github.com/endocode/docker@v1.4.2-0.20160113120958-46eb4700391e/docs/userguide/networking/default_network/dockerlinks.md (about) 1 <!--[metadata]> 2 +++ 3 title = "Legacy container links" 4 description = "Learn how to connect Docker containers together." 5 keywords = ["Examples, Usage, user guide, links, linking, docker, documentation, examples, names, name, container naming, port, map, network port, network"] 6 [menu.main] 7 parent = "smn_networking_def" 8 weight=-2 9 +++ 10 <![end-metadata]--> 11 12 # Legacy container links 13 14 The information in this section explains legacy container links within the Docker default bridge. This is a `bridge` network named `bridge` created automatically when you install Docker. 15 16 Before the [Docker networks feature](../dockernetworks.md), you could use the 17 Docker link feature to allow containers to discover each other and securely 18 transfer information about one container to another container. With the 19 introduction of the Docker networks feature, you can still create links but they 20 behave differently between default `bridge` network and 21 [user defined networks](../work-with-networks.md#linking-containers-in-user-defined-networks) 22 23 This section briefly discusses connecting via a network port and then goes into 24 detail on container linking in default `bridge` network. 25 26 ## Connect using network port mapping 27 28 In [the Using Docker section](../../usingdocker.md), you created a 29 container that ran a Python Flask application: 30 31 $ docker run -d -P training/webapp python app.py 32 33 > **Note:** 34 > Containers have an internal network and an IP address 35 > (as we saw when we used the `docker inspect` command to show the container's 36 > IP address in the [Using Docker](../../usingdocker.md) section). 37 > Docker can have a variety of network configurations. You can see more 38 > information on Docker networking [here](../index.md). 39 40 When that container was created, the `-P` flag was used to automatically map 41 any network port inside it to a random high port within an *ephemeral port 42 range* on your Docker host. Next, when `docker ps` was run, you saw that port 43 5000 in the container was bound to port 49155 on the host. 44 45 $ docker ps nostalgic_morse 46 CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES 47 bc533791f3f5 training/webapp:latest python app.py 5 seconds ago Up 2 seconds 0.0.0.0:49155->5000/tcp nostalgic_morse 48 49 You also saw how you can bind a container's ports to a specific port using 50 the `-p` flag. Here port 80 of the host is mapped to port 5000 of the 51 container: 52 53 $ docker run -d -p 80:5000 training/webapp python app.py 54 55 And you saw why this isn't such a great idea because it constrains you to 56 only one container on that specific port. 57 58 Instead, you may specify a range of host ports to bind a container port to 59 that is different than the default *ephemeral port range*: 60 61 $ docker run -d -p 8000-9000:5000 training/webapp python app.py 62 63 This would bind port 5000 in the container to a randomly available port 64 between 8000 and 9000 on the host. 65 66 There are also a few other ways you can configure the `-p` flag. By 67 default the `-p` flag will bind the specified port to all interfaces on 68 the host machine. But you can also specify a binding to a specific 69 interface, for example only to the `localhost`. 70 71 $ docker run -d -p 127.0.0.1:80:5000 training/webapp python app.py 72 73 This would bind port 5000 inside the container to port 80 on the 74 `localhost` or `127.0.0.1` interface on the host machine. 75 76 Or, to bind port 5000 of the container to a dynamic port but only on the 77 `localhost`, you could use: 78 79 $ docker run -d -p 127.0.0.1::5000 training/webapp python app.py 80 81 You can also bind UDP ports by adding a trailing `/udp`. For example: 82 83 $ docker run -d -p 127.0.0.1:80:5000/udp training/webapp python app.py 84 85 You also learned about the useful `docker port` shortcut which showed us the 86 current port bindings. This is also useful for showing you specific port 87 configurations. For example, if you've bound the container port to the 88 `localhost` on the host machine, then the `docker port` output will reflect that. 89 90 $ docker port nostalgic_morse 5000 91 127.0.0.1:49155 92 93 > **Note:** 94 > The `-p` flag can be used multiple times to configure multiple ports. 95 96 ## Connect with the linking system 97 98 Network port mappings are not the only way Docker containers can connect to one 99 another. Docker also has a linking system that allows you to link multiple 100 containers together and send connection information from one to another. When 101 containers are linked, information about a source container can be sent to a 102 recipient container. This allows the recipient to see selected data describing 103 aspects of the source container. 104 105 ### The importance of naming 106 107 To establish links, Docker relies on the names of your containers. 108 You've already seen that each container you create has an automatically 109 created name; indeed you've become familiar with our old friend 110 `nostalgic_morse` during this guide. You can also name containers 111 yourself. This naming provides two useful functions: 112 113 1. It can be useful to name containers that do specific functions in a way 114 that makes it easier for you to remember them, for example naming a 115 container containing a web application `web`. 116 117 2. It provides Docker with a reference point that allows it to refer to other 118 containers, for example, you can specify to link the container `web` to container `db`. 119 120 You can name your container by using the `--name` flag, for example: 121 122 $ docker run -d -P --name web training/webapp python app.py 123 124 This launches a new container and uses the `--name` flag to 125 name the container `web`. You can see the container's name using the 126 `docker ps` command. 127 128 $ docker ps -l 129 CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES 130 aed84ee21bde training/webapp:latest python app.py 12 hours ago Up 2 seconds 0.0.0.0:49154->5000/tcp web 131 132 You can also use `docker inspect` to return the container's name. 133 134 135 > **Note:** 136 > Container names have to be unique. That means you can only call 137 > one container `web`. If you want to re-use a container name you must delete 138 > the old container (with `docker rm`) before you can create a new 139 > container with the same name. As an alternative you can use the `--rm` 140 > flag with the `docker run` command. This will delete the container 141 > immediately after it is stopped. 142 143 ## Communication across links 144 145 Links allow containers to discover each other and securely transfer information 146 about one container to another container. When you set up a link, you create a 147 conduit between a source container and a recipient container. The recipient can 148 then access select data about the source. To create a link, you use the `--link` 149 flag. First, create a new container, this time one containing a database. 150 151 $ docker run -d --name db training/postgres 152 153 This creates a new container called `db` from the `training/postgres` 154 image, which contains a PostgreSQL database. 155 156 Now, you need to delete the `web` container you created previously so you can replace it 157 with a linked one: 158 159 $ docker rm -f web 160 161 Now, create a new `web` container and link it with your `db` container. 162 163 $ docker run -d -P --name web --link db:db training/webapp python app.py 164 165 This will link the new `web` container with the `db` container you created 166 earlier. The `--link` flag takes the form: 167 168 --link <name or id>:alias 169 170 Where `name` is the name of the container we're linking to and `alias` is an 171 alias for the link name. You'll see how that alias gets used shortly. 172 The `--link` flag also takes the form: 173 174 --link <name or id> 175 176 In which case the alias will match the name. You could have written the previous 177 example as: 178 179 $ docker run -d -P --name web --link db training/webapp python app.py 180 181 Next, inspect your linked containers with `docker inspect`: 182 183 $ docker inspect -f "{{ .HostConfig.Links }}" web 184 [/db:/web/db] 185 186 You can see that the `web` container is now linked to the `db` container 187 `web/db`. Which allows it to access information about the `db` container. 188 189 So what does linking the containers actually do? You've learned that a link allows a 190 source container to provide information about itself to a recipient container. In 191 our example, the recipient, `web`, can access information about the source `db`. To do 192 this, Docker creates a secure tunnel between the containers that doesn't need to 193 expose any ports externally on the container; you'll note when we started the 194 `db` container we did not use either the `-P` or `-p` flags. That's a big benefit of 195 linking: we don't need to expose the source container, here the PostgreSQL database, to 196 the network. 197 198 Docker exposes connectivity information for the source container to the 199 recipient container in two ways: 200 201 * Environment variables, 202 * Updating the `/etc/hosts` file. 203 204 ### Environment variables 205 206 Docker creates several environment variables when you link containers. Docker 207 automatically creates environment variables in the target container based on 208 the `--link` parameters. It will also expose all environment variables 209 originating from Docker from the source container. These include variables from: 210 211 * the `ENV` commands in the source container's Dockerfile 212 * the `-e`, `--env` and `--env-file` options on the `docker run` 213 command when the source container is started 214 215 These environment variables enable programmatic discovery from within the 216 target container of information related to the source container. 217 218 > **Warning**: 219 > It is important to understand that *all* environment variables originating 220 > from Docker within a container are made available to *any* container 221 > that links to it. This could have serious security implications if sensitive 222 > data is stored in them. 223 224 Docker sets an `<alias>_NAME` environment variable for each target container 225 listed in the `--link` parameter. For example, if a new container called 226 `web` is linked to a database container called `db` via `--link db:webdb`, 227 then Docker creates a `WEBDB_NAME=/web/webdb` variable in the `web` container. 228 229 Docker also defines a set of environment variables for each port exposed by the 230 source container. Each variable has a unique prefix in the form: 231 232 `<name>_PORT_<port>_<protocol>` 233 234 The components in this prefix are: 235 236 * the alias `<name>` specified in the `--link` parameter (for example, `webdb`) 237 * the `<port>` number exposed 238 * a `<protocol>` which is either TCP or UDP 239 240 Docker uses this prefix format to define three distinct environment variables: 241 242 * The `prefix_ADDR` variable contains the IP Address from the URL, for 243 example `WEBDB_PORT_5432_TCP_ADDR=172.17.0.82`. 244 * The `prefix_PORT` variable contains just the port number from the URL for 245 example `WEBDB_PORT_5432_TCP_PORT=5432`. 246 * The `prefix_PROTO` variable contains just the protocol from the URL for 247 example `WEBDB_PORT_5432_TCP_PROTO=tcp`. 248 249 If the container exposes multiple ports, an environment variable set is 250 defined for each one. This means, for example, if a container exposes 4 ports 251 that Docker creates 12 environment variables, 3 for each port. 252 253 Additionally, Docker creates an environment variable called `<alias>_PORT`. 254 This variable contains the URL of the source container's first exposed port. 255 The 'first' port is defined as the exposed port with the lowest number. 256 For example, consider the `WEBDB_PORT=tcp://172.17.0.82:5432` variable. If 257 that port is used for both tcp and udp, then the tcp one is specified. 258 259 Finally, Docker also exposes each Docker originated environment variable 260 from the source container as an environment variable in the target. For each 261 variable Docker creates an `<alias>_ENV_<name>` variable in the target 262 container. The variable's value is set to the value Docker used when it 263 started the source container. 264 265 Returning back to our database example, you can run the `env` 266 command to list the specified container's environment variables. 267 268 ``` 269 $ docker run --rm --name web2 --link db:db training/webapp env 270 . . . 271 DB_NAME=/web2/db 272 DB_PORT=tcp://172.17.0.5:5432 273 DB_PORT_5432_TCP=tcp://172.17.0.5:5432 274 DB_PORT_5432_TCP_PROTO=tcp 275 DB_PORT_5432_TCP_PORT=5432 276 DB_PORT_5432_TCP_ADDR=172.17.0.5 277 . . . 278 ``` 279 280 You can see that Docker has created a series of environment variables with 281 useful information about the source `db` container. Each variable is prefixed 282 with 283 `DB_`, which is populated from the `alias` you specified above. If the `alias` 284 were `db1`, the variables would be prefixed with `DB1_`. You can use these 285 environment variables to configure your applications to connect to the database 286 on the `db` container. The connection will be secure and private; only the 287 linked `web` container will be able to talk to the `db` container. 288 289 ### Important notes on Docker environment variables 290 291 Unlike host entries in the [`/etc/hosts` file](#updating-the-etchosts-file), 292 IP addresses stored in the environment variables are not automatically updated 293 if the source container is restarted. We recommend using the host entries in 294 `/etc/hosts` to resolve the IP address of linked containers. 295 296 These environment variables are only set for the first process in the 297 container. Some daemons, such as `sshd`, will scrub them when spawning shells 298 for connection. 299 300 ### Updating the `/etc/hosts` file 301 302 In addition to the environment variables, Docker adds a host entry for the 303 source container to the `/etc/hosts` file. Here's an entry for the `web` 304 container: 305 306 $ docker run -t -i --rm --link db:webdb training/webapp /bin/bash 307 root@aed84ee21bde:/opt/webapp# cat /etc/hosts 308 172.17.0.7 aed84ee21bde 309 . . . 310 172.17.0.5 webdb 6e5cdeb2d300 db 311 312 You can see two relevant host entries. The first is an entry for the `web` 313 container that uses the Container ID as a host name. The second entry uses the 314 link alias to reference the IP address of the `db` container. In addition to 315 the alias you provide, the linked container's name--if unique from the alias 316 provided to the `--link` parameter--and the linked container's hostname will 317 also be added in `/etc/hosts` for the linked container's IP address. You can ping 318 that host now via any of these entries: 319 320 root@aed84ee21bde:/opt/webapp# apt-get install -yqq inetutils-ping 321 root@aed84ee21bde:/opt/webapp# ping webdb 322 PING webdb (172.17.0.5): 48 data bytes 323 56 bytes from 172.17.0.5: icmp_seq=0 ttl=64 time=0.267 ms 324 56 bytes from 172.17.0.5: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.250 ms 325 56 bytes from 172.17.0.5: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.256 ms 326 327 > **Note:** 328 > In the example, you'll note you had to install `ping` because it was not included 329 > in the container initially. 330 331 Here, you used the `ping` command to ping the `db` container using its host entry, 332 which resolves to `172.17.0.5`. You can use this host entry to configure an application 333 to make use of your `db` container. 334 335 > **Note:** 336 > You can link multiple recipient containers to a single source. For 337 > example, you could have multiple (differently named) web containers attached to your 338 >`db` container. 339 340 If you restart the source container, the linked containers `/etc/hosts` files 341 will be automatically updated with the source container's new IP address, 342 allowing linked communication to continue. 343 344 $ docker restart db 345 db 346 $ docker run -t -i --rm --link db:db training/webapp /bin/bash 347 root@aed84ee21bde:/opt/webapp# cat /etc/hosts 348 172.17.0.7 aed84ee21bde 349 . . . 350 172.17.0.9 db 351 352 # Related information