Docker Image Tags:
latest
3
3.x.x
Docker image to forward TCP and UDP traffic to the docker host. This
also works for (rootless) podman. This README.md uses the term docker, but you
can read that as both docker
and podman
(it works for both), unless
otherwise specified.
This container will determine the docker host address in the following order
- If set use environment variable
DOCKER_HOST
. Can be an IP address or a DNS name.- This allows you to use this image to forward traffic to arbitrary destinations, not only the docker host.
- Try to resolve host address from DNS names.
- docker hostname
host.docker.internal
- podman hostname
host.containers.internal
- docker hostname
- Defaults to default gateway (
ip -4 route show default
)
By default all ports (1-65535
) are forwarded to docker host.
- You may restrict ports by setting environment variable
PORTS
to a space and/or comma separated list of ports and/or port ranges e.gdocker run -e PORTS='443, 8000-9000' ...
.
- You may also configure port mapping e.g.
443:8443, 8000-9000:5000-6000
(CONTAINER_PORT:HOST_PORT
).
Important
-
You have to bind your host applications to
0.0.0.0
orbridge
network gateway in addition to127.0.0.1
.Use following docker command to get the bridge network gateway IP address
docker network inspect bridge --format='{{( index .IPAM.Config 0).Gateway}}'
For (rootless) podman, it's sufficient to bind to localhost, assuming default podman installation.
-
You might need to configure your firewall of the host system to allow the docker-host container to communicate with the host on your relevant port, see #21.
-
You probably need to add
nf_nat
kernal module to podman machine by running following commandspodman machine ssh sudo modprobe nf_nat
These examples will send messages from docker container to docker host with netcat
Start netcat
server TCP on port 2323
to receive and display messages
nc -lk 2323
Start netcat
server UDP on port 5353
to receive and display messages
nc -lk 5353 -u
Run the dockerhost container.
docker run --rm \
--name 'docker-host' \
--cap-add=NET_ADMIN --cap-add=NET_RAW \
--restart on-failure \
-d qoomon/docker-host
Run your application container and link the dockerhost container.
The dockerhost will be reachable through the domain/link dockerhost
of the dockerhost container
docker run --rm \
--link 'docker-host' \
-it alpine nc 'docker-host' 2323 -v
docker run --rm \
--link 'docker-host' \
-it alpine nc 'docker-host' 5353 -u -v
Create the dockerhost network.
network_name="Network-$RANDOM"
docker network create "$network_name"
Run the dockerhost container within the dockerhost network.
docker run --name "${network_name}-docker-host" \
--cap-add=NET_ADMIN --cap-add=NET_RAW \
--restart on-failure \
--net=${network_name} --network-alias 'docker-host' \
qoomon/docker-host
Run your application container within the dockerhost network.
The dockerhost will be reachable through the domain/link docker-host
of the dockerhost container
docker run --rm \
--link 'docker-host' \
-it alpine nc 'docker-host' 2323 -v
docker run --rm \
--link 'docker-host' \
-it alpine nc 'docker-host' 5353 -u -v
version: '2'
services:
docker-host:
image: qoomon/docker-host
cap_add: [ 'NET_ADMIN', 'NET_RAW' ]
mem_limit: 8M
restart: on-failure
tcp_message_emitter:
depends_on: [ docker-host ]
image: alpine
command: [ "sh", "-c", "while :; do date; sleep 1; done | nc 'docker-host' 2323 -v"]
udp_message_emitter:
depends_on: [ docker-host ]
image: alpine
command: [ "sh", "-c", "while :; do date; sleep 1; done | nc 'docker-host' 5353 -u -v"]