Commit 28c6721a authored by Suzanne Selhorn's avatar Suzanne Selhorn

Merge branch 'docs/move-docker-socket-binding' into 'master'

Move Docker socket binding next to TLS/nonTLS alternatives

See merge request gitlab-org/gitlab!48012
parents 2ac2f384 b43b4548
......@@ -363,6 +363,90 @@ build:
- docker run my-docker-image /script/to/run/tests
```
#### Use Docker socket binding
The third approach is to bind-mount `/var/run/docker.sock` into the
container so that Docker is available in the context of that image.
NOTE: **Note:**
If you bind the Docker socket and you are
[using GitLab Runner 11.11 or later](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner/-/merge_requests/1261),
you can no longer use `docker:19.03.12-dind` as a service. Volume bindings
are done to the services as well, making these incompatible.
To make Docker available in the context of the image:
1. Install [GitLab Runner](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/install/).
1. From the command line, register a runner with the `docker` executor and share `/var/run/docker.sock`:
```shell
sudo gitlab-runner register -n \
--url https://gitlab.com/ \
--registration-token REGISTRATION_TOKEN \
--executor docker \
--description "My Docker Runner" \
--docker-image "docker:19.03.12" \
--docker-volumes /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
```
This command registers a new runner to use the special
`docker:19.03.12` image, which is provided by Docker. **The command uses
the Docker daemon of the runner itself. Any containers spawned by Docker
commands are siblings of the runner rather than children of the runner.**
This may have complications and limitations that are unsuitable for your workflow.
Your `config.toml` file should not have an entry like this:
```toml
[[runners]]
url = "https://gitlab.com/"
token = REGISTRATION_TOKEN
executor = "docker"
[runners.docker]
tls_verify = false
image = "docker:19.03.12"
privileged = false
disable_cache = false
volumes = ["/var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock", "/cache"]
[runners.cache]
Insecure = false
```
1. Use `docker` in the build script. You don't need to
include the `docker:19.03.12-dind` service, like you do when you're using
the Docker-in-Docker executor:
```yaml
image: docker:19.03.12
before_script:
- docker info
build:
stage: build
script:
- docker build -t my-docker-image .
- docker run my-docker-image /script/to/run/tests
```
This method avoids using Docker in privileged mode. However,
the implications of this method are:
- By sharing the Docker daemon, you are effectively disabling all
the security mechanisms of containers and exposing your host to privilege
escalation, which can lead to container breakout. For example, if a project
ran `docker rm -f $(docker ps -a -q)` it would remove the GitLab Runner
containers.
- Concurrent jobs may not work; if your tests
create containers with specific names, they may conflict with each other.
- Sharing files and directories from the source repository into containers may not
work as expected. Volume mounting is done in the context of the host
machine, not the build container. For example:
```shell
docker run --rm -t -i -v $(pwd)/src:/home/app/src test-image:latest run_app_tests
```
#### Enable registry mirror for `docker:dind` service
When the Docker daemon starts inside of the service container, it uses
......@@ -505,90 +589,6 @@ The configuration is picked up by the `dind` service.
sub_path = "daemon.json"
```
#### Use Docker socket binding
The third approach is to bind-mount `/var/run/docker.sock` into the
container so that Docker is available in the context of that image.
NOTE: **Note:**
If you bind the Docker socket [when using GitLab Runner 11.11 or
newer](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner/-/merge_requests/1261),
you can no longer use `docker:19.03.12-dind` as a service because volume bindings
are done to the services as well, making these incompatible.
In order to do that, follow the steps:
1. Install [GitLab Runner](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/install/).
1. Register GitLab Runner from the command line to use `docker` and share `/var/run/docker.sock`:
```shell
sudo gitlab-runner register -n \
--url https://gitlab.com/ \
--registration-token REGISTRATION_TOKEN \
--executor docker \
--description "My Docker Runner" \
--docker-image "docker:19.03.12" \
--docker-volumes /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
```
The above command registers a new runner to use the special
`docker:19.03.12` image which is provided by Docker. **Notice that it's using
the Docker daemon of the runner itself, and any containers spawned by Docker
commands are siblings of the runner rather than children of the runner.**
This may have complications and limitations that are unsuitable for your workflow.
The above command creates a `config.toml` entry similar to this:
```toml
[[runners]]
url = "https://gitlab.com/"
token = REGISTRATION_TOKEN
executor = "docker"
[runners.docker]
tls_verify = false
image = "docker:19.03.12"
privileged = false
disable_cache = false
volumes = ["/var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock", "/cache"]
[runners.cache]
Insecure = false
```
1. You can now use `docker` in the build script (note that you don't need to
include the `docker:19.03.12-dind` service as when using the Docker in Docker
executor):
```yaml
image: docker:19.03.12
before_script:
- docker info
build:
stage: build
script:
- docker build -t my-docker-image .
- docker run my-docker-image /script/to/run/tests
```
While the above method avoids using Docker in privileged mode, you should be
aware of the following implications:
- By sharing the Docker daemon, you are effectively disabling all
the security mechanisms of containers and exposing your host to privilege
escalation which can lead to container breakout. For example, if a project
ran `docker rm -f $(docker ps -a -q)` it would remove the GitLab Runner
containers.
- Concurrent jobs may not work; if your tests
create containers with specific names, they may conflict with each other.
- Sharing files and directories from the source repository into containers may not
work as expected since volume mounting is done in the context of the host
machine, not the build container. For example:
```shell
docker run --rm -t -i -v $(pwd)/src:/home/app/src test-image:latest run_app_tests
```
## Making Docker-in-Docker builds faster with Docker layer caching
When using Docker-in-Docker, Docker downloads all layers of your image every
......
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