I have a docker image which is partially ready to work. To have it fully working I have to run
sudo docker run -d -p 80 --name myimage -e ADMIN_USER="user1" -e ADMIN_PASSWORD='password1' leonixyz/myimage:1.0
The first time the image gets executed my code configures the application inside.
This is handy because each time I need a new instance of the application, which has to be configured each time for a different user, I can pass different environment variables to docker run
and my code will configure the container specifically for the new user.
Unfortunately, I see these variables cannot be removed from the container.
If I do:
sudo docker exec -it <container_id> bash
then I can see variables ADMIN_USER
and ADMIN_PASSWORD
are (obviously) still there.
I tried to unset ADMIN_PASSWORD
on the end of my one-time-configuration code, but it doesn't work.
Also running unset ADMIN_PASSWORD
from the bash shell in the running container won't work.
Is there a way to remove an environment variable from a container, once this has been started?
Thanks
Edit as pointed out it's better to not pass secrets at all via environment variables, a great workaround is explained here https://github.com/docker/docker/issues/13490#issuecomment-162125128