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community.general/plugins/connection/docker.py
Ruheena Ansari 07e8911fd8
Update docker connection plugin (#80)
* Update docker.py

#67832 fixes the need to run powershell modules on windows containers via docker connection. However, while running win_copy on windows containers, destination path is prefixed, which doesn't work in the case of windows. The changes in this PR take care of bypassing that while running the ansible role on windows containers.

* Update plugins/connection/docker.py

Co-Authored-By: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>

* Create 80-update_docker_connection_plugin.yml

Add changelog fragment

* Update changelogs/fragments/80-update_docker_connection_plugin.yml

Co-Authored-By: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>

Co-authored-by: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>
2020-03-31 20:42:16 +02:00

364 lines
16 KiB
Python

# Based on the chroot connection plugin by Maykel Moya
#
# (c) 2014, Lorin Hochstein
# (c) 2015, Leendert Brouwer (https://github.com/objectified)
# (c) 2015, Toshio Kuratomi <tkuratomi@ansible.com>
# Copyright (c) 2017 Ansible Project
# GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see COPYING or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt)
from __future__ import (absolute_import, division, print_function)
__metaclass__ = type
DOCUMENTATION = '''
author:
- Lorin Hochestein
- Leendert Brouwer
connection: docker
short_description: Run tasks in docker containers
description:
- Run commands or put/fetch files to an existing docker container.
options:
remote_user:
description:
- The user to execute as inside the container
vars:
- name: ansible_user
- name: ansible_docker_user
docker_extra_args:
description:
- Extra arguments to pass to the docker command line
default: ''
remote_addr:
description:
- The name of the container you want to access.
default: inventory_hostname
vars:
- name: ansible_host
- name: ansible_docker_host
'''
import distutils.spawn
import fcntl
import os
import os.path
import subprocess
import re
from distutils.version import LooseVersion
import ansible.constants as C
from ansible.compat import selectors
from ansible.errors import AnsibleError, AnsibleFileNotFound
from ansible.module_utils.six.moves import shlex_quote
from ansible.module_utils._text import to_bytes, to_native, to_text
from ansible.plugins.connection import ConnectionBase, BUFSIZE
from ansible.utils.display import Display
display = Display()
class Connection(ConnectionBase):
''' Local docker based connections '''
transport = 'community.general.docker'
has_pipelining = True
def __init__(self, play_context, new_stdin, *args, **kwargs):
super(Connection, self).__init__(play_context, new_stdin, *args, **kwargs)
# Note: docker supports running as non-root in some configurations.
# (For instance, setting the UNIX socket file to be readable and
# writable by a specific UNIX group and then putting users into that
# group). Therefore we don't check that the user is root when using
# this connection. But if the user is getting a permission denied
# error it probably means that docker on their system is only
# configured to be connected to by root and they are not running as
# root.
# Windows uses Powershell modules
if getattr(self._shell, "_IS_WINDOWS", False):
self.module_implementation_preferences = ('.ps1', '.exe', '')
if 'docker_command' in kwargs:
self.docker_cmd = kwargs['docker_command']
else:
self.docker_cmd = distutils.spawn.find_executable('docker')
if not self.docker_cmd:
raise AnsibleError("docker command not found in PATH")
docker_version = self._get_docker_version()
if docker_version == u'dev':
display.warning(u'Docker version number is "dev". Will assume latest version.')
if docker_version != u'dev' and LooseVersion(docker_version) < LooseVersion(u'1.3'):
raise AnsibleError('docker connection type requires docker 1.3 or higher')
# The remote user we will request from docker (if supported)
self.remote_user = None
# The actual user which will execute commands in docker (if known)
self.actual_user = None
if self._play_context.remote_user is not None:
if docker_version == u'dev' or LooseVersion(docker_version) >= LooseVersion(u'1.7'):
# Support for specifying the exec user was added in docker 1.7
self.remote_user = self._play_context.remote_user
self.actual_user = self.remote_user
else:
self.actual_user = self._get_docker_remote_user()
if self.actual_user != self._play_context.remote_user:
display.warning(u'docker {0} does not support remote_user, using container default: {1}'
.format(docker_version, self.actual_user or u'?'))
elif self._display.verbosity > 2:
# Since we're not setting the actual_user, look it up so we have it for logging later
# Only do this if display verbosity is high enough that we'll need the value
# This saves overhead from calling into docker when we don't need to
self.actual_user = self._get_docker_remote_user()
@staticmethod
def _sanitize_version(version):
return re.sub(u'[^0-9a-zA-Z.]', u'', version)
def _old_docker_version(self):
cmd_args = []
if self._play_context.docker_extra_args:
cmd_args += self._play_context.docker_extra_args.split(' ')
old_version_subcommand = ['version']
old_docker_cmd = [self.docker_cmd] + cmd_args + old_version_subcommand
p = subprocess.Popen(old_docker_cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
cmd_output, err = p.communicate()
return old_docker_cmd, to_native(cmd_output), err, p.returncode
def _new_docker_version(self):
# no result yet, must be newer Docker version
cmd_args = []
if self._play_context.docker_extra_args:
cmd_args += self._play_context.docker_extra_args.split(' ')
new_version_subcommand = ['version', '--format', "'{{.Server.Version}}'"]
new_docker_cmd = [self.docker_cmd] + cmd_args + new_version_subcommand
p = subprocess.Popen(new_docker_cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
cmd_output, err = p.communicate()
return new_docker_cmd, to_native(cmd_output), err, p.returncode
def _get_docker_version(self):
cmd, cmd_output, err, returncode = self._old_docker_version()
if returncode == 0:
for line in to_text(cmd_output, errors='surrogate_or_strict').split(u'\n'):
if line.startswith(u'Server version:'): # old docker versions
return self._sanitize_version(line.split()[2])
cmd, cmd_output, err, returncode = self._new_docker_version()
if returncode:
raise AnsibleError('Docker version check (%s) failed: %s' % (to_native(cmd), to_native(err)))
return self._sanitize_version(to_text(cmd_output, errors='surrogate_or_strict'))
def _get_docker_remote_user(self):
""" Get the default user configured in the docker container """
p = subprocess.Popen([self.docker_cmd, 'inspect', '--format', '{{.Config.User}}', self._play_context.remote_addr],
stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
out, err = p.communicate()
out = to_text(out, errors='surrogate_or_strict')
if p.returncode != 0:
display.warning(u'unable to retrieve default user from docker container: %s %s' % (out, to_text(err)))
return None
# The default exec user is root, unless it was changed in the Dockerfile with USER
return out.strip() or u'root'
def _build_exec_cmd(self, cmd):
""" Build the local docker exec command to run cmd on remote_host
If remote_user is available and is supported by the docker
version we are using, it will be provided to docker exec.
"""
local_cmd = [self.docker_cmd]
if self._play_context.docker_extra_args:
local_cmd += self._play_context.docker_extra_args.split(' ')
local_cmd += [b'exec']
if self.remote_user is not None:
local_cmd += [b'-u', self.remote_user]
# -i is needed to keep stdin open which allows pipelining to work
local_cmd += [b'-i', self._play_context.remote_addr] + cmd
return local_cmd
def _connect(self, port=None):
""" Connect to the container. Nothing to do """
super(Connection, self)._connect()
if not self._connected:
display.vvv(u"ESTABLISH DOCKER CONNECTION FOR USER: {0}".format(
self.actual_user or u'?'), host=self._play_context.remote_addr
)
self._connected = True
def exec_command(self, cmd, in_data=None, sudoable=False):
""" Run a command on the docker host """
super(Connection, self).exec_command(cmd, in_data=in_data, sudoable=sudoable)
local_cmd = self._build_exec_cmd([self._play_context.executable, '-c', cmd])
display.vvv(u"EXEC {0}".format(to_text(local_cmd)), host=self._play_context.remote_addr)
display.debug("opening command with Popen()")
local_cmd = [to_bytes(i, errors='surrogate_or_strict') for i in local_cmd]
p = subprocess.Popen(
local_cmd,
stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE,
)
display.debug("done running command with Popen()")
if self.become and self.become.expect_prompt() and sudoable:
fcntl.fcntl(p.stdout, fcntl.F_SETFL, fcntl.fcntl(p.stdout, fcntl.F_GETFL) | os.O_NONBLOCK)
fcntl.fcntl(p.stderr, fcntl.F_SETFL, fcntl.fcntl(p.stderr, fcntl.F_GETFL) | os.O_NONBLOCK)
selector = selectors.DefaultSelector()
selector.register(p.stdout, selectors.EVENT_READ)
selector.register(p.stderr, selectors.EVENT_READ)
become_output = b''
try:
while not self.become.check_success(become_output) and not self.become.check_password_prompt(become_output):
events = selector.select(self._play_context.timeout)
if not events:
stdout, stderr = p.communicate()
raise AnsibleError('timeout waiting for privilege escalation password prompt:\n' + to_native(become_output))
for key, event in events:
if key.fileobj == p.stdout:
chunk = p.stdout.read()
elif key.fileobj == p.stderr:
chunk = p.stderr.read()
if not chunk:
stdout, stderr = p.communicate()
raise AnsibleError('privilege output closed while waiting for password prompt:\n' + to_native(become_output))
become_output += chunk
finally:
selector.close()
if not self.become.check_success(become_output):
become_pass = self.become.get_option('become_pass', playcontext=self._play_context)
p.stdin.write(to_bytes(become_pass, errors='surrogate_or_strict') + b'\n')
fcntl.fcntl(p.stdout, fcntl.F_SETFL, fcntl.fcntl(p.stdout, fcntl.F_GETFL) & ~os.O_NONBLOCK)
fcntl.fcntl(p.stderr, fcntl.F_SETFL, fcntl.fcntl(p.stderr, fcntl.F_GETFL) & ~os.O_NONBLOCK)
display.debug("getting output with communicate()")
stdout, stderr = p.communicate(in_data)
display.debug("done communicating")
display.debug("done with docker.exec_command()")
return (p.returncode, stdout, stderr)
def _prefix_login_path(self, remote_path):
''' Make sure that we put files into a standard path
If a path is relative, then we need to choose where to put it.
ssh chooses $HOME but we aren't guaranteed that a home dir will
exist in any given chroot. So for now we're choosing "/" instead.
This also happens to be the former default.
Can revisit using $HOME instead if it's a problem
'''
if getattr(self._shell, "_IS_WINDOWS", False):
import ntpath
return ntpath.normpath(remote_path)
else:
if not remote_path.startswith(os.path.sep):
remote_path = os.path.join(os.path.sep, remote_path)
return os.path.normpath(remote_path)
def put_file(self, in_path, out_path):
""" Transfer a file from local to docker container """
super(Connection, self).put_file(in_path, out_path)
display.vvv("PUT %s TO %s" % (in_path, out_path), host=self._play_context.remote_addr)
out_path = self._prefix_login_path(out_path)
if not os.path.exists(to_bytes(in_path, errors='surrogate_or_strict')):
raise AnsibleFileNotFound(
"file or module does not exist: %s" % to_native(in_path))
out_path = shlex_quote(out_path)
# Older docker doesn't have native support for copying files into
# running containers, so we use docker exec to implement this
# Although docker version 1.8 and later provide support, the
# owner and group of the files are always set to root
with open(to_bytes(in_path, errors='surrogate_or_strict'), 'rb') as in_file:
if not os.fstat(in_file.fileno()).st_size:
count = ' count=0'
else:
count = ''
args = self._build_exec_cmd([self._play_context.executable, "-c", "dd of=%s bs=%s%s" % (out_path, BUFSIZE, count)])
args = [to_bytes(i, errors='surrogate_or_strict') for i in args]
try:
p = subprocess.Popen(args, stdin=in_file,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
except OSError:
raise AnsibleError("docker connection requires dd command in the container to put files")
stdout, stderr = p.communicate()
if p.returncode != 0:
raise AnsibleError("failed to transfer file %s to %s:\n%s\n%s" %
(to_native(in_path), to_native(out_path), to_native(stdout), to_native(stderr)))
def fetch_file(self, in_path, out_path):
""" Fetch a file from container to local. """
super(Connection, self).fetch_file(in_path, out_path)
display.vvv("FETCH %s TO %s" % (in_path, out_path), host=self._play_context.remote_addr)
in_path = self._prefix_login_path(in_path)
# out_path is the final file path, but docker takes a directory, not a
# file path
out_dir = os.path.dirname(out_path)
args = [self.docker_cmd, "cp", "%s:%s" % (self._play_context.remote_addr, in_path), out_dir]
args = [to_bytes(i, errors='surrogate_or_strict') for i in args]
p = subprocess.Popen(args, stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
p.communicate()
if getattr(self._shell, "_IS_WINDOWS", False):
import ntpath
actual_out_path = ntpath.join(out_dir, ntpath.basename(in_path))
else:
actual_out_path = os.path.join(out_dir, os.path.basename(in_path))
if p.returncode != 0:
# Older docker doesn't have native support for fetching files command `cp`
# If `cp` fails, try to use `dd` instead
args = self._build_exec_cmd([self._play_context.executable, "-c", "dd if=%s bs=%s" % (in_path, BUFSIZE)])
args = [to_bytes(i, errors='surrogate_or_strict') for i in args]
with open(to_bytes(actual_out_path, errors='surrogate_or_strict'), 'wb') as out_file:
try:
p = subprocess.Popen(args, stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
stdout=out_file, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
except OSError:
raise AnsibleError("docker connection requires dd command in the container to put files")
stdout, stderr = p.communicate()
if p.returncode != 0:
raise AnsibleError("failed to fetch file %s to %s:\n%s\n%s" % (in_path, out_path, stdout, stderr))
# Rename if needed
if actual_out_path != out_path:
os.rename(to_bytes(actual_out_path, errors='strict'), to_bytes(out_path, errors='strict'))
def close(self):
""" Terminate the connection. Nothing to do for Docker"""
super(Connection, self).close()
self._connected = False