I installed Docker in my machine where I have Ubuntu OS.
When I run:
sudo docker run hello-world
All is ok, but I want to hide the sudo command to make the command shorter.
If I write the command without sudo
docker run hello-world
That displays the following:
docker: Got permission denied while trying to connect to the Docker daemon socket at unix:///var/run/docker.sock: Post http://%2Fvar%2Frun%2Fdocker.sock/v1.35/containers/create: dial unix /var/run/docker.sock: connect: permission denied. See 'docker run --help'.
The same happens when I try to run:
docker-compose up
How can I resolve this?
If you want to run docker as non-root user then you need to add it to the docker group.
Create the docker group if it does not exist
$ sudo groupadd docker
Add your user to the docker group.
$ sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
Log in to the new docker group (to avoid having to log out / log in again; but if not enough, try to reboot):
$ newgrp docker
Check if docker can be run without root
$ docker run hello-world
Reboot if still got error
$ reboot
Warning
The docker group grants privileges equivalent to the root user. For details on how this impacts security in your system, see Docker Daemon Attack Surface..
Taken from the docker official documentation:
manage-docker-as-a-non-root-user
After an upgrade I got the permission denied.
Doing the steps of 'mkb' post install steps don't have change anything because my user was already in the 'docker' group; I retry-it twice any way without success.
After an search hour this following solution finaly worked :
sudo chmod 666 /var/run/docker.sock
Solution came from Olshansk.
Look like the upgrade have recreate the socket without enough permission for the 'docker' group.
Problems
This hard chmod open security hole and after each reboot, this error start again and again and you have to re-execute the above command each time. I want a solution once and for all. For that you have two problems :
1) Problem with SystemD : The socket will be create only with owner 'root' and group 'root'.
You can check this first problem with this command :
ls -l /lib/systemd/system/docker.socket
If every this is good, you should see 'root/docker' not 'root/root'.
2 ) Problem with graphical Login : https://superuser.com/questions/1348196/why-my-linux-account-only-belongs-to-one-group
You can check this second problem with this command :
groups
If everything is correct you should see the docker group in the list.
If not try the command
sudo su $USER -c groups
if you see then the docker group it is because of the bug.
Solutions
If you manage to to get a workaround for the graphical login, this should do the job :
sudo chgrp docker /lib/systemd/system/docker.socket
sudo chmod g+w /lib/systemd/system/docker.socket
But If you can't manage this bug, a not so bad solution could be this :
sudo chgrp $USER /lib/systemd/system/docker.socket
sudo chmod g+w /lib/systemd/system/docker.socket
This work because you are in a graphical environnement and probably the only user on your computer.
In both case you need a reboot (or an sudo chmod 666 /var/run/docker.sock)
Add docker group
$ sudo groupadd docker
Add your current user to docker group
$ sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
Switch session to docker group
$ newgrp - docker
Run an example to test
$ docker run hello-world
Add current user to docker group
sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
Change the permissions of docker socket to be able to connect
to the docker daemon /var/run/docker.sock
sudo chmod 666 /var/run/docker.sock
I solve this error with the command :
$ sudo chmod 666 /var/run/docker.sock
It only requires the changes in permission of sock file.
sudo chmod 666 /var/run/docker.sock
this will work definitely.
If creating a docker group and adding your user to it doesn't work (the best solution, described in the previous answers), then this one is the second best alternative:
sudo chown $USER /var/run/docker.sock
What it does is changing the ownership of the docker.sock file to your user.
Note: It's a really bad practice to use chmod 666, because it gives permissions to practically everyone to access and modify the docker.sock file.
Fix Docker Issue: (Permission denied)
Create the docker group if it does not exist: sudo groupadd docker
See number of super users in the available system: grep -Po '^sudo.+:\K.*$' /etc/group
Export the user in linux command shell: export USER=demoUser
Add user to the docker group: sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
Run the following command/ Login or logout: newgrp docker
Check if docker runs ok or not: docker run hello-world
Reboot if you still get an error: reboot
If it does not work, run this command:
sudo chmod 660 /var/run/docker.sock
You can always try Manage Docker as a non-root user paragraph in the https://docs.docker.com/install/linux/linux-postinstall/ docs.
After doing this also if the problem persists then you can run the following command to solve it:
sudo chmod 666 /var/run/docker.sock
We always forget about ACLs . See setfacl.
sudo setfacl -m user:$USER:rw /var/run/docker.sock
To fix that issue, I searched where is my docker and docker-compose installed. In my case, docker was installed in /usr/bin/docker and docker-compose was installed in /usr/local/bin/docker-compose path. Then, I write this in my terminal:
To docker:
sudo chmod +x /usr/bin/docker
To docker-compose:
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
Now I don't need write in my commands docker the word sudo
/***********************************************************************/
ERRATA:
The best solution of this issue was commented by #mkasberg. I quote comment:
That might work, you might run into issues down the road. Also, it's a security vulnerability. You'd be better off just adding yourself to the docker group, as the docs say. sudo groupadd docker, sudo usermod -aG docker $USER.
Docs: https://docs.docker.com/install/linux/linux-postinstall/
Got permission denied while trying to connect to the Docker daemon socket at unix:///var/run/docker.sock: Get http://%2Fvar%2Frun%2Fdocker.sock/v1.40/images/json: dial unix /var/run/docker.sock: connect: permission denied
sudo chmod 666 /var/run/docker.sock
This fix my problem.
ubuntu 21.04 systemd socket ownership
Let me preface, this was a perfectly suitable solution for me during local development and I got here searching for ubuntu docker permission error so i'll just leave this here.
I didn't own the unix socket, so I chowned it.
sudo chown $(whoami):$(whoami) /var/run/docker.sock
Another, more permanent solution for your dev environment, is to modify the user ownership of the unix socket creation. This will give your user the ownership, so it'll stick between restarts:
sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/sockets.target.wants/docker.socket
docker.socket:
[Unit]
Description=Docker Socket for the API
[Socket]
ListenStream=/var/run/docker.sock
SocketMode=0660
SocketUser=YOUR_USERNAME_HERE
SocketGroup=docker
[Install]
WantedBy=sockets.target
Seriously guys. Do not add Docker in your groups or modifies the socket posix (without a hardening SELinux), it's a simple way to make a root privesc. Just add an alias in your .bashrc, it's simpler and safer as : alias dc='sudo docker'.
lightdm and kwallet ship with a bug that seems to not pass the supplementary groups at login. To solve this, I also, beside sudo usermod -aG docker $USER, had to comment out
auth optional pam_kwallet.so
auth optional pam_kwallet5.so
to
#auth optional pam_kwallet.so
#auth optional pam_kwallet5.so
in /etc/pam.d/lightdm before rebooting, for the docker-group to actually have effect.
bug: https://bugs.launchpad.net/lightdm/+bug/1781418 and here: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1581495
Rebooting the machine worked for me.
$ reboot
This work for me:
Get inside the container and modify the file's ACL
sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
sudo setfacl --modify user:$USER:rw /var/run/docker.sock
It's a better solution than use chmod.
use this command
sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
then restart your computer this worked for me.
you can follow these steps and this will work for you:
create a docker group sudo groupadd docker
add your user to this group sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
list the groups to make sure that docker group created successfully by running this command groups
run the following command also to change the session for docker group newgrp docker
change the group ownership for file docker.socksudo chown root:docker /var/run/docker.sock
change the ownership for .docker directory sudo chown "$USER":"$USER" /home/"$USER"/.docker -R
finally sudo chmod g+rwx "$HOME/.docker" -R
After that test you can run docker ps -a
I ran into a similar problem as well, but where the container I wanted to create needed to mount /var/run/docker.sock as a volume (Portainer Agent), while running it all under a different namespace. Normally a container does not care about which namespace it is started in -- that is sort of the point -- but since access was made from a different namespace, this had to be circumvented.
Adding --userns=host to the run command for the container enabled it to use the attain the correct permissions.
Quite a specific use case, but after more research hours than I want to admit I just thought I should share it with the world if someone else ends up in this situation :)
i try this commend with sudo commend and it was ok.sudo docker pull hello-world or sudo docker run hello-world
In the Linux environment, after installing docker and docker-compose reboot is required for work docker better to avoid this issue.
$ sudo systemctl restart docker
It is definitely not the case the question was about, but as it is the first search result while googling the error message, I'll leave it here.
First of all, check if docker service is running using the following command:
systemctl status docker.service
If it is not running, try starting it:
sudo systemctl start docker.service
... and check the status again:
systemctl status docker.service
If it has not started, investigate the reason. Probably, you have modified a config file and made an error (like I did while modifying /etc/docker/daemon.json)
The Docker daemon binds to a Unix socket instead of a TCP port.
By default that Unix socket is owned by the user root and other users can only access it using sudo. The Docker daemon always runs as the root user.
If you don’t want to preface the docker command with sudo, create a Unix group called docker and add users to it. When the Docker daemon starts, it creates a Unix socket accessible by members of the docker group.
To create the docker group and add your user:
Create the docker group
sudo groupadd docker
Add your user to the docker group
sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
Log out and log back in so that your group membership is re-evaluated.
If testing on a virtual machine, it may be necessary to restart the virtual machine for changes to take effect.
On a desktop Linux environment such as X Windows, log out of your session completely and then log back in.
On Linux, you can also run the following command to activate the changes to groups:
newgrp docker
Verify that you can run docker commands without sudo. The below command downloads a test image and runs it in a container. When the container runs, it prints an informational message and exits
docker run hello-world
If you initially ran Docker CLI commands using sudo before adding your user to the docker group, you may see the following error, which indicates that your ~/.docker/ directory was created with incorrect permissions due to the sudo commands.
WARNING: Error loading config file: /home/user/.docker/config.json -
stat /home/user/.docker/config.json: permission denied
To fix this problem, either remove the ~/.docker/ directory (it is recreated automatically, but any custom settings are lost), or change its ownership and permissions using the following commands:
sudo chown "$USER":"$USER" /home/"$USER"/.docker -R
sudo chmod g+rwx "$HOME/.docker" -R
All other post installation steps for docker on linux can be found here https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/linux-postinstall/
The most straightforward solution is to type
sudo chmod 666 /var/run/docker.sock
every time you boot your machine. However, this method defeats any system security that may be in place and opens up the Docker socket to everybody. If this is acceptable to you -e.g.: the only user of your machine- then use it.
Nevertheless, it will be required every time you boot your machine, you can make it run with booting by adding
start on startup
task
exec chmod 666 /var/run/docker.sock
to the /etc/init/docker-chmod.conf file.
I tried all the described methods and nothing helped to solve the problem. The solution was to use the --use-drivers parameter when running selenoid and selenoid-ui. Below is the full listing of my Dockerfile.
FROM selenoid/chrome
USER root
RUN apt-get update
RUN apt-get -y install docker.io
RUN curl -s https://aerokube.com/cm/bash | bash
RUN ./cm selenoid start --vnc --use-drivers
RUN ./cm selenoid-ui start --use-drivers
EXPOSE 4444 8080
CMD ["-conf", "/etc/selenoid/browsers.json", "-video-output-dir", "/opt/selenoid/video/"]
In my case it was the process itself (CI server agent) that was trying to run a docker command wasn't able to run it, but when I tried to run same command from within the same user it worked.
Restarting the daemon that runs CI server agent solved the problem.
The reason why command wasn't working from within agent before is because the agent was running before I installed docker and granted docker group permissions, and agent process used cached old permissions and was failing. Restarting the process dropped the cache and make things work out.
As a shortest answer for linux user ->
Simply try any command as super user with "sudo"
Eg:- sudo docker-compose up
After Docker Installation on Centos. While running below command I got below error.
[centos#aiops-dev-cassandra3 ~]$ docker run hello-world
docker: Got permission denied while trying to connect to the Docker daemon socket at unix:///var/run/docker.sock: Post http://%2Fvar%2Frun%2Fdocker.soc k/v1.40/containers/create: dial unix /var/run/docker.sock: connect: permission denied.
See 'docker run --help'.
Change Group and Permission for docker.socket
[centos#aiops-dev-cassandra3 ~]$ ls -l /lib/systemd/system/docker.socket
-rw-r--r--. 1 root root 197 Nov 13 07:25 /lib/systemd/system/docker.socket
[centos#aiops-dev-cassandra3 ~]$ sudo chgrp docker /lib/systemd/system/docker.socket
[centos#aiops-dev-cassandra3 ~]$ sudo chmod 666 /var/run/docker.sock
[centos#aiops-dev-cassandra3 ~]$ ls -lrth /var/run/docker.sock
srw-rw-rw-. 1 root docker 0 Nov 20 11:59 /var/run/docker.sock
[centos#aiops-dev-cassandra3 ~]$
Verify by using below docker command
[centos#aiops-dev-cassandra3 ~]$ docker run hello-world
Unable to find image 'hello-world:latest' locally
latest: Pulling from library/hello-world
1b930d010525: Pull complete
Digest: sha256:c3b4ada4687bbaa170745b3e4dd8ac3f194ca95b2d0518b417fb47e5879d9b5f
Status: Downloaded newer image for hello-world:latest
Hello from Docker!
This message shows that your installation appears to be working correctly.
To generate this message, Docker took the following steps:
1. The Docker client contacted the Docker daemon.
2. The Docker daemon pulled the "hello-world" image from the Docker Hub.
(amd64)
3. The Docker daemon created a new container from that image which runs the
executable that produces the output you are currently reading.
4. The Docker daemon streamed that output to the Docker client, which sent it
to your terminal.
To try something more ambitious, you can run an Ubuntu container with:
$ docker run -it ubuntu bash
Share images, automate workflows, and more with a free Docker ID:
https://hub.docker.com/
For more examples and ideas, visit:
https://docs.docker.com/get-started/
[centos#aiops-dev-cassandra3 ~]$
After you installed docker, created 'docker' group and added user to it, edit docker service unit file:
sudo nano /usr/lib/systemd/system/docker.service
Add two lines into the section [Service]:
SupplementaryGroups=docker
ExecStartPost=/bin/chmod 666 /var/run/docker.sock
Save the file (Ctrl-X, y, Enter)
Run and enable the Docker service:
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl start docker
sudo systemctl enable docker
I have set a private pipeline with linux vm and agent is install and in the portal it shows that the agent is active. I also have install docker. In the same machine if I use sudo docker it works. So I am sure it is a permission issues when the VSTS agent is running the command. Not sure what which user i need to give which premission so that docker command will run when I initial a build from VSTS.
Got permission denied while trying to connect to the Docker daemon
socket at unix:///var/run/docker.sock: Post
http://%2Fvar%2Frun%2Fdocker.sock/v.37/build?buildargs=%7B%7D&cachefrom=%5B]&cgroupparent=&cpuperiod=0&cpuquota=0&cpusetcpus=&cpusetmems=&cpushares=0&dockerfile=Dockerfile&labels=%7B%7D&memory=0&memswap=0&networkmode=default&rm=&session=a53bebddc77c89993b6e464d9f2a56fac9b***e62***094***fe70355df2c8dfcf***8b9&shmsize=0&t=mycontainerreg.azurecr.io%2Ftk-dashboard%3A853&target=&ulimits=null:
dial unix /var/run/docker.sock: connect: permission denied
/usr/bin/docker failed with return code: ***
In VSTS, it's the build service account which execute entire build pipeline. This account should also run the command.
Note, the service is setting up during the configuration of build agent. You can run the build agent as a systemd service. More details please refer to this tutorial.
You will need to grant appropriate permissions. The user just needs to be added to the group docker.
sudo usermod -a -G docker user
Also restart the systemd service and try to trigger the build again.
First of all, check if the docker group was created.
If the gourp does not exist -> https://www.digitalocean.com/community/questions/how-to-fix-docker-got-permission-denied-while-trying-to-connect-to-the-docker-daemon-socket
Then
usermod -aG docker $USER
usermod -aG root $USER
chmod 777 /var/run/docker.sock
I had to run following commands to get rid off this issue:
sudo usermod -aG docker vstsbuildagent
# check docker group
grep 'docker' /etc/group
usermod -aG root vstsbuildagent
sudo systemctl restart docker
# your build agent process
sudo systemctl stop vsts********
sudo systemctl start vsts********
I am running a jenkins docker application (https://hub.docker.com/r/jenkinsci/blueocean/)
I am trying to do a docker run on jenkins but received this error:Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at unix:///var/run/docker.sock. Is the docker daemon running?
I tried doing : sudo usermod -aG docker jenkins but it said that jenkins user does not exist. I tried doing add admin also but it said it does not exists also.
What am i doing wrong?
I presume that docker service is up & running, if not verify it by running below command -
$ sudo systemctl status docker.service
Run below command to make it work -
$ sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
Log out/in to activate the changes to groups
Explanation -
Change user jenkins with the username which you are logged in on your host -
$ sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
Do a echo $USER to view your current user.
Log out/in to activate the changes to groups, then you can do a docker run ..... successfully.
Note - Jenkins user exists inside the docker container & not on your host machine.
Ref - https://docs.docker.com/install/linux/linux-postinstall/
Check below settings,
The user with which you are running docker run command might not be able to connect with docker, so in that case you need to do
usermod -aG docker <username>
After this, logout from current session, and login again.
Check your docker service
systemctl status docker.service
If not running,
systemctl start docker.service
I just started playing with docker. The first thing I did was to install it, and then install Rstudio-server. (I'm running ubuntu 14.04)
sudo apt-get install docker.io
sudo docker run -d -p 8787:8787 -e USER='some_user_name' -e PASSWORD='super_secret_password' rocker/hadleyverse
Is it possible to run a docker rstudio server without sudo? If so, how?
Thanks!
From this answer:
The docker manual has this to say about it:
Giving non-root access
The docker daemon always runs as the root user, and since Docker version 0.5.2, the docker daemon binds to a Unix socket instead of a TCP port. By default that Unix socket is owned by the user root, and so, by default, you can access it with sudo.
Starting in version 0.5.3, if you (or your Docker installer) create a Unix group called docker and add users to it, then the docker daemon will make the ownership of the Unix socket read/writable by the docker group when the daemon starts. The docker daemon must always run as the root user, but if you run the docker client as a user in the docker group then you don't need to add sudo to all the client commands. As of 0.9.0, you can specify that a group other than docker should own the Unix socket with the -G option.
Warning: The docker group (or the group specified with -G) is root-equivalent; see Docker Daemon Attack Surface details.
Example:
Add the docker group if it doesn't already exist.
sudo groupadd docker
Add the connected user "${USER}" to the docker group. Change the user name to match your preferred user.
sudo gpasswd -a ${USER} docker
Restart the Docker daemon:
sudo service docker restart
If you are on Ubuntu 14.04 and up use docker.io instead:
sudo service docker.io restart
You need to log out and log back in again if you added the current logged in user.