Connect via Socket from Host machine to container using host:port (port mapping) (windows to windows) - windows

Connect to docker container (windows 10) from host via Socket connection
I have tried to build an image using windows 10 as base image, expose port that i want connect to from host machine (40030).
Dockerfile:
FROM mcr.microsoft.com/windows:1903
# Set working directory
WORKDIR /app
EXPOSE 40020
And this is the docker run command:
docker run -it --rm -p 40020:40020 sample:dev
I expect to connect from Host machine to container machine via socket connection. Maybe there are some issue with Socket connection at all, because simple HTTP server is working (simple nodejs server return the response from container to host)

Related

How does VSCode [Remote Development] [Forward Port] work?

When using VSCode Remote Development Open Folder in Container to develop in docker container in Mac, I can not find:
Any info about the port by docker inspect containerId
Any port config in Dockerfile
But I can still access the service in container from host browser.
VS Code uses SSH Tunnel to connect to remote machine. The port forwarding is simply creating this tunnel.
You can do it without vscode with the command below if you have ssh client installed. You have to run this command from localhost shell prompt.
(I assumed we want to connect to port 8080 on remote-machine using localhost:8085)
ssh -L 8085:remote-machine-ip:8080 remote-machine-ip
Now, from your browser, if you go to http://localhost:8085 it will show content from remote-machine's 8080 service

How to access a port on the host machine when running docker container on MacOS with --network=host?

I have set up a couple of containers that interact with each other. The main application container runs on --network = host because it queries several mySQL containers running on different ports exposed on the host network.
I am trying to hit the application on the host but get an error:
curl: (7) Failed to connect to 0.0.0.0 port 36081: Connection refused
I am working on Docker installed on MacOS.
I have read several questions that indicate that docker on MacOS runs on a VM. But what is the workaround to access the application from the host? Any way to get the IP of the said VM?
You cannot use --network=host on Mac to connect via host ports but binding to host port using -p options works.
https://docs.docker.com/docker-for-mac/networking/#/there-is-no-docker0-bridge-on-osx
I WANT TO CONNECT TO A CONTAINER FROM THE MAC
Port forwarding works
for localhost; --publish, -p, or -P all work. Ports exposed from Linux
are forwarded to the host.
Our current recommendation is to publish a port, or to connect from
another container. This is what you need to do even on Linux if the
container is on an overlay network, not a bridge network, as these are
not routed.
For your use case,
You need to create a docker network and attach both the DB and application containers to this network. Then the containers will be able to talk to each other by their name. You can also publish the application container port so that you can access it from your host.
https://docs.docker.com/network/bridge/
Instead of creating the network, attaching the containers to the network etc manually, you can use docker-compose.
https://docs.docker.com/compose/

Localhost vs 0.0.0.0 with Docker on Mac OS

I am reading the docs here and I find myself a bit confused, since running
docker run --name some-mysql -p 3306:3306 -d mysql
or
docker run --name some-mysql -p 127.0.0.1:3306:3306 -d mysql
then mysql --host localhost --port 3306 -u root gives me the following error :
ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/tmp/mysql.sock' (2).
But running mysql -u root -p --host 0.0.0.0 works.
Does someone have an explanation ?
With docker port forwarding, there are two network namespaces you need to keep track of. The first is inside your container. If you listen on localhost inside the container, nothing outside the container can connect to your application. That includes blocking port forwarding from the docker host and container-to-container networking. So unless your container is talking to itself, you always listen on 0.0.0.0 with the application you are running inside the container.
The second network namespace is on your docker host. When you forward a port with docker run -p 127.0.0.1:1234:5678 ... that configures a listener on the docker host interface 127.0.0.1 port 1234, and forwards it to the container namespace port 5678 (that container must be listening on 0.0.0.0). If you leave off the ip, docker will publish the port on all interfaces on the host.
So when you configure mysql to listen on 127.0.0.1, there's no way to reach it from outside of the container's networking namespace. If you need to prevent others outside of your docker host from reaching the port, configure that restriction when publishing the port on the docker run cli.
As described in the mysql documentation (https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/connecting.html), when you connect to 127.0.0.1 with the client, it'll try to use the unix sockets to perform this operation. Normally this would work fine since it's on the same host. In Docker the socket file is not available.

How to access webserver running on localhost from a docker container on a network?

I have the following system configuration:
Docker container running on user defined network
docker-machine (with VirtualBox on OS:X forwarding port 9000 to 9000)
Local webserver running on http://localhost:9000
I do not know how to make a basic http request against this webserver, from within my docker container.
To test this I am using:
docker exec testcontainer curl --data "foobaz=foo" http://{hostname}:9000/
where I have tried, for hostnames:
'localhost'
'127.0.0.1'
'192.168.99.100' (docker-machine IP)
Each time I receive errors or timeouts. When I run the curl command locally (not in docker and on my host OS:X machine) I am able to successfully post the http request.
I cannot disconnect the docker container from my user-defined network. I also cannot add my webserver to that network, as it is not running in a container. Also, I know it is trivial to connect the other way (curl to a webserver running in a docker container) but this is not my use case.
How can I successfully route that http request from the docker container which is part of a user defined network to my localhost webserver?
You can do this with the actual IP address of your local computer.
So for example, if your en0 IP is 10.100.20.32 on your host OS, you can run:
docker exec testcontainer curl --data "foobaz=foo" http://10.100.20.32:9000/
which will successfully allow you to make the http requests.
Note that if you are doing this from a container on the host docker network, this is trivial, as you can directly access localhost or 0.0.0.0 without having to use the actual machine IP.
You might want to check what the IP address of the container is - you can find this out by running docker inspect.
However, if you want to access the server process running in your container using the docker machine IP, then you should "expose" port 9000 that your contained app is listening on (using Dockerfile) - in this way, you will still need to figure out which port the 9000 container port is mapped to (this shows when you list your containers via $ docker ps. You can also specify port binding option in command line when starting your container like this: $ docker run -p 9000:9000 <your-container>.

How to access web page served by nginx web server running in docker container

We are trying to use docker to run nginx but for some reason I'm unable to access the nginx web server running inside the docker container.
We have booted a Docker Container using the following Dockerfile: https://github.com/dwyl/learn-docker/blob/53cca71042482ca70e03033c66d969b475c61ac2/Dockerfile
(Its a basic hello world using nginx running on port 8888)
To run the container we used:
docker run -it ubuntu bash
we determined the Container's IP address using the docker inspect command:
docker inspect --format '{{ .NetworkSettings.IPAddress }}' a9404c168b21
which is: 172.17.0.11
when I try to visit the container's IP address and the nginx port in a browser http://172.17.0.11:8888/ we get ERR_CONNECTION_TIMED_OUT
or using curl:
curl 172.17.0.11:8888
curl: (7) Failed to connect to 172.17.0.11 port 8888: Connection refused
To attempt to solve this we googled extensively but suspect we might be asking the "wrong" questions...
You shouldn't be trying to hit the IP address of the container, you should be using the IP address of the host machine.
What you are missing is the mapping of the port of the host machine to the port of the container running the nginx server.
Assuming that you want to use port 8888 on the host machine, you need a parameter such as this to map the ports:
docker run ... -p 8888:8888 ...
Then you should be able to access you server at http://<HOST_MACHINE_IP>:8888
EDIT: There is another gotcha if you are running on a Mac. To use Docker on a Mac it's common to use boot2docker but boot2docker adds in another layer. You need determine the IP address of the boot2docker container and use that instead of localhost to access nginx.
$ boot2docker ip
The VM's Host only interface IP address is: <X.X.X.X>
$ wget http://<X.X.X.X>:8888
...
Connecting to <X.X.X.X>:8888... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Reference: https://viget.com/extend/how-to-use-docker-on-os-x-the-missing-guide
EDIT: ... or with docker-machine the equivalent command would be docker-machine ip <machine-name> where <machine-name> is likely to be "default".
You may need to check if your container is running:
docker ps ( you should have an active container)
If no container is active:
docker run -p 80:80 -it /bin/bash
you will then be on your image terminal
start nginx - sudo service nginx start
ctrl p + ctrl q to quit docker without exiting the container
if you are on mac and using boot2docker you cannot use localhost to check your running nginx
so use boot2docker ip
browse using the boot2docker ip

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