I am working on an application which requires some configuration to be stored in /etc/hosts file of a docker container.
I have tried it with many options but did not find any correct way of modifying the /etc/hosts file at run time.
I want to do it either by Dockerfile or by java code.
I am able to build the docker image and modify the /etc/hosts files manually, but unfortunately that is not our projects requirement.
Depends upon what sort of modifications you want to do. If you just need to add more hosts, you can probably do it within docker run command like -
docker run --add-host="localA:127.0.0.1" --add-host="localB:172.0.0.1" ....
This link might be useful as well :- https://github.com/docker/docker/issues/10324
The recommended solution is to use the --add-host
option to docker run
or the equivalent in the docker-compose.yml
file if you're using docker-compose.
BUT, I was in the same boat as you. I have a script that modifies the hosts file that I wanted to run in the container, so what I did was COPY
the script into the container and make it executable, then in the Dockerfile's CMD
script that your choose, call your script to modify the hosts file
Works
in Dockerfile
# add the modifyHostsFile script, make it executable
COPY ./bash-scripts/modifyHostsFile.sh /home/user/modifyHostsFile.sh
RUN sudo chmod +x /home/user/modifyHostsFile.sh
# run the script that starts services
CMD ["/bin/bash", "/home/user/run.sh"]
And in the run.sh
script I execute that script to modify the hosts file
# modify the hosts file
bash ./modifyHostsFile.sh
Doesn't Work
in Dockerfile
# add the modifyHostsFile script, make it executable
COPY ./bash-scripts/modifyHostsFile.sh /home/user/modifyHostsFile.sh
RUN sudo chmod +x /home/user/modifyHostsFile.sh
# modify the hosts file right now
RUN bash /home/user/modifyHostsFile.sh
# run the script that starts services
CMD ["/bin/bash", "/home/user/run.sh"]
You have to run the script that modifies your hosts file during your CMD
script. If you run it via RUN bash ./modifyHostsFile.sh
in your Dockerfile it will be added to that container, but then Docker will continue to the next step in the Dockerfile and create a new container (it creates a new intermediary container for each step in the Dockerfile) and your changes to the /etc/hosts
will be overridden.
I had the same problem and overcome it with vi
in ex
mode.
ex -sc '%s/foo/bar/g|x' /etc/hosts