My project directory structure:
myapp/
src/
Dockerfile
docker-compose.yml
docker-deploy.sh
wait-for-it.sh
.env
Where wait-for-it.sh is a copy of the famous wait-for-it script.
My Dockerfile:
FROM node:16
WORKDIR /usr/src/app
COPY package*.json ./
COPY wait-for-it.sh ./
COPY docker-deploy.sh ./
RUN chmod +x docker-deploy.sh
RUN npm install --legacy-peer-deps
COPY . .
RUN npm run build
ENTRYPOINT ["docker-deploy.sh"]
And docker-deploy.sh is:
#!/bin/bash
# make wait-for-it executable
chmod +x wait-for-it.sh
# call wait-for-it with passed in args and then start node if it succeeds
bash wait-for-it.sh -h $1 -p $2 -t 300 -s -- node start
And my docker-compose.yml:
version: '3.7'
services:
my-service:
build: .
postgres:
container_name: postgres
image: postgres:14.3
environment:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: ${DB_PASSWORD}
POSTGRES_USER: ${DB_USER}
POSTGRES_DB: my-service-db
PG_DATA: /var/lib/postgresql2/data
ports:
- ${DB_PORT}:${DB_PORT}
volumes:
- pgdata:/var/lib/postgresql2/data
volumes:
pgdata:
And where my .env looks like:
DB_PASSWORD=1234
DB_USER=root
DB_PORT=5432
When I run the following command-line from the project root:
docker-compose --env-file .env up --build
I get:
Creating myapp_my-service_1 ... error
Creating postgres ...
Creating postgres ... done
ERROR: for my-service Cannot start service my-service: OCI runtime create failed: container_linux.go:380: starting container process caused: exec: "docker-deploy.sh": executable file not found in $PATH: unknown
ERROR: Encountered errors while bringing up the project.
What is going on? Is the error coming from the wait-for-it.sh script itself, from a poorly configured CMD directive in the Dockerfile, or from the actual Node/JS app running as my-service?
Latest errors after applying @ErikMD's suggested changes:
Creating postgres ... done
Creating myapp_my-service_1 ... error
ERROR: for myapp_my-service_1 Cannot start service my-service: OCI runtime create failed: container_linux.go:380: starting container process caused: exec: "./docker-deploy.sh": permission denied: unknown
ERROR: for my-service Cannot start service my-service: OCI runtime create failed: container_linux.go:380: starting container process caused: exec: "./docker-deploy.sh": permission denied: unknown
ERROR: Encountered errors while bringing up the project.
So it is spinning up the DB (postgres) no problem but is still for some reason getting permissions-related issues with the docker-deploy.sh script.
As pointed out in @derpirscher's comment and mine, one of the issues was the permission of your script(s) and the way they should be called as the ENTRYPOINT (not CMD).
Consider this alternative code for your Dockerfile :
FROM node:16
WORKDIR /usr/src/app
COPY package*.json ./
COPY wait-for-it.sh ./
COPY docker-deploy.sh ./
# Use a single RUN command to avoid creating multiple RUN layers
RUN chmod +x wait-for-it.sh \
&& chmod +x docker-deploy.sh \
&& npm install --legacy-peer-deps
COPY . .
RUN npm run build
ENTRYPOINT ["./docker-deploy.sh"]
docker-deploy.sh script :
#!/bin/sh
# call wait-for-it with args and then start node if it succeeds
exec ./wait-for-it.sh -h "${DB_HOST}" -p "${DB_PORT}" -t 300 -s -- node start
See this other SO question for more context on the need for the exec builtin in a Docker shell entrypoint.
Also, note that the fact this exec ... command line is written inside a shell script (not directly in an ENTRYPOINT / CMD exec form) is a key ingredient for using the parameter expansion.
In other words: in the revision 2 of your question, the "${DB_HOST}:${DB_PORT}" argument was understood literally because no shell interpolation occurs in an ENTRYPOINT / CMD exec form.
Regarding the docker-compose.yml :
# version: '3.7'
# In the Docker Compose specification, "version:" is now deprecated.
services:
my-service:
build: .
# Add "image:" for readability
image: some-optional-fresh-tag-name
# Pass environment values to the entrypoint
environment:
DB_HOST: postgres
DB_PORT: ${DB_PORT}
# etc.
# Add network spec to make it explicit what services can communicate together
networks:
- postgres-network
# Add "depends_on:" to improve "docker-run scheduling":
depends_on:
- postgres
postgres:
# container_name: postgres # unneeded
image: postgres:14.3
environment:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: ${DB_PASSWORD}
POSTGRES_USER: ${DB_USER}
POSTGRES_DB: my-service-db
PG_DATA: /var/lib/postgresql2/data
volumes:
- pgdata:/var/lib/postgresql2/data
networks:
- postgres-network
# ports:
# - ${DB_PORT}:${DB_PORT}
# Rather remove this line in prod, which is a typical weakness, see (§)
networks:
postgres-network:
driver: bridge
volumes:
pgdata:
# let's be more explicit
driver: local
Note that in this Docker setting, the wait-for-it host should be postgres (the Docker service name of your database), not 0.0.0.0 nor localhost. Because the wait-for-it script acts as a client that tries to connect to the specified web service in the ambient docker-compose network.
For a bit more details on the difference between 0.0.0.0 (a server-side, catch-all special IP) and localhost in a Docker context, see e.g. this other SO answer of mine.
(§): last but not least, the ports: [ "${DB_PORT}:${DB_PORT}" ] lines should rather be removed because they are not necessary for the Compose services to communicate (the services just need to belong to a common Compose network and use the other Compose services' hostname), while exposing one such port directly on the host increases the attack surface.
To follow-up this comment of mine, suggesting to run ls -l docker-deploy.sh; file docker-deploy.sh in your myapp/ directory as a debugging step (BTW: feel free to do this later on then comment for the record):
Assuming there might be an unexpected bug in Docker similar to this one as pointed by @Lety:
I'd suggest to just replacing (in the Dockerfile) the line
RUN chmod +x wait-for-it.sh \
&& chmod +x docker-deploy.sh \
&& npm install --legacy-peer-deps
with
RUN npm install --legacy-peer-deps
and running directly in a terminal on the host machine:
cd myapp/
chmod -v 755 docker-deploy.sh
chmod -v 755 wait-for-it.sh
docker-compose --env-file .env up --build
If this does not work, here is another useful information you may want to provide: what is your OS, and what is your Docker package name? (e.g. docker-ce or podman…)
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