dexec
is a small Go library allowing you to run processes inside
Docker containers as if you are running them locally using os/exec
package.
Read documentation at godoc.org or see examples.
Using dexec
, you can do stream processing, off-load computationally
expensive parts of your program to a remote fleet of Docker engines.
Its interface is strikingly similar to os/exec
.
Check out the following examples:
- Hello, world inside container →
- Connect to container’s
STDIN
/STDOUT
→ - Stream processing with pipes →
- Check exit code of a remote process →
- Audio extraction from YouTube videos →
- Parallel computation on Swarm →
It takes only a 4-line code change to convert a piece of code
using os/exec
to use dexec
to start running your stuff inside containers.
Here is a minimal Go program that runs echo
in a container:
package main
import (
"log"
dexec "github.com/ericvolp12/go-dexec"
"github.com/fsouza/go-dockerclient"
)
func main(){
cl, _ := docker.NewClient("unix:///var/run/docker.sock")
d := dexec.Docker{cl}
m, _ := dexec.ByCreatingContainer(docker.CreateContainerOptions{
Config: &docker.Config{Image: "busybox"}})
cmd := d.Command(m, "echo", `I am running inside a container!`)
b, err := cmd.Output()
if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) }
log.Printf("%s", b)
}
Output: I am running inside a container!
This library is intended for providing an execution model that looks and feels
like os/exec
package.
You might want to use this library when:
-
You want to execute a process, but run it in a container with extra security and finer control over resource usage with Docker –and change your code minimally.
-
You want to execute a piece of work on a remote machine (or even better, a pool of machines or a cluster) through Docker. Especially useful to distribute computationally expensive workloads.
For such cases, this library abstracts out the details of executing the process in a container and gives you a cleaner interface you are already familiar with.