One of the options I can pass to docker run
is --device
, as described here. I wonder, if everything-is-a-file™ is Unix/Linux, why Docker needs a special way of binding devices to the container?
My understanding is that creating a volume bind should be enough. Then, I could mount some /dev/deviceX
file to some file in my container (like /mydeviceX
) and access it that way. In the end, all the operations on /mydeviceX
from within the container would be relied to the /dev/deviceX
on the host, wouldn't they?
--privileged
and that I can control access with:rwm
? Does it mean that actually, I could bind the device files into the container using "normal" volume mount as well? In such case, I'd of course have to take care of proper permissions for the user ID that the container is using.mknod
a device-special file to mount the host's root disk, you could trivially escape the container and root the host; the--device
option prevents attacks like this.