I have a container with 2 subnets:
- one is the reverse proxy subnet
- the second one is the internal subnet for the different containers of that project
The container needs to access an external SMTP server (on mailgun.com), but it looks like, with docker-compose, you can put a container on both one or more subnets and give it access to the host network at the same time.
Is there a way to allow this container to initiate connections to the outside world?
and, if no, what common workarounds are used? (for example, adding an extra IP to the container to be on the host network, etc.)
This is the docker compose file:
version: '2.3'
services:
keycloak:
container_name: keycloak
image: jboss/keycloak
restart: unless-stopped
volumes:
- '/appdata/keycloak:/opt/jboss/keycloak/standalone/data'
expose:
- 8080
external_links:
- auth
networks:
- default
- nginx
environment:
KEYCLOAK_USER: XXXX
KEYCLOAK_PASSWORD: XXXX
PROXY_ADDRESS_FORWARDING: 'true'
ES_JAVA_OPTS: '-Xms512m -Xmx512m'
VIRTUAL_HOST: auth.XXXX.com
VIRTUAL_PORT: 80
LETSENCRYPT_HOST: auth.XXXX.com
LETSENTRYPT_EMAIL: [email protected]
networks:
default:
external:
name: app-network
nginx:
external:
name: nginx-proxy
The networks are as follows:
$ dk network ls
NETWORK ID NAME DRIVER SCOPE
caba49ae8b1c bridge bridge local
2b311986a6f6 app-network bridge local
67f70f82aea2 host host local
9e0e2fe50385 nginx-proxy bridge local
dab9f171e37f none null local
and nginx-proxy network info is:
$ dk network inspect nginx-proxy
[
{
"Name": "nginx-proxy",
"Id": "9e0e2fe503857c5bc532032afb6646598ee0a08e834f4bd89b87b35db1739dae",
"Created": "2019-02-18T10:16:38.949628821Z",
"Scope": "local",
"Driver": "bridge",
"EnableIPv6": false,
"IPAM": {
"Driver": "default",
"Options": {},
"Config": [
{
"Subnet": "172.18.0.0/16",
"Gateway": "172.18.0.1"
}
]
},
"Internal": false,
"Attachable": false,
"Ingress": false,
"ConfigFrom": {
"Network": ""
},
"ConfigOnly": false,
"Containers": {
"360b49ab066853a25cd739a4c1464a9ac25fe56132c596ce48a5f01465d07d12": {
"Name": "keycloak",
"EndpointID": "271ed86cac77db76f69f6e76686abddefa871b92bb60a007eb131de4e6a8cb53",
"MacAddress": "02:42:ac:12:00:04",
"IPv4Address": "172.18.0.4/16",
"IPv6Address": ""
},
"379dfe83d6739612c82e99f3e8ad9fcdfe5ebb8cdc5d780e37a3212a3bf6c11b": {
"Name": "nginx-proxy",
"EndpointID": "0fcf186c6785dd585b677ccc98fa68cc9bc66c4ae02d086155afd82c7c465fef",
"MacAddress": "02:42:ac:12:00:03",
"IPv4Address": "172.18.0.3/16",
"IPv6Address": ""
},
"4c944078bcb1cca2647be30c516b8fa70b45293203b355f5d5e00b800ad9a0d4": {
"Name": "adminmongo",
"EndpointID": "65f1a7a0f0bcef37ba02b98be8fa1f29a8d7868162482ac0b957f73764f73ccf",
"MacAddress": "02:42:ac:12:00:06",
"IPv4Address": "172.18.0.6/16",
"IPv6Address": ""
},
"671cc99775e09077edc72617836fa563932675800cb938397597e17d521c53fe": {
"Name": "portainer",
"EndpointID": "950e4b5dcd5ba2a13acba37f50e315483123d7da673c8feac9a0f8d6f8b9eb2b",
"MacAddress": "02:42:ac:12:00:02",
"IPv4Address": "172.18.0.2/16",
"IPv6Address": ""
},
"90a98111cbdebe76920ac2ebc50dafa5ea77eba9f42197216fcd57bad9e0516e": {
"Name": "kibana",
"EndpointID": "fe1768274eec9c02c28c74be0104326052b9b9a9c98d475015cd80fba82ec45d",
"MacAddress": "02:42:ac:12:00:05",
"IPv4Address": "172.18.0.5/16",
"IPv6Address": ""
}
},
"Options": {},
"Labels": {}
}
]
Update:
The following test was done to test the solution proposed by lbndev:
a test network was created:
# docker network create \
-o "com.docker.network.bridge.enable_icc"="true" \
-o "com.docker.network.bridge.enable_ip_masquerade"="true" \
-o "com.docker.network.bridge.host_binding_ipv4"="0.0.0.0" \
-o"com.docker.network.driver.mtu"="1500" \
test_network
e21057cf83eec70e9cfeed459d79521fb57e9f08477b729a8c8880ea83891ed9
we can display the contents:
# docker inspect test_network
[
{
"Name": "test_network",
"Id": "e21057cf83eec70e9cfeed459d79521fb57e9f08477b729a8c8880ea83891ed9",
"Created": "2019-02-24T21:52:44.678870135+01:00",
"Scope": "local",
"Driver": "bridge",
"EnableIPv6": false,
"IPAM": {
"Driver": "default",
"Options": {},
"Config": [
{
"Subnet": "172.22.0.0/16",
"Gateway": "172.22.0.1"
}
]
},
"Internal": false,
"Attachable": false,
"Ingress": false,
"ConfigFrom": {
"Network": ""
},
"ConfigOnly": false,
"Containers": {},
"Options": {
"com.docker.network.bridge.enable_icc": "true",
"com.docker.network.bridge.enable_ip_masquerade": "true",
"com.docker.network.bridge.host_binding_ipv4": "0.0.0.0",
"com.docker.network.driver.mtu": "1500"
},
"Labels": {}
}
]
Then we can inspect the container:
I put the contents on pastebin: https://pastebin.com/5bJ7A9Yp since it's quite large and would make this post unreadable.
and testing:
# docker exec -it 5d09230158dd sh
sh-4.2$ ping 1.1.1.1
PING 1.1.1.1 (1.1.1.1) 56(84) bytes of data.
^C
--- 1.1.1.1 ping statistics ---
11 packets transmitted, 0 received, 100% packet loss, time 10006ms
So, we couldn't get this solution to work.
docker-compose.yml
file.docker network ls
anddocker network inspect nginx-proxy
(I assume the network you want to use for access to/from the "outside world" is nginx-proxy) ? My guess is that something is wrong in the way you created those networks mentioned in your compoose file.