Docker container SSL certificates

Mount the certs onto the Docker container using -v:

docker run -v /host/path/to/certs:/container/path/to/certs -d IMAGE_ID "update-ca-certificates"

I am trying to do something similar to this. As commented above, I think you would want to build a new image with a custom Dockerfile (using the image you pulled as a base image), ADD your certificate, then RUN update-ca-certificates. This way you will have a consistent state each time you start a container from this new image.

# Dockerfile
FROM some-base-image:0.1
ADD you_certificate.crt:/container/cert/path
RUN update-ca-certificates

Let's say a docker build against that Dockerfile produced IMAGE_ID. On the next docker run -d [any other options] IMAGE_ID, the container started by that command will have your certificate info. Simple and reproducible.


As was suggested in a comment above, if the certificate store on the host is compatible with the guest, you can just mount it directly.

On a Debian host (and container), I've successfully done:

docker run -v /etc/ssl/certs:/etc/ssl/certs:ro ...

You can use relative path to mount the volume to container:

docker run -v `pwd`/certs:/container/path/to/certs ...

Note the back tick on the pwd which give you the present working directory. It assumes you have the certs folder in current directory that the docker run is executed. Kinda great for local development and keep the certs folder visible to your project.