370

I have copied this code from what seems to be various working dockerfiles around, here is mine:

FROM ubuntu

MAINTAINER Luke Crooks "[email protected]"

# Update aptitude with new repo
RUN apt-get update

# Install software 
RUN apt-get install -y git python-virtualenv

# Make ssh dir
RUN mkdir /root/.ssh/

# Copy over private key, and set permissions
ADD id_rsa /root/.ssh/id_rsa
RUN chmod 700 /root/.ssh/id_rsa
RUN chown -R root:root /root/.ssh

# Create known_hosts
RUN touch /root/.ssh/known_hosts

# Remove host checking
RUN echo "Host bitbucket.org\n\tStrictHostKeyChecking no\n" >> /root/.ssh/config

# Clone the conf files into the docker container
RUN git clone [email protected]:Pumalo/docker-conf.git /home/docker-conf

This gives me the error

Step 10 : RUN git clone [email protected]:Pumalo/docker-conf.git /home/docker-conf
 ---> Running in 0d244d812a54
Cloning into '/home/docker-conf'...
Warning: Permanently added 'bitbucket.org,131.103.20.167' (RSA) to the list of known hosts.
Permission denied (publickey).
fatal: Could not read from remote repository.

Please make sure you have the correct access rights
and the repository exists.
2014/04/30 16:07:28 The command [/bin/sh -c git clone [email protected]:Pumalo/docker-conf.git /home/docker-conf] returned a non-zero code: 128

This is my first time using dockerfiles, but from what I have read (and taken from working configs) I cannot see why this doesn't work.

My id_rsa is in the same folder as my dockerfile and is a copy of my local key which can clone this repo no problem.

Edit:

In my dockerfile I can add:

RUN cat /root/.ssh/id_rsa

And it prints out the correct key, so I know its being copied correctly.

I have also tried to do as noah advised and ran:

RUN echo "Host bitbucket.org\n\tIdentityFile /root/.ssh/id_rsa\n\tStrictHostKeyChecking no" >> /etc/ssh/ssh_config

This sadly also doesn't work.

3
  • 1
    Watch out! Docker images have a versioned file system and they remember command history. A lot of the answers will bake git credentials into your docker image. At best you are letting anyone who has the image get access to the repo until you delete the key from Github/Gitlab/etc.. At worst you are giving anyone who has the image total access to your Github/etc. account! There is almost no secure way to clone a git repo into a Dockerfile, see this answer for a real alternative (copying files in).
    – jrh
    Feb 17, 2022 at 15:36
  • Hypothetically even if you stored your git credentials in a Docker secret (none of these answers do that), you will still have to expose that secret in a place where the git cli can access it, and if you write it to file, you have now stored it in the image forever for anyone to read (even if you delete the credentials later). I am not aware of any way to securely handle git CLI credentials that git clone can use that will not also bake that credential into your image.
    – jrh
    Feb 17, 2022 at 15:38
  • 2
    I flagged this question, because it is so old that many answers are dangerously wrong now. Read the docs on how to do this in modern docker: docs.docker.com/develop/develop-images/build_enhancements/…
    – P.R.
    Aug 2, 2022 at 11:33

12 Answers 12

376

My key was password protected which was causing the problem, a working file is now listed below (for help of future googlers)

FROM ubuntu

MAINTAINER Luke Crooks "[email protected]"

# Update aptitude with new repo
RUN apt-get update

# Install software 
RUN apt-get install -y git
# Make ssh dir
RUN mkdir /root/.ssh/

# Copy over private key, and set permissions
# Warning! Anyone who gets their hands on this image will be able
# to retrieve this private key file from the corresponding image layer
ADD id_rsa /root/.ssh/id_rsa

# Create known_hosts
RUN touch /root/.ssh/known_hosts
# Add bitbuckets key
RUN ssh-keyscan bitbucket.org >> /root/.ssh/known_hosts

# Clone the conf files into the docker container
RUN git clone [email protected]:User/repo.git
27
  • 14
    Just in case, here it is a link describing how to remove the password protection of the key
    – Thomas
    Jul 9, 2014 at 11:12
  • 114
    Just an FYI, after you run RUN ssh-keyscan bitbucket.org >> /root/.ssh/known_hosts, the Image will save that as a layer. If anyone gets a hold of your image, they can retrieve the key... even if you delete that file in a later layer, b/c they can go back to Step 7 when you added it. Jan 7, 2015 at 22:37
  • 31
    Thanks for the helpful answer. But for us the build failed randomly and after investigation we noticed that ssh-keyscan has a default timeout of 5 seconds which bitbucket often exceeded. ssh-keyscan won't even report an error. So better run RUN ssh-keyscan -T 60 bitbucket.org >> /root/.ssh/known_hosts to be safe.
    – fluidsonic
    Feb 26, 2015 at 17:05
  • 9
    Could someone explain why running ssh-keyscan is an issue? My understanding is that it will simply pull the public key of Github/Bitbucket. What alternative can be used so it doesn't end up in a layer?
    – Pedro
    May 14, 2017 at 19:45
  • 15
    @Pedro The keyscan step in particular is not an issue at all, you're clearly right. If anything, these host public keys should be spread as much as possible. See sshd(8) for details on the known_hosts file. People just upvote random things when they sound alarming enough.
    – tne
    Jul 6, 2017 at 16:11
124

You should create new SSH key set for that Docker image, as you probably don't want to embed there your own private key. To make it work, you'll have to add that key to deployment keys in your git repository. Here's complete recipe:

  1. Generate ssh keys with ssh-keygen -q -t rsa -N '' -f repo-key which will give you repo-key and repo-key.pub files.

  2. Add repo-key.pub to your repository deployment keys.
    On GitHub, go to [your repository] -> Settings -> Deploy keys

  3. Add something like this to your Dockerfile:

    ADD repo-key /
    RUN \
      chmod 600 /repo-key && \  
      echo "IdentityFile /repo-key" >> /etc/ssh/ssh_config && \  
      echo -e "StrictHostKeyChecking no" >> /etc/ssh/ssh_config && \  
      // your git clone commands here...
    

Note that above switches off StrictHostKeyChecking, so you don't need .ssh/known_hosts. Although I probably like more the solution with ssh-keyscan in one of the answers above.

7
  • 9
    Warning: on my config, echo -e "..." also write -e inside the file. Just remove the flag and it works fine. Aug 4, 2016 at 9:37
  • 3
    Thank you millions! I am on the edge of declaring love to you. You solved an issue I was battling for days!
    – alexandra
    Jun 25, 2019 at 13:29
  • 3
    The answer selected for this question is not a good answer anymore. It was correct in 2014 but for 2020 this is the correct answer. Apr 8, 2020 at 19:05
  • 1
    @BikalBasnet how is the selected answer not a good answer? It works pretty well and very secured, this answer leaves the ssh key in the image and is not secure
    – Luk Aron
    Jan 30, 2021 at 9:38
  • 4
    This leaves a security hole in your repo as you share in the image a production ssh key Apr 28, 2021 at 0:59
103

There's no need to fiddle around with ssh configurations. Use a configuration file (not a Dockerfile) that contains environment variables, and have a shell script update your docker file at runtime. You keep tokens out of your Dockerfiles and you can clone over https (no need to generate or pass around ssh keys).

Go to Settings > Personal Access Tokens

  • Generate a personal access token with repo scope enabled.
  • Clone like this: git clone https://[email protected]/user-or-org/repo

Some commenters have noted that if you use a shared Dockerfile, this could expose your access key to other people on your project. While this may or may not be a concern for your specific use case, here are some ways you can deal with that:

  • Use a shell script to accept arguments which could contain your key as a variable. Replace a variable in your Dockerfile with sed or similar, i.e. calling the script with sh rundocker.sh MYTOKEN=foo which would replace on https://{{MY_TOKEN}}@github.com/user-or-org/repo. Note that you could also use a configuration file (in .yml or whatever format you want) to do the same thing but with environment variables.
  • Create a github user (and generate an access token for) for that project only
13
  • 1
    The downside of this approach is that you are storing credentials for a private repo within the Dockerfile as opposed to @crooksey's approach which would allow you to reference a key that is stored separately from a Dockerfile. Without context around how OP is storing the Dockerfile we cannot determine if this would cause an issue but from personal experience I like to store my Dockerfiles within a VCS and wouldn't want to commit anything that contained credentials. Once Docker implement ability to pass env variables to build command then I agree this would be cleanest solution.
    – Jabbslad
    May 12, 2015 at 22:23
  • 2
    @CalvinFroedge by locally I assume you mean your host? I am not aware of a way to expose environment variables on the host to a container at build time which is why we have open issues like this github.com/docker/docker/issues/6822. Please can you clarify?
    – Jabbslad
    May 13, 2015 at 6:21
  • 1
    Even cleaner (separation of concerns): a linked volume for the cloned repo + a dedicated container only for the cloning task + a linked volume only with the SSH keys (or token, as you suggest). See stackoverflow.com/a/30992047, maybe combined with stackoverflow.com/a/29981990.
    – Peterino
    Dec 14, 2015 at 1:30
  • 10
    Also the question is for a BITBUCKET repo, not a github repo. Feb 15, 2016 at 5:40
  • 2
    This is not a secure solution, no matter how you store the credential (whether it's in a secret, env var, etc...) git clone https://[email protected]/user-or-org/repo will show up in the image history and will leak your PAT.
    – jrh
    Nov 6, 2021 at 15:03
91

You often do not want to perform a git clone of a private repo from within the docker build. Doing the clone there involves placing the private ssh credentials inside the image where they can be later extracted by anyone with access to your image.

Instead, the common practice is to clone the git repo from outside of docker in your CI tool of choice, and simply COPY the files into the image. This has a second benefit: docker caching. Docker caching looks at the command being run, environment variables it includes, input files, etc, and if they are identical to a previous build from the same parent step, it reuses that previous cache. With a git clone command, the command itself is identical, so docker will reuse the cache even if the external git repo is changed. However, a COPY command will look at the files in the build context and can see if they are identical or have been updated, and use the cache only when it's appropriate.

BuildKit has a feature just for ssh which allows you to still have your password protected ssh keys, the result looks like:

# syntax=docker/dockerfile:experimental
FROM ubuntu as clone
LABEL maintainer="Luke Crooks <[email protected]>"

# Update aptitude with new repo
RUN apt-get update \
 && apt-get install -y git

# Make ssh dir
# Create known_hosts
# Add bitbuckets key
RUN mkdir /root/.ssh/ \
 && touch /root/.ssh/known_hosts \
 && ssh-keyscan bitbucket.org >> /root/.ssh/known_hosts

# Clone the conf files into the docker container
RUN --mount=type=ssh \
    git clone [email protected]:User/repo.git

And you can build that with:

$ eval $(ssh-agent)
$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
(Input your passphrase here)
$ DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1 docker build -t your_image_name \
  --ssh default=$SSH_AUTH_SOCK .

Again, this is injected into the build without ever being written to an image layer, removing the risk that the credential could accidentally leak out.


BuildKit also has a features that allow you to pass an ssh key in as a mount that never gets written to the image:

# syntax=docker/dockerfile:experimental
FROM ubuntu as clone
LABEL maintainer="Luke Crooks <[email protected]>"

# Update aptitude with new repo
RUN apt-get update \
 && apt-get install -y git

# Make ssh dir
# Create known_hosts
# Add bitbuckets key
RUN mkdir /root/.ssh/ \
 && touch /root/.ssh/known_hosts \
 && ssh-keyscan bitbucket.org >> /root/.ssh/known_hosts

# Clone the conf files into the docker container
RUN --mount=type=secret,id=ssh_id,target=/root/.ssh/id_rsa \
    git clone [email protected]:User/repo.git

And you can build that with:

$ DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1 docker build -t your_image_name \
  --secret id=ssh_id,src=$(pwd)/id_rsa .

Note that this still requires your ssh key to not be password protected, but you can at least run the build in a single stage, removing a COPY command, and avoiding the ssh credential from ever being part of an image.


If you are going to add credentials into your build, consider doing so with a multi-stage build, and only placing those credentials in an early stage that is never tagged and pushed outside of your build host. The result looks like:

FROM ubuntu as clone

# Update aptitude with new repo
RUN apt-get update \
 && apt-get install -y git
# Make ssh dir
# Create known_hosts
# Add bitbuckets key
RUN mkdir /root/.ssh/ \
 && touch /root/.ssh/known_hosts \
 && ssh-keyscan bitbucket.org >> /root/.ssh/known_hosts

# Copy over private key, and set permissions
# Warning! Anyone who gets their hands on this image will be able
# to retrieve this private key file from the corresponding image layer
COPY id_rsa /root/.ssh/id_rsa

# Clone the conf files into the docker container
RUN git clone [email protected]:User/repo.git

FROM ubuntu as release
LABEL maintainer="Luke Crooks <[email protected]>"

COPY --from=clone /repo /repo
...

To force docker to run the git clone even when the lines before have been cached, you can inject a build ARG that changes with each build to break the cache. That looks like:

# inject a datestamp arg which is treated as an environment variable and
# will break the cache for the next RUN command
ARG DATE_STAMP
# Clone the conf files into the docker container
RUN git clone [email protected]:User/repo.git

Then you inject that changing arg in the docker build command:

date_stamp=$(date +%Y%m%d-%H%M%S)
docker build --build-arg DATE_STAMP=$date_stamp .
5
  • 2
    You suggest to use git from outside of Docker, however you explain how to deal with ssh keys anyway. When do you consider this necessary/appropriate?
    – JCarlosR
    Sep 28, 2019 at 2:25
  • 4
    @JCarlosR when you don't have an external system in which to run the build (e.g. a CI/CD system capable of running the clone in advance). There can be exceptions, but a clone inside a Dockerfile is a code smell.
    – BMitch
    Jan 21, 2020 at 10:32
  • @BMitch Please explain why it is a code smell, as long as security issues are avoided, it is fine.
    – Luk Aron
    Jan 30, 2021 at 9:45
  • 2
    @LukAron it's an indication that a CI system is being replaced by a complex Dockerfile, and causes lots of issues like leaking secrets and breaking docker's caching logic. It's a bit like answering a question on how to define a global variable, yes there's an answer, but a majority of those looking for the answer should really consider if they wanted dependency injection. Both can be more work to implement, but they are a better solution to a majority of the use cases.
    – BMitch
    Jan 30, 2021 at 13:39
  • 4
    @BMitch git clone of a private repo in a Dockerfile can be more than just a code smell, it can be a straight up security risk. I think it's worth mentioning that the answers that do git clone https://{{MY_TOKEN}}@github.com are all wrong because even if you somehow hide that clone command in a secret or something, the PAT would still be present in the remote property of the cloned repo. So thanks for this answer, it has very good information. I think COPYing a previously downloaded tarball (not downloaded in the Dockerfile) is the solution for me.
    – jrh
    Nov 5, 2021 at 13:06
37

Another option is to use a multi-stage docker build to ensure that your SSH keys are not included in the final image.

As described in my post you can prepare your intermediate image with the required dependencies to git clone and then COPY the required files into your final image.

Additionally if we LABEL our intermediate layers, we can even delete them from the machine when finished.

# Choose and name our temporary image.
FROM alpine as intermediate
# Add metadata identifying these images as our build containers (this will be useful later!)
LABEL stage=intermediate

# Take an SSH key as a build argument.
ARG SSH_KEY

# Install dependencies required to git clone.
RUN apk update && \
    apk add --update git && \
    apk add --update openssh

# 1. Create the SSH directory.
# 2. Populate the private key file.
# 3. Set the required permissions.
# 4. Add github to our list of known hosts for ssh.
RUN mkdir -p /root/.ssh/ && \
    echo "$SSH_KEY" > /root/.ssh/id_rsa && \
    chmod -R 600 /root/.ssh/ && \
    ssh-keyscan -t rsa github.com >> ~/.ssh/known_hosts

# Clone a repository (my website in this case)
RUN git clone [email protected]:janakerman/janakerman.git

# Choose the base image for our final image
FROM alpine

# Copy across the files from our `intermediate` container
RUN mkdir files
COPY --from=intermediate /janakerman/README.md /files/README.md

We can then build:

MY_KEY=$(cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa)
docker build --build-arg SSH_KEY="$MY_KEY" --tag clone-example .

Prove our SSH keys are gone:

docker run -ti --rm clone-example cat /root/.ssh/id_rsa

Clean intermediate images from the build machine:

docker rmi -f $(docker images -q --filter label=stage=intermediate)
6
  • ARG SSH_PRIVATE_KEY needs to be replaced with ARG SSH_KEY Feb 18, 2019 at 20:01
  • cant we just delete the keys once git clone is done?
    – Broncha
    Jun 17, 2019 at 8:01
  • 1
    You could do, but you'd need to do it as part of a single RUN so you don't leave the key in a previous image layer. As of docker 1.13 you can use the --squash experimental argument which would remove the SSH key in your final image layers too.
    – jaker
    Jun 18, 2019 at 11:52
  • You can start FROM alpine/git AS intermediate and then skip the apk add commands
    – isapir
    Dec 29, 2020 at 4:26
  • is there any way to let the container generate an ssh key and add that ssh key to GitHub or GitLab by some API on the fly?
    – Luk Aron
    Jan 30, 2021 at 9:32
21

For bitbucket repository, generate App Password (Bitbucket settings -> Access Management -> App Password, see the image) with read access to the repo and project.

bitbucket user menu

Then the command that you should use is:

git clone https://username:[email protected]/reponame/projectname.git
8
  • 1
    Simplest :) I must admit I'd prefer an SSH based approach, but I could not get any of the above working... files aren't found, etc.
    – Johnny
    Sep 13, 2017 at 9:24
  • I don't see "Access Management" ... I guess it is outdated? May 3, 2018 at 12:31
  • 1
    Worked! Plain and simple... Great!
    – Josemy
    May 9, 2018 at 10:33
  • 2
    Of course... You just have to click on your profile picture on the left bar, then on Bitbucket settings and you will see something like this: imgur.com/EI33zj3
    – Josemy
    May 9, 2018 at 15:57
  • 1
    This worked for me. However, I have submodules and --recursive did not work. I had to put in git clone for each submodule, which is fine but would have been great if it would have worked recursively. Jan 23, 2019 at 3:15
8

Nowsaday you can use the Buildkit option --ssh default when you build your container ; Prior to build, you need to add your SSH deploy key to your ssh-agent.

Here is the full process from the beginning :

  1. Create a key pair on your deployment server. Just run ssh-keygen -t ecdsa Store your key pair into ~/.ssh

  2. Add your public key generated (.pub extension) at your git provider website (gitlab, github..)

  3. Add your key to your ssh-agent (a program that basically manages your keys easier than handling every file)

eval $(ssh-agent)
ssh-add /path/to/your/private/key
  1. Add this to your Dockerfile :
# this 3 first lines add your provider public keys to known_host 
# so git doesn't get an error from SSH.

RUN mkdir -m 700 /root/.ssh && \
  touch -m 600 /root/.ssh/known_hosts && \
  ssh-keyscan your-git-provider.com > /root/.ssh/known_hosts 


# now you can clone with --mount=type=ssh option, 
# forwarding to Docker your host ssh agent

RUN mkdir -p /wherever/you/want/to/clone && cd /wherever/you/want/to/clone && \
  --mount=type=ssh git clone [email protected]:your-project.git
  1. And now you can finally build your Dockerfile (with buildkit enabled)
DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1 docker build . --ssh default

As you cannot currently pass console parameters to build in docker-compose, this solution is not available yet for docker-compose, but it should be soon (it's been done on github and proposed as a merge request)

4

p.s. this solution is quick & easy; but at a cost of reduced security (see comments by @jrh).


Create an access token: https://github.com/settings/tokens

pass it in as an argument to docker (p.s. if you are using CapRover, set it under App Configs)

In your Dockerfile:

ARG GITHUB_TOKEN=${GITHUB_TOKEN}
RUN git config --global url."https://${GITHUB_TOKEN}@github.com/".insteadOf "https://github.com/"
RUN pip install -r requirements.txt

p.s. this assumes that private repos are in the following format in requirements.txt:

git+https://github.com/<YOUR-USERNAME>/<YOUR-REPO>.git
1
  • 3
    This isn't a secure solution, your personal access token will show up in the image log (in the git config command). There is no secure way to clone like that from a Dockerfile, you need to use something like COPY or share credentials some other way that won't show up in the history.
    – jrh
    Nov 6, 2021 at 15:06
0

For other people searching I had the same issue adding --ssh default flag made it work

0

In addition to @Calvin Froedge's approach to use Personal Access Token (PAT),

You may need to add oauth or oauth2 as username before your PAT to authenticate like this:

https://oauth:<token>@git-url.com/user/repo.git
0

recently had a similar issue with a private repository in a Rust project. I suggest avoiding ssh permissions/config altogether.

Instead:

  1. clone the repository within the build environment e.g. CI, where the permissions already exist (or can be easily configured)
  2. copy the files into the Dockerfile (this can also be cached natively within the CI)

Example

part 1) within CI

CARGO_HOME=tmp-home cargo fetch

part 2) within Dockerfile

COPY tmp-home $CARGO_HOME

the process is the same regardless of language/package system

0

What we are doing is using AWS Secret Manager (You can use any that you have access to).

  1. Create an SSH Key and add the public key to an authorised GitHub Account. Perhaps a common GitHub account in your organization that for example a DevOPs Team has access to.
  2. Your private key has new lines. If you copy this directly to your secret manager, the new lines are removed. Therefore, base64 encode your private key with
cat ssh_private_file | base64 -w 0
  1. Add your base64 encoded private key to aws secret manager (or any secret manager).
  2. Let's say the key is called 'ssh_private' inside your secret name "Private_Repo", you can access your private key
aws secretsmanager get-secret-value \
    --secret-id Private_Repo --query "SecretString" --output text --region $region_name \
    | jq -r ".ssh_private" | base64 -d

Make sure you have jq installed.

  1. When you build your image, you need to pass your credentials to the docker build command to authenticate the process to use the secret manager. The following is a snippet of our Dockerfile:
ARG AWS_DEFAULT_REGION
ARG AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
ARG AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
ARG ssh_file=id_rsa

ENV AWS_DEFAULT_REGION=$AWS_DEFAULT_REGION
ENV AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=$AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
ENV AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=$AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY

RUN curl "https://awscli.amazonaws.com/awscli-exe-linux-x86_64.zip" -o "awscliv2.zip" \
    && unzip awscliv2.zip \
    && ./aws/install \
    && aws secretsmanager get-secret-value \
    --secret-id Private_Repo --query "SecretString" --output text --region $AWS_DEFAULT_REGION \
    | jq -r ".ssh_private" | base64 -d > ${ssh_file} \
    && chmod 0700 id_rsa

RUN eval "$(ssh-agent -s)" \
    && ssh-add ${ssh_file} \
    && mkdir ~/.ssh/ \
    && echo "Host github.com\n\tIdentityFile ${ssh_file}\n\tStrictHostKeyChecking no\n" >> ~/.ssh/config

The above

  • reads the private key from secret manager and writes to a file, -
  • ssh-adds the files
  • edits your ssh config file to access Github.com host with this private key.

You can pass the credentials with the following command if they are saved as environment variables.

DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1 docker build --build-arg AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=$env:AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID --build-arg AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=$env:AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY --build-arg AWS_DEFAULT_REGION=$env:AWS_DEFAULT_REGION -f docker/Dockerfile .

This approach allows you to delete the private key from your image after all the installations are done and the container doesn't need to access private repos during run time.

I believe, the main downside of this approach is turning off StringHostKeyChecking in your ssh config(I'm not aware of the consequences here) and that secret managers cost some cents.

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