So I'm building a rpm package with some pre-loaded docker image, and I want to load the image to the system and delete the image tar file after installation.
I've already achieved this in a debian package by simply adding these 2 lines in postinst
file:
docker load -i <path>/image.tar
rm <some_path>/image.tar
However I got some troubles doing this in RPM package and here's the .spec file roughly looks like:
%prep
%build
%install
mkdir -p %{buildroot}/etc/my_app/
cp app %{buildroot}/etc/my_app/app
cp image.tar %{buildroot}/etc/my_app/image.tar
%post
docker load -i /etc/my_app/image.tar
rm /etc/my_app/image.tar
%files
/etc/my_app/app
/etc/my_app/image.tar
%changelog
The first problem is that when installing the package, I got /bin/docker: Permission denied
error when running the %post scriptlets. (hence the image wasn't successfully loaded).
The second one is that when uninstalling the package, I got the warning: file /etc/edgexpert/image.tar: remove failed: No such file or directory
. I guess this is because I put the image.tar file under $file.
So my questions would be :
- how to make the
docker
command runnable? - where to put my
image.tar
file so that it can be used during %post scriptlets and won't be checked in %file
Thanks for the help.
Edited:
[vagrant@localhost ~]$ ls -l /bin/docker
-rwxr-xr-x. 1 root root 84956288 Jun 1 09:14 /bin/docker
ls -l /bin/docker
give you? Please append this info to your question..
at the end of the permissions indicates an selinux ACL. That is making docker fail on permissions despite the permissions looking right. stackoverflow.com/a/30595081/2002471 You might want to try to disable selinux or see if bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1382997 helps.sudo
privilege (sudo docker load -i /etc/my_app/image.tar
in %post scriptlet), is this acceptable? Also how do I handle such intermediate(temporary) file like image.tar ? putting it in %install and %file will cause WARNING when uninstalling package.image.tar
looks ok to me. Disabling selinux is not great for security, but getting selinux to cooperate often takes extra work. There's plenty of posts on getting docker to work with selinux out there if you're interested in fixing that part.