157

I have a YAML scalar that is throwing the following error when I try to evaluate my docker-compose.yml file:

ERROR: Invalid interpolation format for "environment" option in service "time_service": "${Time.now}"

YAML:

---
version: '2'
services:
  time_service:
    build: "."
    environment:
      TIME: "${Time.now}"

How can I maintain the same string output as written, but avoid having the docker-compose interpret it as faulty string interpolation?

1
  • 1
    It is not the YAML parser that is interpreting that string. YAML doesn't know about ${}. Interpreting is done by docker-compose and that is written in Python, so the tag ruby was inappropriate as well.
    – Anthon
    Nov 15, 2016 at 23:05

2 Answers 2

240

You can use a $$ (double-dollar sign) when your configuration needs a literal dollar sign.

You are hitting the docker-compose variable substitution, which is well documented here:

Both $VARIABLE and ${VARIABLE} syntax are supported. Extended shell-style features, such as ${VARIABLE-default} and ${VARIABLE/foo/bar}, are not supported.

You can use a $$ (double-dollar sign) when your configuration needs a literal dollar sign. This also prevents Compose from interpolating a value, so a $$ allows you to refer to environment variables that you don’t want processed by Compose.

docker-compose is written in Python, as you see on github, the doubling mechanism to get the original meaning of special characters can be found in many programs, I needed to use this myself, while programming, as far back in 1984.

3
  • what is the functional difference between the variable with and without the curly braces? $VARIABLE vs ${VARIABLE}?
    – Zaffer
    Jul 24, 2021 at 14:01
  • 1
    If the $VARIABLE is directly followed alphabetic character ($VARIABLEX, you'll have to use the more verbose ${VARIABLE}X
    – Anthon
    Jul 24, 2021 at 19:21
  • Note that ${VARIABLE-default} "extended shell-style feature" is now supported (but still not ${VARIABLE/foo/bar}) and that Docker Compose V2 is no longer written in Python but in Go.
    – AymDev
    Nov 21, 2022 at 10:28
50

Found the answer by copying the suggestion for % characters in this post

It requires a double dollar sign $$.

So I needed "$${Time.now}", which evaluates to "${Time.now}"

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