How can a container identify which container it is in a set of a scaled docker-compose service?

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萌比男神i
萌比男神i 2021-02-15 11:15

I have a docker container called node that I want to scale to n containers. A given node container needs to know which container it is in the set of n

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  •  夕颜
    夕颜 (楼主)
    2021-02-15 12:01

    This can be solved by using the Docker api.

    While the code in this answer is Python, and my linked example is Java, this is pretty independent of your language. Just use the Docker API with a library of your choice, or make requests directly to the Docker API socket.

    I used the docker-py package to access it.

    The api exposes a labels dictionary for each container, and the keys com.docker.compose.container-number, com.docker.compose.project and com.docker.compose.service did what was needed to build the hostname.

    The code below is a simplified for code I am now using. You can find my advanced code with caching and fancy stuff that at Github at luckydonald/pbft/dockerus.ServiceInfos (python) as well as a similar java version at luckydonald/pbft-java/de.luckydonald.utils.dockerus.Dockerus (java) which tries to do the same thing in java, but is probably harder to read, and has no caching.

    something

    Lets tackle this in steps:


    0. Make the API available to the container.

    We need to make the socket file available to the volume, so in the volume section of your docker-compose.yml file add /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:

    version: '2'
    services:
      node:
        build: .
        volumes:
          - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
    

    This maps the socket file into the docker container. Because we don't expose any socket ports, we don't have to worry about firewalls for the outside world.


    1. Connect to the API

    Now we can connect to it. As I am using python, I use docker-py for that.

    from docker import Client  # pip install docker-py
    
    cli = Client(base_url='unix://var/run/docker.sock')
    

    2. Getting all containers in the same scale group, by filtering the containers by our own project name and service name.

    Find ourself

    To know which container we are, we compare the $HOSTNAME environment variable with the container Id.

    import os
    HOSTNAME = os.environ.get("HOSTNAME")
    
    all_containers = cli.containers()
    
    # filter out ourself by HOSTNAME
    our_container = [c for c in all_containers if c['Id'][:12] == HOSTNAME[:12]][0]
    

    The hostname should be 12 characters of the Id, so we cut the id when comparing to be sure it will be equal. our_container now is the api representation of ourself. Yay.

    Next is to get the other containers.

    We will search for containers which have the same project and service names. That way we know they are instances of ourself.

    service_name = our_container.Labels['com.docker.compose.service']
    project_name = our_container.Labels['com.docker.compose.project']
    
    filters = [
      'com.docker.compose.project={}'.format(project_name),
      'com.docker.compose.service={}'.format(service_name)
    ]
    # The python wrapper has a filter function to do that work for us.
    containers = cli.containers(filters={'label': filters})
    

    We only want each container where the com.docker.compose.project and com.docker.compose.service label is the same as our own container's.

    And finally build a list of hostnames
    hostname_list = list()
    for container in containers:
      project = container.Labels["com.docker.compose.project"]
      service = container.Labels["com.docker.compose.service"]
      number  = container.Labels["com.docker.compose.container-number"]
      hostname = "{project}_{service}_{i}".format(project=project, service=service, i=number)
      hostname_list.append(hostname)
    # end for
    

    So, we got our hostname_list.

    I am also using that as a class, with caching the values for a minute: dockerus.ServiceInfos (backup at gist.github.com)

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