问题
I'm running Celery under Docker Compose. I'd like to make Celery's Flower persistent. So I do:
version: '2'
volumes:
[...]
flower_data: {}
[...]
flower:
image: [base code image]
ports:
- "5555:5555"
volumes:
- flower_data:/flower
command:
celery -A proj flower --port=5555 --persistent=True --db=/flower/flower
However, then I get:
IOError: [Errno 13] Permission denied: 'flower.dat'
I ran the following to elucidate why:
bash -c "ls -al /flower; whoami; celery -A proj flower --persistent=True --db=/flower/flower"
This made it clear why:
flower_1 | drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 4096 Mar 10 23:05 .
flower_1 | drwxr-xr-x 7 root root 4096 Mar 10 23:05 ..
Namely, the directory is mounted as root
, yet in [base code image]
I ensure the user running is not root, as per Celery's docks to never run as root:
FROM python:2.7
...
RUN groupadd user && useradd --create-home --home-dir /usrc/src/app -g user user
USER user
What would be the best way for Celery Flower to continue to run not as root, yet be able to use this named volume?
回答1:
The following works: In the Dockerfile, install sudo
and add user
to the sudo
group, requiring a password:
RUN apt-get update
RUN apt-get -y install sudo
RUN echo "user:SECRET" | chpasswd && adduser user sudo
Then, in the Docker Compose config, the command will be:
bash -c "echo SECRET | sudo -S chown user:user /flower; celery -A proj flower --power=5555 --persistent --db=/flower/flower"
I'm not sure if this is the best way, though, or what the security implications of this are.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/35929442/access-named-volume-from-container-when-not-running-as-root