Simple CentOS docker image with SSH access
To create the image tutum/centos
with one tag per CentOS release, execute the following commands on the tutum-ubuntu repository folder:
docker build -t tutum/centos:latest .
docker build -t tutum/centos:centos5 centos5
docker build -t tutum/centos:centos6 centos6
docker build -t tutum/centos:centos7 centos7
Run a container from the image you created earlier binding it to port 2222 in all interfaces:
sudo docker run -d -p 0.0.0.0:2222:22 tutum/centos
The first time that you run your container, a random password will be generated
for user root
. To get the password, check the logs of the container by running:
docker logs <CONTAINER_ID>
You will see an output like the following:
========================================================================
You can now connect to this CentOS container via SSH using:
ssh -p <port> root@<host>
and enter the root password 'U0iSGVUCr7W3' when prompted
Please remember to change the above password as soon as possible!
========================================================================
In this case, U0iSGVUCr7W3
is the password allocated to the root
user.
Done!
If you want to use a preset password instead of a random generated one, you can
set the environment variable ROOT_PASS
to your specific password when running the container:
docker run -d -p 0.0.0.0:2222:22 -e ROOT_PASS="mypass" tutum/centos
If you want to use your SSH key to login, you can use the AUTHORIZED_KEYS
environment variable. You can add more than one public key separating them by ,
:
docker run -d -p 2222:22 -e AUTHORIZED_KEYS="`cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub`" tutum/centos