Kind of a longshot, but has anyone had any problems using bcrypt in a linux container (specifically docker) and know of an automated workaround? I have the same issue as these two:
Invalid ELF header with node bcrypt on AWSBox
bcrypt invalid elf header when running node app
My Dockerfile
# Pull base image
FROM node:0.12
# Expose port 8080
EXPOSE 8080
# Add current directory into path /data in image
ADD . /data
# Set working directory to /data
WORKDIR /data
# Install dependencies from package.json
RUN npm install --production
# Run index.js
CMD ["npm", "start"]
I get the previously mentioned invalid ELF header error if I have bcrypt already installed in my node_modules, but if I remove it (either just itself or all my packages), it isn't installed for some reason when I build the container. I have to manually enter the container after the build and install it inside.
Is there an automated workaround?
Or maybe, just, what would be a good alternative to bcrypt with a Node stack?
Liam's comment is on the money, just expanding on it for future travellers on the internets.
The issue is that you've copied your node_modules folder into your container. The reason that this is a problem is that bcrypt is a native module. It's not just javascript, but also a bunch of C code that gets compiled at the time of installation.
The binaries that come out of that compilation get stored in the node_modules folder and they're customised to the place they were built. Transplanting them out of their OSX home into a strange Linux land causes them to misbehave and complain about ELF headers and fairy feet.
The solution is to
echo node_modules >> .dockerignore
and runnpm install
as part of your Dockerfile. This means that the native modules will be compiled inside the container rather than outside it on your laptop.With this in place, there is no need to run npm install before your start CMD. Just having it in the build phase of the Dockerfile is fine.
protip: the official node images set NODE_ENV=production by default, which npm treats the same as the --production flag. Most of the time this is a good thing. It is not a good thing when your Dockerfile also contains some build steps that rely on dev dependencies (webpack, etc). In that case you want
NODE_ENV=null npm install
pro protip: you can take better advantage of Docker's caching by copying in your package.json separately to the rest of your code. Make your Dockerfile look like this:
And that way Docker will only re-run
npm install
when you change your package.json, not every time you change a line of code.Okay, so I have a working automated workaround:
Call
npm install --production
in the CMD instruction. I'm going to wave my hands at figuring out why I have to install bcrypt at the time of executing the container, but it works.Updated Dockerfile