Log into or run a command on a machine using SSH.
To login, just run docker-machine ssh machinename
:
$ docker-machine ssh dev
## .
## ## ## ==
## ## ## ## ===
/""""""""""""""""\___/ ===
~~~ {~~ ~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~ ~~ ~ / ===- ~~~
\______ o __/
\ \ __/
\____\______/
_ _ ____ _ _
| |__ ___ ___ | |_|___ \ __| | ___ ___| | _____ _ __
| '_ \ / _ \ / _ \| __| __) / _` |/ _ \ / __| |/ / _ \ '__|
| |_) | (_) | (_) | |_ / __/ (_| | (_) | (__| < __/ |
|_.__/ \___/ \___/ \__|_____\__,_|\___/ \___|_|\_\___|_|
Boot2Docker version 1.4.0, build master : 69cf398 - Fri Dec 12 01:39:42 UTC 2014
docker@boot2docker:~$ ls /
Users/ dev/ home/ lib/ mnt/ proc/ run/ sys/ usr/
bin/ etc/ init linuxrc opt/ root/ sbin/ tmp var/
You can also specify commands to run remotely by appending them directly to the
docker-machine ssh
command, much like the regular ssh
program works:
$ docker-machine ssh dev free
total used free shared buffers
Mem: 1023556 183136 840420 0 30920
-/+ buffers: 152216 871340
Swap: 1212036 0 1212036
Commands with flags will work as well:
$ docker-machine ssh dev df -h
Filesystem Size Used Available Use% Mounted on
rootfs 899.6M 85.9M 813.7M 10% /
tmpfs 899.6M 85.9M 813.7M 10% /
tmpfs 499.8M 0 499.8M 0% /dev/shm
/dev/sda1 18.2G 58.2M 17.2G 0% /mnt/sda1
cgroup 499.8M 0 499.8M 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
/dev/sda1 18.2G 58.2M 17.2G 0%
/mnt/sda1/var/lib/docker/aufs
If you are using the “external” SSH type as detailed in the next section, you
can include additional arguments to pass through to the ssh
binary in the
generated command (unless they conflict with any of the default arguments for
the command generated by Docker Machine). For instance, the following command
will forward port 8080 from the default
machine to localhost
on your host
computer:
$ docker-machine ssh default -L 8080:localhost:8080
When Docker Machine is invoked, it will check to see if you have the venerable
ssh
binary around locally and will attempt to use that for the SSH commands it
needs to run, whether they are a part of an operation such as creation or have
been requested by the user directly. If it does not find an external ssh
binary locally, it will default to using a native Go implementation from
crypto/ssh. This is useful in
situations where you may not have access to traditional UNIX tools, such as if
you are using Docker Machine on Windows without having msysgit installed
alongside of it.
In most situations, you will not have to worry about this implementation detail and Docker Machine will act sensibly out of the box. However, if you deliberately want to use the Go native version, you can do so with a global command line flag / environment variable like so:
$ docker-machine --native-ssh ssh dev
There are some variations in behavior between the two methods, so please report any issues or inconsistencies if you come across them.