DOKK / manpages / debian 10 / charliecloud / ch-docker2tar.1.en
CH-DOCKER2TAR(1) Charliecloud CH-DOCKER2TAR(1)

ch-docker2tar - Flatten a Docker image into a Charliecloud image tarball

$ ch-docker2tar IMAGE OUTDIR


Flattens the Docker image tagged IMAGE into a Charliecloud tarball in directory OUTDIR.

Sudo privileges are required to run docker export.

Additional arguments:

print help and exit
print version and exit



$ ch-docker2tar hello /var/tmp
57M /var/tmp/hello.tar.gz
$ ls -lh /var/tmp
-rw-r-----  1 reidpr reidpr  57M Feb 13 16:14 hello.tar.gz


If Charliecloud was obtained from your Linux distribution, use your distribution’s bug reporting procedures.

Otherwise, report bugs to: <https://github.com/hpc/charliecloud/issues>

charliecloud(1)

Full documentation at: <https://hpc.github.io/charliecloud>

Docker is a convenient way to build Charliecloud images. While installing Docker is beyond the scope of this documentation, here are a few tips.

Because Docker (a) makes installing random crap from the internet really easy and (b) is easy to deploy insecurely, you should take care. Some of the implications are below. This list should not be considered comprehensive nor a substitute for appropriate expertise; adhere to your moral and institutional responsibilities.

docker equals root

Anyone who can run the docker command or interact with the Docker daemon can trivially escalate to root. This is considered a feature.

For this reason, don’t create the docker group, as this will allow passwordless, unlogged escalation for anyone in the group.

Standard hygiene for “installing stuff from the internet” applies. Only work with images you trust. The official Docker Hub repositories can help.

By default, Docker runs container processes as root. In addition to being poor hygiene, this can be an escalation path, e.g. if you bind-mount host directories.

To see what it did:

$ ifconfig    # note docker0 interface
$ brctl show  # note docker0 bridge
$ route -n


If you don’t want the service starting automatically at boot, e.g.:

$ systemctl is-enabled docker
enabled
$ systemctl disable docker
$ systemctl is-enabled docker
disabled


By default, Docker does not work if you have a proxy, and it fails in two different ways.

The first problem is that Docker itself must be told to use a proxy. This manifests as:

$ sudo docker run hello-world
Unable to find image 'hello-world:latest' locally
Pulling repository hello-world
Get https://index.docker.io/v1/repositories/library/hello-world/images: dial tcp 54.152.161.54:443: connection refused


If you have a systemd system, the Docker documentation explains how to configure this. If you don’t have a systemd system, then /etc/default/docker might be the place to go?

The second problem is that Docker containers need to know about the proxy as well. This manifests as images failing to build because they can’t download stuff from the internet.

The fix is to set the proxy variables in your environment, e.g.:

export HTTP_PROXY=http://proxy.example.com:8088
export http_proxy=$HTTP_PROXY
export HTTPS_PROXY=$HTTP_PROXY
export https_proxy=$HTTP_PROXY
export ALL_PROXY=$HTTP_PROXY
export all_proxy=$HTTP_PROXY
export NO_PROXY='localhost,127.0.0.1,.example.com'
export no_proxy=$NO_PROXY


You also need to teach sudo to retain them. Add the following to /etc/sudoers:

Defaults env_keep+="HTTP_PROXY http_proxy HTTPS_PROXY https_proxy ALL_PROXY all_proxy NO_PROXY no_proxy"


Because different programs use different subsets of these variables, and to avoid a situation where some things work and others don’t, the Charliecloud test suite (see below) includes a test that fails if some but not all of the above variables are set.

Reid Priedhorsky, Tim Randles, and others

2014–2018, Los Alamos National Security, LLC

2018-12-14 19:09 Coordinated Universal Time