An Ansible role to configure install and configure a Docker daemon running as a non-root user.
Do not use any of this without first testing in a non-operational environment.
Rootless mode allows running the Docker daemon and containers as a non-root user to mitigate potential vulnerabilities in the daemon and the container runtime. (docker)
None.
---
- hosts: all
any_errors_fatal: true
tasks:
- name: include the konstruktoid.docker_rootless role
include_role:
name: konstruktoid.docker_rootless
...
---
docker_add_alias: true
docker_release: "20.10.17"
docker_release_shasum: "969210917b5548621a2b541caf00f86cc6963c6cf0fb13265b9731c3b98974d9"
docker_release_rootless_shasum: "d37af346d0f00422e9d51f745ecced372f951412d7b4679504380b6d897ed78f"
docker_bash_completion_shasum: "cd9c70120bc5f7e6772b6a5350abf63099004c357814abc8a8a3689a7f2e3df0"
docker_compose_bash_completion_shasum: "9926c945b466fad570ad574089d6a90f7d9ba452a2d6a8ba67611a664707f0de"
docker_rootful: false
docker_rootful_enabled: false
docker_rootful_opts: >
--live-restore --icc=false --default-ulimit nproc=512:1024 --default-ulimit nofile=100:200 -H fd://
docker_url: "https://download.docker.com/linux/static/stable/x86_64"
docker_user: dockeruser
docker_user_bashrc: false
docker_allow_privileged_ports: false
docker_allow_ping: false
docker_compose: false
...
Before using this role you first have to decide if you want to install Docker
using the packages available to the distribution, also known as the "rootful"
installation since it requires root
permissions and installs the upstream
Docker daemon or if you want to download the static binaries and do a manual
install.
If you set docker_rootful: false
you will download the static binaries and do
a manual install, not requiring any root
permissions.
If docker_rootful: true
, then docker_rootful_enabled
will decide if the
daemon should be enabled as a service or not.
Using docker_rootful: true
and docker_rootful_enabled: true
, will result in
a standard Docker installation, with an additional Docker daemon, running as a
non-root user.
Note that Debian 10 and earlier requires
docker_rootful: false
due to missing dependencies.
The docker_url
and docker_release
variables defines where you find the
relevant binaries and which version you should use when doing a manual
installation.
You define the name of the Docker user that will be created with the
docker_user
variable. This user will download and install the binaries if
docker_rootful: false
or else the user will be the one running the
rootless installation script and starting a isolated daemon.
Note that the sole purpose of the
docker_user
is to run the Docker daemon and related containers, and not for system administration or used as a regular user.
docker_release_shasum
and docker_release_rootless_shasum
are used to verify
the files when downloaded using the get_url
module.
docker_rootful_opts
is the options to apply to the Docker daemon if
running in rootful mode.
If docker_add_alias: true
, then a docker
alias will be added to either .bashrc
or .bash_aliases
of the Ansible user. If false
, a shell script named docker_rootless.sh
is
created in the Ansible user home directory. This works as a substitute to the
docker
command so that the Ansible user can execute the rootless Docker installation from the docker_user
.
If docker_compose: true
, then docker-compose
will be installed via pip.
If docker_user_bashrc: true
, a .bashrc with completion for the docker(-compose)
command will be placed inside the docker_user
home.
The docker_allow_privileged_ports
variable configures if exposing
privileged ports (< 1024)
is allowed.
The docker_allow_ping
variable configures if unprivileged users can open ICMP
echo
sockets.
On some distributions, this is not allowed, and thereby containers cannot ping
to the outside.
Running containers is not that much different from when a rootful Docker daemon is used, but you still need to become the unprivileged user and adapt any paths to the user working directores.
If docker_add_alias: true
is used, the docker
command will be
available as usual for the Ansible user, too. Type alias
in the shell to see the keyword
configuration.
- name: register "{{ docker_user }}" info
become: true
user:
name: "{{ docker_user }}"
check_mode: true
register: docker_user_info
tags:
- user
- name: example container block
environment:
XDG_RUNTIME_DIR: "/run/user/{{ docker_user_info.uid }}"
PATH: "{{ docker_user_info.home }}/bin:{{ ansible_env.PATH }}"
DOCKER_HOST: "unix:///run/user/{{ docker_user_info.uid }}/docker.sock"
block:
- name: nginx container
become: true
become_user: "{{ docker_user }}"
community.docker.docker_container:
name: nginx
image: konstruktoid/nginx
state: started
cap_drop: all
capabilities:
- chown
- dac_override
- net_bind_service
- setgid
- setuid
pull: true
hostname: "{{ ansible_nodename }}"
container_default_behavior: compatibility
If Ansible Molecule
with the molecule-vagrant
plugin and related software is installed, running molecule test
is supported.
tox -l
will list all available tox
test environments.
Do you want to contribute? Great! Contributions are always youlcome, no matter how large or small. If you found something odd, feel free to submit a issue, improve the code by creating a pull request, or by sponsoring this project.
Apache License Version 2.0