I'm trying to dockerize my node.js app. When the container is built I want it to run a git clone
and then start the node server. Therefore I put these operations in a .sh script. And run the script as a single command in the ENTRYPOINT:
FROM ubuntu:14.04
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y build-essential libssl-dev gcc curl npm git
#install gcc 4.9
RUN apt-get install -y software-properties-common python-software-properties
RUN add-apt-repository -y ppa:ubuntu-toolchain-r/test
RUN apt-get update
RUN apt-get install -y libstdc++-4.9-dev
#install newst nodejs
RUN curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_4.x | sudo -E bash -
RUN apt-get install -y nodejs
RUN mkdir -p /usr/src/app
WORKDIR /usr/src/app
ADD package.json /usr/src/app/
RUN npm install
ADD docker-entrypoint.sh /usr/src/app/
EXPOSE 8080
ENTRYPOINT ["/usr/src/app/docker-entrypoint.sh"]
My docker-entrypoint.sh looks like this:
git clone git@<repo>.git
git add remote upstream git@<upstream_repo>.git
/usr/bin/node server.js
After building this image and run:
docker run --env NODE_ENV=development -p 8080:8080 -t -i <image>
I'm getting:
docker: Error response from daemon: oci runtime error: exec: "/usr/src/app/docker-entrypoint.sh": permission denied.
I shell into the container and the permission of docker-entrypoint.sh is:
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 292 Aug 10 18:41 docker-entrypoint.sh
three questions:
Does my bash script have wrong syntax? How do I change the permission of a bash file before adding it into an image? What's the best way to run multiple git commands in entrypoint without using a bash script?
Thanks.
.sh
extension leaves a misleading impression about which interpreters can execute it. You might consider taking that out -- it's not conventional for UNIX commands to have extensions (you don't run ls.elf
, for instance).
exec
a shell that way? wouldn't it need the bash
prefix.
"Permission denied" prevents your script from being invoked at all. Thus, the only syntax that could be possibly pertinent is that of the first line (the "shebang"), which should look like #!/usr/bin/env bash, or #!/bin/bash, or similar depending on your target's filesystem layout. Most likely the filesystem permissions not being set to allow execute. It's also possible that the shebang references something that isn't executable, but this is far less likely. Mooted by the ease of repairing the prior issues.
The simple reading of
docker: Error response from daemon: oci runtime error: exec: "/usr/src/app/docker-entrypoint.sh": permission denied.
...is that the script isn't marked executable.
RUN ["chmod", "+x", "/usr/src/app/docker-entrypoint.sh"]
will address this within the container. Alternately, you can ensure that the local copy referenced by the Dockerfile is executable, and then use COPY
(which is explicitly documented to retain metadata).
An executable file needs to have permissions for execute set before you can execute it.
In your machine where you are building the docker image (not inside the docker image itself) try running:
ls -la path/to/directory
The first column of the output for your executable (in this case docker-entrypoint.sh) should have the executable bits set something like:
-rwxrwxr-x
If not then try:
chmod +x docker-entrypoint.sh
and then build your docker image again.
Docker uses it's own file system but it copies everything over (including permissions bits) from the source directories.
chmod +x docker-entrypoint.sh
on tzhe host is actually the recommended solution, as it is much simpler than changing your Dockerfile
.
I faced same issue & it resolved by
ENTRYPOINT ["sh", "/docker-entrypoint.sh"]
For the Dockerfile in the original question it should be like:
ENTRYPOINT ["sh", "/usr/src/app/docker-entrypoint.sh"]
sh
, ignoring its shebang's specification of an interpreter; so if it uses #!/bin/bash
, saying it wants to be interpreted with bash, that will be ignored and it'll be interpreted with sh
instead, thus disallowing language features like [[ ]]
, arrays, etc.
The problem is due to original file not having execute permission.
Check original file has permission.
run ls -al
If result get -rw-r--r--
,
run
chmod +x docker-entrypoint.sh
before docker build!
Remove Dot [.]
This problem take with me more than 3 hours finally, I just tried the problem was in removing dot from the end just.
problem was
docker run -p 3000:80 --rm --name test-con test-app .
/usr/local/bin/docker-entrypoint.sh: 8: exec: .: Permission denied
just remove dot from the end of your command line :
docker run -p 3000:80 --rm --name test-con test-app
Grant execution rights to the file docker-entrypoint.sh
sudo chmod 775 docker-entrypoint.sh
This is an old question asked two years prior to my answer, I am going to post what worked for me anyways.
In my working directory I have two files: Dockerfile & provision.sh
Dockerfile:
FROM centos:6.8
# put the script in the /root directory of the container
COPY provision.sh /root
# execute the script inside the container
RUN /root/provision.sh
EXPOSE 80
# Default command
CMD ["/bin/bash"]
provision.sh:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
yum upgrade
I was able to make the file in the docker container executable by setting the file outside the container as executable chmod 700 provision.sh
then running docker build .
.
This is a bit stupid maybe but the error message I got was Permission denied and it sent me spiralling down in a very wrong direction to attempt to solve it. (Here for example)
I haven't even added any bash script myself, I think one is added by nodejs image which I use.
FROM node:14.9.0
I was wrongly running to expose/connect the port on my local:
docker run -p 80:80 [name] . # this is wrong!
which gives
/usr/local/bin/docker-entrypoint.sh: 8: exec: .: Permission denied
But you shouldn't even have a dot in the end, it was added to documentation of another projects docker image by misstake. You should simply run:
docker run -p 80:80 [name]
I like Docker a lot but it's sad it has so many gotchas like this and not always very clear error messages...
If you do not use DockerFile, you can simply add permission as command line argument of the bash:
docker run -t <image> /bin/bash -c "chmod +x /usr/src/app/docker-entrypoint.sh; /usr/src/app/docker-entrypoint.sh"
If you still get Permission denied
errors when you try to run your script in the docker's entrypoint, just try DO NOT use the shell form of the entrypoint:
Instead of: ENTRYPOINT ./bin/watcher
write ENTRYPOINT ["./bin/watcher"]
:
https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#entrypoint
https://i.stack.imgur.com/TOtR7.png
Success story sharing
noexec
flag, runbash yourscript
instead of./yourscript
.docker build
the imtermediate container works fine. But when I dodocker run
, it throws such error. Seems like a magical intermediate container I have got.