path/to/pipe/exec_out'
%x[ echo #{cmd} > #{exec_in} ]
%x[ cat #{exec_out} ]
end
# example
fifo_exec "curl https://ip4.seeip.org"
Depending on the situation, this could be a helpful resource.
This uses a job queue (Celery) that can be run on the host, commands/data could be passed to this through Redis (or rabbitmq). In the example below, this is occurring in a django application (which is commonly dockerized).
https://www.codingforentrepreneurs.com/blog/celery-redis-django/
To expand on user2915097's response:
The idea of isolation is to be able to restrict what an application/process/container (whatever your angle at this is) can do to the host system very clearly. Hence, being able to copy and execute a file would really break the whole concept.
Yes. But it's sometimes necessary.
No. That's not the case, or Docker is not the right thing to use. What you should do is declare a clear interface for what you want to do (e.g. updating a host config), and write a minimal client/server to do exactly that and nothing more. Generally, however, this doesn't seem to be very desirable. In many cases, you should simply rethink your approach and eradicate that need. Docker came into an existence when basically everything was a service that was reachable using some protocol. I can't think of any proper usecase of a Docker container getting the rights to execute arbitrary stuff on the host.

Pass file content to docker exec

I am learning with docker containers and I'd like to pass .sql file to database using docker exec.
How can I do that?
I am searching for about an hour now and found this:
cat file.sql | docker exec -it mariadb sh -c 'mysql -u<user> -p<pass>'
or this
docker exec -it mariadb sh -c 'mysql -u<user> -p<pass> "$(< /path/file.sql)"'
but neither of it worked. I think there is problem that I am passing it into sh -c and it tries to load that file from inside the container. How can I do it?
there's more than one way to do it, of course; most of your invocations are close, but if you execute docker with -t it will allocate a terminal for i/o and that will interfere with stream opearations.
My recent invocation from shell history was :
docker exec -i mysql mysql -t < t.sql
in my case of course mysql is the running container name. You'll note that I do not pass -t to the docker exec - I do however pass it to mysql command line program that I exec on the docker host, so don't get confused there.
The shell that interprets that command and executes docker is also the one that opens t.sql and redirects that file descriptor to docker's stdin, so t.sql here is in the current working directory of the host shell, not the container shell.
That having been said, here's why yours didn't work. In the first place, as I said, the use of exec -it allocates a terminal that interferes with the stdin stream that the bash shell set up from cat. In the second place, you're really close, but path/file.sql wasn't on the docker image so I'm guessing that threw a 'no such file or directory' because file.sql is on the host, not the container, yet it's referenced within the -c parameter to the container's sh execution. Of course, that would also need -t to be removed; in neither case does a terminal need to be allocated (you already have one, and it will already be the stdout for the docker execution as it will inherit the shell's un-redirected stdout).

Connecting to a specific shell instance in a docker container?

Let's say I have a running docker container my_container. I start a new shell session with:
docker exec -it my_container bash
And then I start a process (a Python script for example), and exit the container with cntrl-p then cntrl-q to keep the script running in the background. If I do this a few different times with a few different scripts, how do I reconnect to a specific shell instance so I can see the std out of my scripts? If I use docker attach my_container, I'm always placed into the first shell instance I initiated when I did my docker run command.
What I usually do is to start tmux inside the first shell. And then start any other processes inside a new window.
Although it is theoretically possible to do so, docker exec still has many issues and it is always better to avoid it for now.
This is a trivial mode, but may be it helps. Instead of "echo "..." substitude with your script names.
Run the container, then run your scripts directly with docker exec and redirect their output to different files.
docker exec -ti containerId /bin/bash -c 'echo "Hello script1" > /var/log/1.log'
docker exec -ti containerId /bin/bash -c 'echo "Hello script2" > /var/log/2.log'
Then you can look at the files by docker exec(uting) some other commands like cat, grep, tail or whatever you want:
docker exec -ti containerId /bin/tail -f /var/log/1.log
docker exec -ti containerId /bin/tail -f /var/log/2.log
Remind you could also use
docker logs containerId
to see the output redirect to /dev/stdout from commands running in the container, but, if I understood your need, in this case you would get the output from many scritps mixed in stdout.

systemd-run does not set environment variables when using --setenv

According to the systemd-run documentation, the -setenv option can be used to "Run the service process with the specified environment variables set".
However, it seems like the environment variable is actually not available to the process:
# systemd-run -t --setenv=TEST=Success echo TEST:$TEST
Running as unit run-20705.service.
Press ^] three times within 1s to disconnect TTY.
TEST:
Am I misunderstanding the usage of the --setenv option? Running systemd version 219.
You need to prevent bash from resolving $TEST before the systemd command is run.
Also echo is incapable of resolving environmental variables. Bash is needed within the systemd process to resolve TEST
So you need to run the following:
systemd-run -t --setenv=TEST=Success 'bash -c echo TEST:$TEST'

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