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Troubleshooting Docker

You're reading from   Troubleshooting Docker Develop, test, automate, and deploy production-ready Docker containers

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783552344
Length 290 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Authors (4):
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John Wooten John Wooten
Author Profile Icon John Wooten
John Wooten
Navid Ahmed Shaikh Navid Ahmed Shaikh
Author Profile Icon Navid Ahmed Shaikh
Navid Ahmed Shaikh
Vaibhav Kohli Vaibhav Kohli
Author Profile Icon Vaibhav Kohli
Vaibhav Kohli
Rajdeep Dua Rajdeep Dua
Author Profile Icon Rajdeep Dua
Rajdeep Dua
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Understanding Container Scenarios and an Overview of Docker FREE CHAPTER 2. Docker Installation 3. Building Base and Layered Images 4. Devising Microservices and N-Tier Applications 5. Moving Around Containerized Applications 6. Making Containers Work 7. Managing the Networking Stack of a Docker Container 8. Managing Docker Containers with Kubernetes 9. Hooking Volume Baggage 10. Docker Deployment in a Public Cloud - AWS and Azure

Super-privileged container


This concept is introduced in one of the Project Atomic blogs, by Redhat. It provides the capability to use a special/privileged container as an agent to control the underlying host. If we ship only the application code, we risk turning the container into a black box. There are many benefits to the host of packaging up an agent as a Docker container with the right access. We can bind in devices via -v /dev:/dev, which will help to mount devices inside the container without needing super-privileged access.

Using nsenter trick, allows you to run commands in another namespace, that is, if Docker has its own private mount namespace, with nsenter and the right mode we can reach out to the host and mount things in its namespace.

We can run in privileged mode to mount the whole host system on some path (/media/host):

$ docker run -it -v /:/media/host --privileged fedora 
nsenter --mount=/media/host/proc/1/ns/mnt --mount /dev/xvdf /home/mic  

We can then use nsenter...

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