Nathan Thompson
Nathan Thompson

Reputation: 2384

Docker Plugin for Jenkins Pipeline - No user exists for uid 1005

I'm trying to execute an SSH command from inside a Docker container in a Jenkins pipeline. I'm using the CloudBees Docker Pipeline Plugin to spin up the container and execute commands, and the SSH Agent Plugin to manage my SSH keys. Here's a basic version of my Jenkinsfile:

node {
  step([$class: 'WsCleanup'])
  docker.image('node').inside {
    stage('SSH') {
      sshagent (credentials: [ 'MY_KEY_UUID' ]) {
        sh "ssh -vvv -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no [email protected] uname -a"
      }
    }
  }
}

When the SSH command runs, I get this error:

+ ssh -vvv -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no [email protected] uname -a
No user exists for uid 1005

Upvotes: 25

Views: 17496

Answers (4)

Ranesh
Ranesh

Reputation: 1

From the solution provided by Nathan Thompson, I modified it this way for Jenkins DOCKER build container which runs inside a Jenkins DOCKER-slave. #docker in docker

if (validated_parameters.custom_gradle_image){
                docker.image(validated_parameters.custom_gradle_image).inside(" -v /etc/passwd:/etc/passwd -v /var/lib/jenkins/.ssh/:/var/lib/jenkins/.ssh/ "){
                 sshagent(['jenkins-git-io']){
                    sh "${gradleCommand}"
                 }

Upvotes: 0

Florian Bachmann
Florian Bachmann

Reputation: 572

I just found another solution to this problem, that I want to share. It differentiates from the existing solutions in that it allows to run the complete pipeline in one agent, instead of per stage.

The trick is to, instead of directly using an image, refer to a Dockerfile (which may be build FROM the original) and then add the user:

# Dockerfile
FROM node

ARG jenkinsUserId=
RUN if ! id $jenkinsUserId; then \
    usermod -u ${jenkinsUserId} jenkins; \
    groupmod -g ${nodeId} jenkins; \
  fi
// Jenkinsfile
pipeline {
  agent {
    dockerfile {
      additionalBuildArgs "--build-arg jenkinsUserId=\$(id -u jenkins)"
    }
  }
}

Upvotes: 8

hpaknia
hpaknia

Reputation: 3118

The solution provided by @nathan-thompson is awesome, but in my case I was unable to find the user even in the /etc/passwd of the host machine! It means mounting the passwd file did not fix the problem. This question https://superuser.com/questions/580148/users-not-found-in-etc-passwd suggested some users are logged in the host using an identity provider like LDAP.

The solution was finding a way to add the proper line to the passwd file on the container. Calling getent passwd $USER on the host will provide the passwd line for the Jenkins user running the container.

I added a step running on the node (and not the docker agent) to get the line and save it in a file. Then in the next step I mounted the generated passwd to the container:

stages {
    stage('Create passwd') {
        steps {
            sh """echo \$(getent passwd \$USER) > /tmp/tmp_passwd
            """
        }
    }
    stage('Test') {
        agent {
            docker {
                image '*******'
                args '***** -v /tmp/tmp_passwd:/etc/passwd'
                reuseNode true
                registryUrl '*****'
                registryCredentialsId '*****'
            }
        }
        steps {
            sh """ssh -i ********
            """
        }
    }
}

Upvotes: 10

Nathan Thompson
Nathan Thompson

Reputation: 2384

I combed through the logs and realized the Docker Pipeline Plugin is automatically telling the container to run with the same user that is logged in on the host by passing a UID as a command line argument:

$ docker run -t -d -u 1005:1005 [...]

I decided to check what users existed in the host and the container by running cat /etc/passwd in each environment. Sure enough, the list of users was different in each. 1005 was the jenkins user on the host machine, but that UID didn't exist in the container. To solve the issue, I mounted /etc/passwd from the host to the container when spinning it up:

node {
  step([$class: 'WsCleanup'])
  docker.image('node').inside('-v /etc/passwd:/etc/passwd') {
    stage('SSH') {
      sshagent (credentials: [ 'MY_KEY_UUID' ]) {
        sh "ssh -vvv -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no [email protected] uname -a"
      }
    }
  }
}

Upvotes: 31

Related Questions