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nfs-server-alpine

A handy NFS Server image comprising Alpine Linux and NFS v4 only, over TCP on port 2049.

Overview

The image comprises of;

  • Alpine Linux v3.8.1. Alpine Linux is a security-oriented, lightweight Linux distribution based on musl libc (v1.1.19) and BusyBox.
  • NFS v4 only, over TCP on port 2049. Rpcbind is enabled for now to overcome a bug with slow startup, it shouldn't be required.

Confd is no longer used, making the image simpler & smaller and providing wider device compatibility.

For ARM versions, tag 6-arm is based on hypriot/rpi-alpine and tag 7 onwards based on the stock Alpine image. Tag 7 uses confd v0.16.0.

For previous tags 7, 8 & 9;

  • Alpine Linux v3.7.0
  • Musl v1.1.18
  • Confd v0.14.0

For previous tag 6;

  • Alpine Linux v3.6.0
  • Musl v1.1.15

For previous tag 5;

  • Confd v0.13.0

For previous tag 4;

  • Alpine Linux v3.5
  • Confd v0.12.0-dev

Note: There were some serious flaws with image versions 3 and earlier. Please use 4 or later. The earlier version are only here in case they are used in automated workflows.

When run, this container will make whatever directory is specified by the environment variable SHARED_DIRECTORY available to NFS v4 clients.

docker run -d --name nfs --privileged -v /some/where/fileshare:/nfsshare -e SHARED_DIRECTORY=/nfsshare itsthenetwork/nfs-server-alpine:latest

Add --net=host or -p 2049:2049 to make the shares externally accessible via the host networking stack. This isn't necessary if using Rancher or linking containers in some other way.

Adding -e READ_ONLY will cause the exports file to contain ro instead of rw, allowing only read access by clients.

Adding -e SYNC=true will cause the exports file to contain sync instead of async, enabling synchronous mode. Check the exports man page for more information: https://linux.die.net/man/5/exports.

Adding -e PERMITTED="10.11.99.*" will permit only hosts with an IP address starting 10.11.99 to mount the file share.

Due to the fsid=0 parameter set in the /etc/exports file, there's no need to specify the folder name when mounting from a client. For example, this works fine even though the folder being mounted and shared is /nfsshare:

sudo mount -v 10.11.12.101:/ /some/where/here

To be a little more explicit:

sudo mount -v -o vers=4,loud 10.11.12.101:/ /some/where/here

To unmount:

sudo umount /some/where/here

The /etc/exports file contains these parameters unless modified by the environment variables listed above:

*(rw,fsid=0,async,no_subtree_check,no_auth_nlm,insecure,no_root_squash)

Note that the showmount command won't work against the server as rpcbind isn't running.

Privileged Mode

You'll note above with the docker run command that privileged mode is required. Yes, this is a security risk but an unavoidable one it seems. You could try these instead: --cap-add SYS_ADMIN --cap-add SETPCAP --security-opt=no-new-privileges but I've not had any luck with them myself. You may fare better with your own combination of Docker and OS. The SYS_ADMIN capability is very, very broad in any case and almost as risky as privileged mode.

See the following sub-sections for information on doing the same in non-interactive environments.

Kubernetes

As reported here #8 it appears Kubernetes requires the privileged: true option to be set:

spec:
  containers:
  - name: ...
    image: ...
    securityContext:
      privileged: true

To use capabilities instead:

spec:
  containers:
  - name: ...
    image: ...
    securityContext:
      capabilities:
        add: ["SYS_ADMIN", "SETPCAP"]

Note that AllowPrivilegeEscalation is automatically set to true when privileged mode is set to true or the SYS_ADMIN capability added.

Docker Compose v2/v3 or Rancher v1.x

When using Docker Compose you can specify privileged mode like so:

privileged: true

To use capabilities instead:

cap_add:
  - SYS_ADMIN
  - SETPCAP

RancherOS

You may need to do this at the CLI to get things working:

sudo ros service enable kernel-headers
sudo ros service up kernel-headers

Alternatively you can add this to the host's cloud-config.yml (or user data on the cloud):

#cloud-config
rancher:
  services_include:
    kernel-headers: true

RancherOS also uses overlayfs for Docker so please read the next section.

OverlayFS

OverlayFS does not support NFS export so please volume mount into your NFS container from an alternative (hopefully one is available).

On RancherOS the /home, /media and /mnt file systems are good choices as these are ext4.

Other Operating Systems

You may need to ensure the nfs and nfsd kernel modules are loaded by running modprobe nfs nfsd.

Host Mode Networking & Rancher DNS

You'll need to use this label if you are using host network mode and want other services to resolve the NFS service's name via Rancher DNS:

  labels:
    io.rancher.container.dns: 'true'

Mounting Within a Container

The container requires the SYS_ADMIN capability, or, less securely, to be run in privileged mode.

Multiple Shares

This image can be used to export and share multiple directories with a little modification. Be aware that NFSv4 dictates that the additional shared directories are subdirectories of the root share specified by SHARED_DIRECTORY.

Note its far easier to volume mount multiple directories as subdirectories of the root/first and share the root.

To share multiple directories you'll need to mount additional volumes and specify additional environment variables in your docker run command. Here's an example:

docker run -d --name nfs --privileged -v /some/where/fileshare:/nfsshare -v /some/where/else:/nfsshare/another -e SHARED_DIRECTORY=/nfsshare -e SHARED_DIRECTORY_2=/nfsshare/another itsthenetwork/nfs-server-alpine:latest

You should then modify the nfsd.sh file to process the extra environment variables and add entries to the exports file. I've already included a working example to get you started:

if [ ! -z "${SHARED_DIRECTORY_2}" ]; then
  echo "Writing SHARED_DIRECTORY_2 to /etc/exports file"
  echo "{{SHARED_DIRECTORY_2}} {{PERMITTED}}({{READ_ONLY}},{{SYNC}},no_subtree_check,no_auth_nlm,insecure,no_root_squash)" >> /etc/exports
  /bin/sed -i "s@{{SHARED_DIRECTORY_2}}@${SHARED_DIRECTORY_2}@g" /etc/exports
fi

You'll find you can now mount the root share as normal and the second shared directory will be available as a subdirectory. However, you should now be able to mount the second share directly too. In both cases you don't need to specify the root directory name with the mount commands. Using the docker run command above to start a container using this image, the two mount commands would be:

sudo mount -v 10.11.12.101:/ /mnt/one
sudo mount -v 10.11.12.101:/another /mnt/two

You might want to make the root share read only, or even make it inaccessible, to encourage users to only mount the correct, more specific shares directly. To do so you'll need to modify the exports file so the root share doesn't get configured based on the values assigned to the PERMITTED or SYNC environment variables.

What Good Looks Like

A successful server start should produce log output like this:

Writing SHARED_DIRECTORY to /etc/exports file
The PERMITTED environment variable is unset or null, defaulting to '*'.
This means any client can mount.
The READ_ONLY environment variable is unset or null, defaulting to 'rw'.
Clients have read/write access.
The SYNC environment variable is unset or null, defaulting to 'async' mode.
Writes will not be immediately written to disk.
Displaying /etc/exports contents:
/nfsshare *(rw,fsid=0,async,no_subtree_check,no_auth_nlm,insecure,no_root_squash)

Starting rpcbind...
Displaying rpcbind status...
   program version netid     address                service    owner
    100000    4    tcp6      ::.0.111               -          superuser
    100000    3    tcp6      ::.0.111               -          superuser
    100000    4    udp6      ::.0.111               -          superuser
    100000    3    udp6      ::.0.111               -          superuser
    100000    4    tcp       0.0.0.0.0.111          -          superuser
    100000    3    tcp       0.0.0.0.0.111          -          superuser
    100000    2    tcp       0.0.0.0.0.111          -          superuser
    100000    4    udp       0.0.0.0.0.111          -          superuser
    100000    3    udp       0.0.0.0.0.111          -          superuser
    100000    2    udp       0.0.0.0.0.111          -          superuser
    100000    4    local     /var/run/rpcbind.sock  -          superuser
    100000    3    local     /var/run/rpcbind.sock  -          superuser
Starting NFS in the background...
rpc.nfsd: knfsd is currently down
rpc.nfsd: Writing version string to kernel: -2 -3 +4
rpc.nfsd: Created AF_INET TCP socket.
rpc.nfsd: Created AF_INET6 TCP socket.
Exporting File System...
exporting *:/nfsshare
/nfsshare     	<world>
Starting Mountd in the background...
Startup successful.

What Good Looks Like - Confd Versions

The PERMITTED environment variable is missing or null, defaulting to '*'.
Any client can mount.
The READ_ONLY environment variable is missing or null, defaulting to 'rw'
Clients have read/write access.
The SYNC environment variable is missing or null, defaulting to 'async'.
Writes will not be immediately written to disk.
Starting Confd population of files...
confd 0.14.0 (Git SHA: 9fab9634, Go Version: go1.9.1)
2018-05-07T18:24:39Z d62d37258311 /usr/bin/confd[14]: INFO Backend set to env
2018-05-07T18:24:39Z d62d37258311 /usr/bin/confd[14]: INFO Starting confd
2018-05-07T18:24:39Z d62d37258311 /usr/bin/confd[14]: INFO Backend source(s) set to
2018-05-07T18:24:39Z d62d37258311 /usr/bin/confd[14]: INFO /etc/exports has md5sum 4f1bb7b2412ce5952ecb5ec22d8ed99d should be 92cc8fa446eef0e167648be03aba09e5
2018-05-07T18:24:39Z d62d37258311 /usr/bin/confd[14]: INFO Target config /etc/exports out of sync
2018-05-07T18:24:39Z d62d37258311 /usr/bin/confd[14]: INFO Target config /etc/exports has been updated
Displaying /etc/exports contents...
/nfsshare *(rw,fsid=0,async,no_subtree_check,no_auth_nlm,insecure,no_root_squash)
Starting rpcbind...
Displaying rpcbind status...
   program version netid     address                service    owner
    100000    4    tcp6      ::.0.111               -          superuser
    100000    3    tcp6      ::.0.111               -          superuser
    100000    4    udp6      ::.0.111               -          superuser
    100000    3    udp6      ::.0.111               -          superuser
    100000    4    tcp       0.0.0.0.0.111          -          superuser
    100000    3    tcp       0.0.0.0.0.111          -          superuser
    100000    2    tcp       0.0.0.0.0.111          -          superuser
    100000    4    udp       0.0.0.0.0.111          -          superuser
    100000    3    udp       0.0.0.0.0.111          -          superuser
    100000    2    udp       0.0.0.0.0.111          -          superuser
    100000    4    local     /var/run/rpcbind.sock  -          superuser
    100000    3    local     /var/run/rpcbind.sock  -          superuser
Starting NFS in the background...
rpc.nfsd: knfsd is currently down
rpc.nfsd: Writing version string to kernel: -2 -3 +4
rpc.nfsd: Created AF_INET TCP socket.
rpc.nfsd: Created AF_INET6 TCP socket.
Exporting File System...
exporting *:/nfsshare
/nfsshare     	<world>
Starting Mountd in the background...
Startup successful.

Dockerfile

The Dockerfile used to create this image is available at the root of the file system on build.

FROM alpine:latest
LABEL maintainer "Steven Iveson <steve@iveson.eu>"
LABEL source "https://github.com/sjiveson/nfs-server-alpine"
LABEL branch "master"
COPY Dockerfile README.md /

RUN apk add --no-cache --update --verbose nfs-utils bash iproute2 && \
    rm -rf /var/cache/apk /tmp /sbin/halt /sbin/poweroff /sbin/reboot && \
    mkdir -p /var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs /var/lib/nfs/v4recovery && \
    echo "rpc_pipefs    /var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs rpc_pipefs      defaults        0       0" >> /etc/fstab && \
    echo "nfsd  /proc/fs/nfsd   nfsd    defaults        0       0" >> /etc/fstab

COPY exports /etc/
COPY nfsd.sh /usr/bin/nfsd.sh
COPY .bashrc /root/.bashrc

RUN chmod +x /usr/bin/nfsd.sh

ENTRYPOINT ["/usr/bin/nfsd.sh"]

Acknowlegements

Thanks to Torsten Bronger @bronger for the suggestion and help around implementing a multistage Docker build to better handle the inclusion of Confd (since removed).

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A handy Alpine Linux based NFS Server image running NFS v4 only, over TCP on port 2049

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