docker macvlan - no route to host (container) - docker

Im trying to understand the "macvlan" network from docker. I create a new network:
docker network create -d macvlan \
--subnet=192.168.2.0/24 \
--gateway=192.168.2.1 \
-o parent=eno1 \
pub_net
And start new container with the new network:
docker run --rm -d --net=pub_net --ip=192.168.2.74 --name=whoami -t jwilder/whoami
When i try to access the service from the container or ping it i get:
curl: (7) Failed to connect to 192.168.2.74 port 8000: no route to host
Tested with Ubuntu 16.04, Ubuntu 18.04 & CentOS 7.
Neither from the docker host itself or other clients on the network can reach the container.
I followed the example fromt he docker site: https://docs.docker.com/network/network-tutorial-macvlan/#bridge-example
What im missing ?
I read here Bind address in Docker macvlan to execute these commands (no clue what they do):
sudo ip link add pub_net link eno1 type macvlan mode bridge
sudo ip addr add 192.168.2.22/24 dev pub_net
But this does nothing on my machine(s)

I believe it is by design that host cannot reach its own containers through a macvlan network. I leave it to others to explain why exactly this is so, but to verify that this is where your problem lies, you can try to ping your container at 192.168.2.74 from another host on the network or even from another container or vm on the same host. If you can reach the container from other machines but not from the host, everything is working as it should.
According to this blog post, you can nevertheless allow for host-container communication by creating a macvlan interface on the host sub-interface and then create a macvlan interface in host in order to let it access the macvlan that the container is in.
I have not tried this myself yet and I'm not sure about the exact consequences, so I quote the instructions from the blog post here so that others can add to it where necessary:
Create a macvlan interface on host sub-interface:
docker network create -d macvlan \
–subnet=192.168.0.0/16 \
–ip-range=192.168.2.0/24 \
-o macvlan_mode=bridge \
-o parent=eth2.70 macvlan70
Create container on that macvlan interface:
docker run -d –net=macvlan70 –name nginx nginx
Find ip address of Container:
docker inspect nginx | grep IPAddress
“SecondaryIPAddresses”: null,
“IPAddress”: “”,
“IPAddress”: “192.168.2.1”,
At this point, we cannot ping container IP “192.168.2.1” from host machine.
Now, let’s create macvlan interface in host with address “192.168.2.10” in same network.
sudo ip link add mymacvlan70 link eth2.70 type macvlan mode bridge
sudo ip addr add 192.168.2.10/24 dev mymacvlan70
sudo ifconfig mymacvlan70 up
Now, we should be able to ping the Container IP as well as access “nginx” container from host machine.
$ ping -c1 192.168.2.1
PING 192.168.2.1 (192.168.2.1): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 192.168.2.1: seq=0 ttl=64 time=0.112 ms
— 192.168.2.1 ping statistics —
1 packets transmitted, 1 packets received, 0% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max = 0.112/0.112/0.112 ms

Related

Assigning static IP on the host network to container

I need to run a docker container (hosting nginx), such that the container gets a static IP address on the host network. Example:
Suppose the host has IP 172.18.0.2/16 then I would like to give 172.18.0.3/16 to the docker container running on the host. I'd like the other physical machines in the host's network to be able to connect to the container at 172.18.0.3/16.
I have tried the solution described by: https://qiita.com/kojiwell/items/f16757c1f0cc86ff225b, (without vegrant) but it didn't help. I'm not sure about the --subnet option that needed to be supplied to the docker network create command.
As suggested in this post, I was trying to do:
docker network create \
--driver bridge \
--subnet=<WHAT TO SUPPLY HERE?> \
--gateway=<WHAT TO SUPPLY HERE?> \
--opt "com.docker.network.bridge.name"="docker1" \
shared_nw
# Add my host NIC to the bridge
brctl addif docker1 eth1
Then start the container as:
docker run --name myApp --net shared_nw --ip 172.18.0.3 -dt ubuntu
Somehow it did not work. I will appreciate if someone could point me to the right direction about how to set such a thing up. Grateful!
On your use-case the ipvlan docker network could work for you.
using your assumptions about the host ip address and mask, you could create the network like this:
docker network create -d ipvlan --subnet=172.18.0.1/16 \
-o ipvlan_mode=l2 my_network
Then run your docker container within that network and assign an IP address:
docker run --name myApp --net my_network --ip 172.18.0.3 -dt ubuntu
Note that any exposed port of that container will be available on the 172.18.0.3 ip address, but any other services on your host will not be reachable with that IP address.
You can find more info on ipvlan at the official docker documentation
The docker run -p option optionally accepts a bind-address part, which specifies a specific host IP address that will accept inbound connections. If your host is already configured with the alternate IP address, you can just run
docker run -p 172.18.0.3:80:8080 ...
and http://172.18.0.3/ (on the default HTTP port 80) will forward to port 8080 in the container.
Docker has a separate internal IP address space for containers, that you can almost totally ignore. You almost never need the docker network create --subnet option and you really never need the docker run --ip option. If you ran ifconfig inside this container you'd see a totally different IP address, and that would be fine; the container doesn't know what host ports or IP addresses (if any) it's associated with.

how to enable containers from docker-compose "bridge" network to reach out to service running on Docker host? [duplicate]

I have a Nginx running inside a docker container. I have a MySql running on the host system. I want to connect to the MySql from within my container. MySql is only binding to the localhost device.
Is there any way to connect to this MySql or any other program on localhost from within this docker container?
This question is different from "How to get the IP address of the docker host from inside a docker container" due to the fact that the IP address of the docker host could be the public IP or the private IP in the network which may or may not be reachable from within the docker container (I mean public IP if hosted at AWS or something). Even if you have the IP address of the docker host it does not mean you can connect to docker host from within the container given that IP address as your Docker network may be overlay, host, bridge, macvlan, none etc which restricts the reachability of that IP address.
Edit:
If you are using Docker-for-mac or Docker-for-Windows 18.03+, connect to your mysql service using the host host.docker.internal (instead of the 127.0.0.1 in your connection string).
If you are using Docker-for-Linux 20.10.0+, you can also use the host host.docker.internal if you started your Docker container with the --add-host host.docker.internal:host-gateway option.
Otherwise, read below
TLDR
Use --network="host" in your docker run command, then 127.0.0.1 in your docker container will point to your docker host.
Note: This mode only works on Docker for Linux, per the documentation.
Note on docker container networking modes
Docker offers different networking modes when running containers. Depending on the mode you choose you would connect to your MySQL database running on the docker host differently.
docker run --network="bridge" (default)
Docker creates a bridge named docker0 by default. Both the docker host and the docker containers have an IP address on that bridge.
on the Docker host, type sudo ip addr show docker0 you will have an output looking like:
[vagrant#docker:~] $ sudo ip addr show docker0
4: docker0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc noqueue state UP group default
link/ether 56:84:7a:fe:97:99 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
inet 172.17.42.1/16 scope global docker0
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 fe80::5484:7aff:fefe:9799/64 scope link
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
So here my docker host has the IP address 172.17.42.1 on the docker0 network interface.
Now start a new container and get a shell on it: docker run --rm -it ubuntu:trusty bash and within the container type ip addr show eth0 to discover how its main network interface is set up:
root#e77f6a1b3740:/# ip addr show eth0
863: eth0: <BROADCAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast state UP group default qlen 1000
link/ether 66:32:13:f0:f1:e3 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
inet 172.17.1.192/16 scope global eth0
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 fe80::6432:13ff:fef0:f1e3/64 scope link
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
Here my container has the IP address 172.17.1.192. Now look at the routing table:
root#e77f6a1b3740:/# route
Kernel IP routing table
Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface
default 172.17.42.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 eth0
172.17.0.0 * 255.255.0.0 U 0 0 0 eth0
So the IP Address of the docker host 172.17.42.1 is set as the default route and is accessible from your container.
root#e77f6a1b3740:/# ping 172.17.42.1
PING 172.17.42.1 (172.17.42.1) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 172.17.42.1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.070 ms
64 bytes from 172.17.42.1: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.201 ms
64 bytes from 172.17.42.1: icmp_seq=3 ttl=64 time=0.116 ms
docker run --network="host"
Alternatively you can run a docker container with network settings set to host. Such a container will share the network stack with the docker host and from the container point of view, localhost (or 127.0.0.1) will refer to the docker host.
Be aware that any port opened in your docker container would be opened on the docker host. And this without requiring the -p or -P docker run option.
IP config on my docker host:
[vagrant#docker:~] $ ip addr show eth0
2: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast state UP group default qlen 1000
link/ether 08:00:27:98:dc:aa brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
inet 10.0.2.15/24 brd 10.0.2.255 scope global eth0
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 fe80::a00:27ff:fe98:dcaa/64 scope link
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
and from a docker container in host mode:
[vagrant#docker:~] $ docker run --rm -it --network=host ubuntu:trusty ip addr show eth0
2: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast state UP group default qlen 1000
link/ether 08:00:27:98:dc:aa brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
inet 10.0.2.15/24 brd 10.0.2.255 scope global eth0
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 fe80::a00:27ff:fe98:dcaa/64 scope link
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
As you can see both the docker host and docker container share the exact same network interface and as such have the same IP address.
Connecting to MySQL from containers
bridge mode
To access MySQL running on the docker host from containers in bridge mode, you need to make sure the MySQL service is listening for connections on the 172.17.42.1 IP address.
To do so, make sure you have either bind-address = 172.17.42.1 or bind-address = 0.0.0.0 in your MySQL config file (my.cnf).
If you need to set an environment variable with the IP address of the gateway, you can run the following code in a container :
export DOCKER_HOST_IP=$(route -n | awk '/UG[ \t]/{print $2}')
then in your application, use the DOCKER_HOST_IP environment variable to open the connection to MySQL.
Note: if you use bind-address = 0.0.0.0 your MySQL server will listen for connections on all network interfaces. That means your MySQL server could be reached from the Internet ; make sure to set up firewall rules accordingly.
Note 2: if you use bind-address = 172.17.42.1 your MySQL server won't listen for connections made to 127.0.0.1. Processes running on the docker host that would want to connect to MySQL would have to use the 172.17.42.1 IP address.
host mode
To access MySQL running on the docker host from containers in host mode, you can keep bind-address = 127.0.0.1 in your MySQL configuration and connect to 127.0.0.1 from your containers:
[vagrant#docker:~] $ docker run --rm -it --network=host mysql mysql -h 127.0.0.1 -uroot -p
Enter password:
Welcome to the MySQL monitor. Commands end with ; or \g.
Your MySQL connection id is 36
Server version: 5.5.41-0ubuntu0.14.04.1 (Ubuntu)
Copyright (c) 2000, 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Oracle is a registered trademark of Oracle Corporation and/or its affiliates. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners.
Type 'help;' or '\h' for help. Type '\c' to clear the current input statement.
mysql>
note: Do use mysql -h 127.0.0.1 and not mysql -h localhost; otherwise the MySQL client would try to connect using a unix socket.
For all platforms
Docker v 20.10 and above (since December 14th 2020)
Use your internal IP address or connect to the special DNS name host.docker.internal which will resolve to the internal IP address used by the host.
On Linux, using the Docker command, add --add-host=host.docker.internal:host-gateway to your Docker command to enable this feature.
To enable this in Docker Compose on Linux, add the following lines to the container definition:
extra_hosts:
- "host.docker.internal:host-gateway"
For older macOS and Windows versions of Docker
Docker v 18.03 and above (since March 21st 2018)
Use your internal IP address or connect to the special DNS name host.docker.internal which will resolve to the internal IP address used by the host.
Linux support pending https://github.com/docker/for-linux/issues/264
For older macOS versions of Docker
Docker for Mac v 17.12 to v 18.02
Same as above but use docker.for.mac.host.internal instead.
Docker for Mac v 17.06 to v 17.11
Same as above but use docker.for.mac.localhost instead.
Docker for Mac 17.05 and below
To access host machine from the docker container you must attach an IP alias to your network interface. You can bind whichever IP you want, just make sure you're not using it to anything else.
sudo ifconfig lo0 alias 123.123.123.123/24
Then make sure that you server is listening to the IP mentioned above or 0.0.0.0. If it's listening on localhost 127.0.0.1 it will not accept the connection.
Then just point your docker container to this IP and you can access the host machine!
To test you can run something like curl -X GET 123.123.123.123:3000 inside the container.
The alias will reset on every reboot so create a start-up script if necessary.
Solution and more documentation here: https://docs.docker.com/docker-for-mac/networking/#use-cases-and-workarounds
Use
host.docker.internal
instead of
localhost
I doing a hack similar to above posts of get the local IP to map to a alias name (DNS) in the container. The major problem is to get dynamically with a simple script that works both in Linux and OSX the host IP address. I did this script that works in both environments (even in Linux distribution with "$LANG" != "en_*" configured):
ifconfig | grep -E "([0-9]{1,3}\.){3}[0-9]{1,3}" | grep -v 127.0.0.1 | awk '{ print $2 }' | cut -f2 -d: | head -n1
So, using Docker Compose, the full configuration will be:
Startup script (docker-run.sh):
export DOCKERHOST=$(ifconfig | grep -E "([0-9]{1,3}\.){3}[0-9]{1,3}" | grep -v 127.0.0.1 | awk '{ print $2 }' | cut -f2 -d: | head -n1)
docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml up
docker-compose.yml:
myapp:
build: .
ports:
- "80:80"
extra_hosts:
- "dockerhost:$DOCKERHOST"
Then change http://localhost to http://dockerhost in your code.
For a more advance guide of how to customize the DOCKERHOST script, take a look at this post with a explanation of how it works.
Solution for Linux (kernel >=3.6).
Ok, your localhost server has a default docker interface docker0 with IP address 172.17.0.1. Your container started with default network settings --net="bridge".
Enable route_localnet for docker0 interface:
$ sysctl -w net.ipv4.conf.docker0.route_localnet=1
Add these rules to iptables:
$ iptables -t nat -I PREROUTING -i docker0 -d 172.17.0.1 -p tcp --dport 3306 -j DNAT --to 127.0.0.1:3306
$ iptables -t filter -I INPUT -i docker0 -d 127.0.0.1 -p tcp --dport 3306 -j ACCEPT
Create MySQL user with access from '%' that means - from anyone, excluding localhost:
CREATE USER 'user'#'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';
Change in your script the mysql-server address to 172.17.0.1.
From the kernel documentation:
route_localnet - BOOLEAN: Do not consider loopback addresses as martian source or destination while routing. This enables the use of 127/8 for local routing purposes (default FALSE).
This worked for me on an NGINX/PHP-FPM stack without touching any code or networking where the app's just expecting to be able to connect to localhost
Mount mysqld.sock from the host to inside the container.
Find the location of the mysql.sock file on the host running mysql:
netstat -ln | awk '/mysql(.*)?\.sock/ { print $9 }'
Mount that file to where it's expected in the docker:
docker run -v /hostpath/to/mysqld.sock:/containerpath/to/mysqld.sock
Possible locations of mysqld.sock:
/tmp/mysqld.sock
/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
/Applications/MAMP/tmp/mysql/mysql.sock # if running via MAMP
Until host.docker.internal is working for every platform, you can use my container acting as a NAT gateway without any manual setup:
https://github.com/qoomon/docker-host
Simplest solution for Mac OSX
Just use the IP address of your Mac. On the Mac run this to get the IP address and use it from within the container:
ifconfig | grep 'inet 192'| awk '{ print $2}'
As long as the server running locally on your Mac or in another docker container is listening to 0.0.0.0, the docker container will be able to reach out at that address.
If you just want to access another docker container that is listening on 0.0.0.0 you can use 172.17.0.1
Very simple and quick, check your host IP with ifconfig (linux) or ipconfig (windows) and then create a docker-compose.yml:
version: '3' # specify docker-compose version
services:
nginx:
build: ./ # specify the directory of the Dockerfile
ports:
- "8080:80" # specify port mapping
extra_hosts:
- "dockerhost:<yourIP>"
This way, your container will be able to access your host. When accessing your DB, remember to use the name you specified before, in this case dockerhost and the port of your host in which the DB is running.
Several solutions come to mind:
Move your dependencies into containers first
Make your other services externally accessible and connect to them with that external IP
Run your containers without network isolation
Avoid connecting over the network, use a socket that is mounted as a volume instead
The reason this doesn't work out of the box is that containers run with their own network namespace by default. That means localhost (or 127.0.0.1 pointing to the loopback interface) is unique per container. Connecting to this will connect to the container itself, and not services running outside of docker or inside of a different docker container.
Option 1: If your dependency can be moved into a container, I would do this first. It makes your application stack portable as others try to run your container on their own environment. And you can still publish the port on your host where other services that have not been migrated can still reach it. You can even publish the port to the localhost interface on your docker host to avoid it being externally accessible with a syntax like: -p 127.0.0.1:3306:3306 for the published port.
Option 2: There are a variety of ways to detect the host IP address from inside of the container, but each have a limited number of scenarios where they work (e.g. requiring Docker for Mac). The most portable option is to inject your host IP into the container with something like an environment variable or configuration file, e.g.:
docker run --rm -e "HOST_IP=$(ip route get 1 | sed -n 's/^.*src \([0-9.]*\) .*$/\1/p')" ...
This does require that your service is listening on that external interface, which could be a security concern. For other methods to get the host IP address from inside of the container, see this post.
Slightly less portable is to use host.docker.internal. This works in current versions of Docker for Windows and Docker for Mac. And in 20.10, the capability has been added to Docker for Linux when you pass a special host entry with:
docker run --add-host host.docker.internal:host-gateway ...
The host-gateway is a special value added in Docker 20.10 that automatically expands to a host IP. For more details see this PR.
Option 3: Running without network isolation, i.e. running with --net host, means your application is running on the host network namespace. This is less isolation for the container, and it means you cannot access other containers over a shared docker network with DNS (instead, you need to use published ports to access other containerized applications). But for applications that need to access other services on the host that are only listening on 127.0.0.1 on the host, this can be the easiest option.
Option 4: Various services also allow access over a filesystem based socket. This socket can be mounted into the container as a bind mounted volume, allowing you to access the host service without going over the network. For access to the docker engine, you often see examples of mounting /var/run/docker.sock into the container (giving that container root access to the host). With mysql, you can try something like -v /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock:/var/run/mysqld/mysql.sock and then connect to localhost which mysql converts to using the socket.
Solution for Windows 10
Docker Community Edition 17.06.0-ce-win18 2017-06-28 (stable)
You can use DNS name of the host docker.for.win.localhost, to resolve to the internal IP. (Warning some sources mentioned windows but it should be win)
Overview
I needed to do something similar, that is connect from my Docker container to my localhost, which was running the Azure Storage Emulator and CosmosDB Emulator.
The Azure Storage Emulator by default listens on 127.0.0.1, while you can change the IP its bound too, I was looking for a solution that would work with default settings.
This also works for connecting from my Docker container to SQL Server and IIS, both running locally on my host with default port settings.
For windows,
I have changed the database url in spring configuration: spring.datasource.url=jdbc:postgresql://host.docker.internal:5432/apidb
Then build the image and run. It worked for me.
None of the answers worked for me when using Docker Toolbox on Windows 10 Home, but 10.0.2.2 did, since it uses VirtualBox which exposes the host to the VM on this address.
This is not an answer to the actual question. This is how I solved a similar problem. The solution comes totally from: Define Docker Container Networking so Containers can Communicate. Thanks to Nic Raboy
Leaving this here for others who might want to do REST calls between one container and another. Answers the question: what to use in place of localhost in a docker environment?
Get how your network looks like docker network ls
Create a new network docker network create -d my-net
Start the first container docker run -d -p 5000:5000 --network="my-net" --name "first_container" <MyImage1:v0.1>
Check out network settings for first container docker inspect first_container. "Networks": should have 'my-net'
Start the second container docker run -d -p 6000:6000 --network="my-net" --name "second_container" <MyImage2:v0.1>
Check out network settings for second container docker inspect second_container. "Networks": should have 'my-net'
ssh into your second container docker exec -it second_container sh or docker exec -it second_container bash.
Inside of the second container, you can ping the first container by ping first_container. Also, your code calls such as http://localhost:5000 can be replaced by http://first_container:5000
If you're running with --net=host, localhost should work fine. If you're using default networking, use the static IP 172.17.0.1.
See this - https://stackoverflow.com/a/48547074/14120621
For those on Windows, assuming you're using the bridge network driver, you'll want to specifically bind MySQL to the IP address of the hyper-v network interface.
This is done via the configuration file under the normally hidden C:\ProgramData\MySQL folder.
Binding to 0.0.0.0 will not work. The address needed is shown in the docker configuration as well, and in my case was 10.0.75.1.
Edit: I ended up prototyping out the concept on GitHub. Check out: https://github.com/sivabudh/system-in-a-box
First, my answer is geared towards 2 groups of people: those who use a Mac, and those who use Linux.
The host network mode doesn't work on a Mac. You have to use an IP alias, see: https://stackoverflow.com/a/43541681/2713729
What is a host network mode? See: https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/#/network-settings
Secondly, for those of you who are using Linux (my direct experience was with Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and I'm upgrading to 16.04 LTS in production soon), yes, you can make the service running inside a Docker container connect to localhost services running on the Docker host (eg. your laptop).
How?
The key is when you run the Docker container, you have to run it with the host mode. The command looks like this:
docker run --network="host" -id <Docker image ID>
When you do an ifconfig (you will need to apt-get install net-tools your container for ifconfig to be callable) inside your container, you will see that the network interfaces are the same as the one on Docker host (eg. your laptop).
It's important to note that I'm a Mac user, but I run Ubuntu under Parallels, so using a Mac is not a disadvantage. ;-)
And this is how you connect NGINX container to the MySQL running on a localhost.
For Linux, where you cannot change the interface the localhost service binds to
There are two problems we need to solve
Getting the IP of the host
Making our localhost service available to Docker
The first problem can be solved using qoomon's docker-host image, as given by other answers.
You will need to add this container to the same bridge network as your other container so that you can access it. Open a terminal inside your container and ensure that you can ping dockerhost.
bash-5.0# ping dockerhost
PING dockerhost (172.20.0.2): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 172.20.0.2: seq=0 ttl=64 time=0.523 ms
Now, the harder problem, making the service accessible to docker.
We can use telnet to check if we can access a port on the host (you may need to install this).
The problem is that our container will only be able to access services that bind to all interfaces, such as SSH:
bash-5.0# telnet dockerhost 22
SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_7.6p1 Ubuntu-4ubuntu0.3
But services bound only to localhost will be inaccessible:
bash-5.0# telnet dockerhost 1025
telnet: can't connect to remote host (172.20.0.2): Connection refused
The proper solution here would be to bind the service to dockers bridge network. However, this answer assumes that it is not possible for you to change this. So we will instead use iptables.
First, we need to find the name of the bridge network that docker is using with ifconfig. If you are using an unnamed bridge, this will just be docker0. However, if you are using a named network you will have a bridge starting with br- that docker will be using instead. Mine is br-5cd80298d6f4.
Once we have the name of this bridge, we need to allow routing from this bridge to localhost. This is disabled by default for security reasons:
sysctl -w net.ipv4.conf.<bridge_name>.route_localnet=1
Now to set up our iptables rule. Since our container can only access ports on the docker bridge network, we are going to pretend that our service is actually bound to a port on this network.
To do this, we will forward all requests to <docker_bridge>:port to localhost:port
iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp -i <docker_bridge_name> --dport <service_port> -j DNAT --to-destination 127.0.0.1:<service_port>
For example, for my service on port 1025
iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp -i br-5cd80298d6f4 --dport 1025 -j DNAT --to-destination 127.0.0.1:1025
You should now be able to access your service from the container:
bash-5.0# telnet dockerhost 1025
220 127.0.0.1 ESMTP Service Ready
First see this answer for the options that you have to fix this problem. But if you use docker-compose you can add network_mode: host to your service and then use 127.0.0.1 to connect to the local host. This is just one of the options described in the answer above. Below you can find how I modified docker-compose.yml from https://github.com/geerlingguy/php-apache-container.git:
---
version: "3"
services:
php-apache:
+ network_mode: host
image: geerlingguy/php-apache:latest
container_name: php-apache
...
+ indicates the line I added.
[Additional info] This has also worked in version 2.2. and "host" or just 'host' are both worked in docker-compose.
---
version: "2.2"
services:
php-apache:
+ network_mode: "host"
or
+ network_mode: host
...
I disagree with the answer from Thomasleveil.
Making mysql bind to 172.17.42.1 will prevent other programs using the database on the host to reach it. This will only work if all your database users are dockerized.
Making mysql bind to 0.0.0.0 will open the db to outside world, which is not only a very bad thing to do, but also contrary to what the original question author wants to do. He explicitly says "The MySql is running on localhost and not exposing a port to the outside world, so its bound on localhost"
To answer the comment from ivant
"Why not bind mysql to docker0 as well?"
This is not possible. The mysql/mariadb documentation explicitly says it is not possible to bind to several interfaces. You can only bind to 0, 1, or all interfaces.
As a conclusion, I have NOT found any way to reach the (localhost only) database on the host from a docker container. That definitely seems like a very very common pattern, but I don't know how to do it.
Try this:
version: '3.5'
services:
yourservice-here:
container_name: container_name
ports:
- "4000:4000"
extra_hosts: # <---- here
- localhost:192.168.1.202
- or-vitualhost.local:192.168.1.202
To get 192.168.1.202, uses ifconfig
This worked for me. Hope this help!
In 7 years the question was asked, it is either docker has changed, or no one tried this way. So I will include my own answer.
I have found all answers use complex methods. Today, I have needed this, and found 2 very simple ways:
use ipconfig or ifconfig on your host and make note of all IP addresses. At least two of them can be used by the container.
I have a fixed local network address on WiFi LAN Adapter: 192.168.1.101. This could be 10.0.1.101. the result will change depending on your router
I use WSL on windows, and it has its own vEthernet address: 172.19.192.1
use host.docker.internal. Most answers have this or another form of it depending on OS. The name suggests it is now globally used by docker.
A third option is to use WAN address of the machine, or in other words IP given by the service provider. However, this may not work if IP is not static, and requires routing and firewall settings.
You need to know the gateway! My solution with local server was to expose it under 0.0.0.0:8000, then run docker with subnet and run container like:
docker network create --subnet=172.35.0.0/16 --gateway 172.35.0.1 SUBNET35
docker run -d -p 4444:4444 --net SUBNET35 <container-you-want-run-place-here>
So, now you can access your loopback through http://172.35.0.1:8000
Connect to the gateway address.
❯ docker network inspect bridge | grep Gateway
"Gateway": "172.17.0.1"
Make sure the process on the host is listening on this interface or on all interfaces and is started after docker. If using systemd, you can add the below to make sure it is started after docker.
[Unit]
After=docker.service
Example
❯ python -m http.server &> /dev/null &
[1] 149976
❯ docker run --rm python python -c "from urllib.request import urlopen;print(b'Directory listing for' in urlopen('http://172.17.0.1:8000').read())"
True
Here is my solution : it works for my case
set local mysql server to public access by comment
#bind-address = 127.0.0.1
in /etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d
restart mysql server
sudo /etc/init.d/mysql restart
run the following command to open user root access any host
mysql -uroot -proot
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON *.* TO 'root'#'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'root' WITH
GRANT OPTION;
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
create sh script : run_docker.sh
#!bin/bash
HOSTIP=`ip -4 addr show scope global dev eth0 | grep inet | awk '{print \$2}' | cut -d / -f 1`
docker run -it -d --name web-app \
--add-host=local:${HOSTIP} \
-p 8080:8080 \
-e DATABASE_HOST=${HOSTIP} \
-e DATABASE_PORT=3306 \
-e DATABASE_NAME=demo \
-e DATABASE_USER=root \
-e DATABASE_PASSWORD=root \
sopheamak/springboot_docker_mysql
run with docker-composer
version: '2.1'
services:
tomcatwar:
extra_hosts:
- "local:10.1.2.232"
image: sopheamak/springboot_docker_mysql
ports:
- 8080:8080
environment:
- DATABASE_HOST=local
- DATABASE_USER=root
- DATABASE_PASSWORD=root
- DATABASE_NAME=demo
- DATABASE_PORT=3306
You can get the host ip using alpine image
docker run --rm alpine ip route | awk 'NR==1 {print $3}'
This would be more consistent as you're always using alpine to run the command.
Similar to Mariano's answer you can use same command to set an environment variable
DOCKER_HOST=$(docker run --rm alpine ip route | awk 'NR==1 {print $3}') docker-compose up
you can use net alias for your machine
OSX
sudo ifconfig lo0 alias 123.123.123.123/24 up
LINUX
sudo ifconfig lo:0 123.123.123.123 up
then from the container you can see the machine by 123.123.123.123
The CGroups and Namespaces are playing major role in the Container Ecosystem.
Namespace provide a layer of isolation. Each container runs in a separate namespace and its access is limited to that namespace. The Cgroups controls the resource utilization of each container, whereas Namespace controls what a process can see and access the respective resource.
Here is the basic understanding of the solution approach you could follow,
Use Network Namespace
When a container spawns out of image, a network interface is defined and create. This gives the container unique IP address and interface.
$ docker run -it alpine ifconfig
By changing the namespace to host, cotainers networks does not remain isolated to its interface, the process will have access to host machines network interface.
$ docker run -it --net=host alpine ifconfig
If the process listens on ports, they'll be listened on the host interface and mapped to the container.
Use PID Namespace
By changing the Pid namespace allows a container to interact with other process beyond its normal scope.
This container will run in its own namespace.
$ docker run -it alpine ps aux
By changing the namespace to the host, the container can also see all the other processes running on the system.
$ docker run -it --pid=host alpine ps aux
Sharing Namespace
This is a bad practice to do this in production because you are breaking out of the container security model which might open up for vulnerabilities, and easy access to eavesdropper. This is only for debugging tools and understating the loopholes in container security.
The first container is nginx server. This will create a new network and process namespace. This container will bind itself to port 80 of newly created network interface.
$ docker run -d --name http nginx:alpine
Another container can now reuse this namespace,
$ docker run --net=container:http mohan08p/curl curl -s localhost
Also, this container can see the interface with the processes in a shared container.
$ docker run --pid=container:http alpine ps aux
This will allow you give more privileges to containers without changing or restarting the application. In the similar way you can connect to mysql on host, run and debug your application. But, its not recommend to go by this way. Hope it helps.
Until fix is not merged into master branch, to get host IP just run from inside of the container:
ip -4 route list match 0/0 | cut -d' ' -f3
(as suggested by #Mahoney here).
I solved it by creating a user in MySQL for the container's ip:
$ sudo mysql<br>
mysql> create user 'username'#'172.17.0.2' identified by 'password';<br>
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> grant all privileges on database_name.* to 'username'#'172.17.0.2' with grant option;<br>
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
$ sudo vim /etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/mysqld.cnf
<br>bind-address = 172.17.0.1
$ sudo systemctl restart mysql.service
Then on container: jdbc:mysql://<b>172.17.0.1</b>:3306/database_name

Link containers in docker (RancherOS and command line)

I run a RancherOS to run docker containers
I created a container on the GUI to run my databases (image: mysql, name: r-mysql-e4e8df05). Different containers use it.
I can link other containers to it on the GUI
This time I would like to automate the creation and starting of a container on jenkins, but the linking is not working well
My command:
docker run -d --name=app-that-needs-mysql --link mysql:mysql myimages.mycompany.com/appthatneedsmysql
I get error:
Error response from daemon: Could not get container for mysql
I tried different things:
1)
--link r-mysql-e4e8df05:mysql
Error:
Cannot link to /r-mysql-e4e8df05, as it does not belong to the default network
2)
Try to use --net options
Running: docker network ls
NETWORK ID NAME DRIVER SCOPE
c..........e bridge bridge local
4..........c host host local
c..........a none null local
With --net none it succeeds but actually it is not working. The app cannot connect to the DB
With --net host error message conflicting options: host type networking can't be used with links. This would result in undefined behavior
With --net bridge error message: Cannot link to /r-mysql-e4e8df05, as it does not belong to the default network
I also checked on rancher GUI where this mysql runs:
It get a continer IP startin with: 10.X.X.X
I also tried to add --net managed but the error: network managed not found
I believe I miss understanding something in this docker linking process. Please give me some idea, how can I make these work.
(previously it was working when I created the same container and linked to the mysql in the GUI)
Hey #Tomi you can expose the mysql container on whatever port you like, from rancher. That way you dont have to link the container, then your jenkins spawned container connect to that on the exposed port on the host. You could also use jenkins to spin up the container within rancher, using the rancher cli. Thay way you dont have to surface mysql on the hosts network... a few ways to skin that cat with rancher.
At first glance it seems that Rancher uses a managed network, which docker network ls does not show.
Reproducing the problem
I used dummy alpine containers to reproduce this:
# create some network
docker network create your_invisible_network
# run a container belonging to this network
docker container run \
--detach \
--name r-mysql-e4e8df05 \
--net your_invisible_network \
alpine tail -f /dev/null
# trying to link this container
docker container run \
--link r-mysql-e4e8df05:mysql \
alpine ping mysql
Indeed I get docker: Error response from daemon: Cannot link to /r-mysql-e4e8df05, as it does not belong to the default network.
Possible Solution
A workaround would be to create a user-defined bridge network and simpy add your mysql container to it:
# create a network
docker network create \
--driver bridge \
a_workaround_network
# connect the mysql to this network (and alias it)
docker network connect \
--alias mysql \
a_workaround_network r-mysql-e4e8df05
# try to ping it using its alias
docker container run \
--net a_workaround_network \
alpine \
ping mysql
# yay!
PING mysql (127.0.0.1): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 127.0.0.1: seq=0 ttl=64 time=0.135 ms
64 bytes from 127.0.0.1: seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.084 ms
As you can see in the output pinging the mysql container via its DNS name is possible.
Good to know:
With a user-created bridge networks DNS resolution works out of the box without having to explicitly --link containers :)
Containers can belong to several networks, this is why this works. In this case the mysql container belongs to both your_invisible_network and a_workaround_network
I hope this helps!

Why I can't ping container by its hostname, from an external machine, while using macvlan?

I am creating a macvlan with this conf:
sudo docker network create -d macvlan \
--subnet=192.168.4.0/24 \
--gateway=192.168.4.1 \
-o macvlan_mode=bridge \
-o parent=eth0 macvlan70
Then I run an alpine image using:
docker run --net=macvlan70 --hostname=thehost --ip=192.168.4.17 -it alpine /bin/sh
At this moment I moved to another machine in LAN - host can't connect with Macvlan containers without a bridge.
I can ping 192.168.4.17 with success. But ping thehost will not result. In the router admin page the ip 192.168.4.17 is recognized but without the hostname associated.
As it's said in the docker docs, the user-defined hostname is not available from outside of the container.
Even in host network mode a container has its own UTS namespace by default. As such --hostname is allowed in host network mode and will only change the hostname inside the container

connecting to exposed docker container

I'm trying to expose a docker container to the outside world, not just the host machine. When I created the image from a base CentOS image it looks like this:
# install openssh server and ssh client
RUN yum install -y openssh-server
RUN yum install -y openssh-clients
RUN echo 'root:password' | chpasswd
RUN sed -ri 's/UsePAM yes/#UsePAM yes/g' /etc/ssh/sshd_config
RUN sed -ri 's/#UsePAM no/UsePAM no/g' /etc/ssh/sshd_config
EXPOSE 22
CMD ["/usr/sbin/sshd", "-D"]
I run this image like so:
sudo docker run -d -P crystal/ssh
When I try to look at the container with sudo docker ps, I see Ports:
0.0.0.0:49154->22tcp
If I ifconfig on the host machine (ubuntu), I see docker0 inet addr:172.17.42.1. I can ping this from my host machine, but not from any other machine. What am I doing wrong in setting up the container to look at the outside world? Thanks.
Edit:
I have tried inspecting the IPAddress of the container and I see IPAddress: 172.17.0.28, but I cannot ping that either...
If I try nmap , that seems to return the ports. So does that mean it is open and I should be able to ssh into it if I have ssh set up? Thanks.
nmap -p 49154 10.211.55.1 shows that the port is open with an unknown service.
I tried to ssh in by ssh -l root -p 49154 10.211.55.1 and I get
Read from socket failed: Connection reset by peer.
UPDATE
Your Dockerfile is wrong. Your sshd is not properly configured, it does not start properly and thats the reason while container does not respond on port 22 correctly. See errors:
Could not load host key: /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key
Could not load host key: /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key
You need to generate host keys. This line will do the magic:
RUN ssh-keygen -P "" -t dsa -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key
PREVIOUS ANSWER
You probably need to look up IP address of eth0 interface (that is accessible from network) and you need to connect to your container via this IP address. Traffic from/to docker0 bridge should be forwarded by default to your eth interfaces.
Also, you better check if you have ip forwarding enabled:
cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
This command should return 1, otherwise you should execute:
sudo echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
Q: Why you can connect this way to container?
If you have ip forwarding enabled, packets incoming from eth0 interface are forwarded to virtual docker0 interface. Magic happens and packet is received at correct container. See Docker Advanced Networking for more details:
But docker0 is no ordinary interface. It is a virtual Ethernet bridge
that automatically forwards packets between any other network
interfaces that are attached to it. This lets containers communicate
both with the host machine and with each other. Every time Docker
creates a container, it creates a pair of “peer” interfaces that are
like opposite ends of a pipe — a packet sent on one will be received
on the other. It gives one of the peers to the container to become its
eth0 interface and keeps the other peer, with a unique name like
vethAQI2QT, out in the namespace of the host machine. By binding every
veth* interface to the docker0 bridge, Docker creates a virtual subnet
shared between the host machine and every Docker container.
You can't ping 172.17.42.1 from outside your host because it is a private ip so it can be accessed only in private network as it is the one created by the host on which you run the docker container, the virtual switch docker0 and the docker container which is attached with a virtual interface to the bridge docker0...
Moreover 172.17.42.1 is the ip of the bridge docker0, not the ip of your docker instance. If you want to know the ip of the docker instance you have to run ifconfig inside it or you can use docker inspect
I'm not an expert about port mapping, but up to me that means that to access the docker container on port 22 you have to connect to port 49154 of the host and all the traffic will be forwarded.

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