Simply add pidunu to all your docker containers, and make it run your desired command:
CMD ["/path/to/my/binary", "arg1", "arg2"]
becomes
ADD pidunu /usr/bin/pidunu
CMD ["/usr/bin/pidunu", "/path/to/my/binary", "arg1", "arg2"]
Pidunu does one thing and one thing only: it will start one process, and reap any children untill the spawned child exits, at wich point it will exit as well. Since "docker stop" sends a sigterm to the process it spawned in the container, Pidunu is wellbehaved and passes along SIGTERM to the spawned child.
No. Run an actual init daemon or look at something like supervisord to use together with pidunu.
Basically to avoid zombie processes in your containers.
Any process that exits, still gets tracked by the kernel until it's parrent calls wait (called reaping). This ensures the parent can find out about the return code of exited subprocesses. Untill reaping happens the process is said to be in a Zombie state.
If your process spawns a child process, and that process spawns it's own children and exits before they terminate, those children are inherited by PID1. On *nixe PID1 has the special responsibillity of calling wait on any ingerited child. When using Docker, whatever command you specified as the entry point will be the first one spawned thus becoming PID1 for your container.
I sugest you read this great explanation: http://blog.phusion.nl/2015/01/20/docker-and-the-pid-1-zombie-reaping-problem/
This is definitely not a mature project, however there are tests and I use it in a couple of places and it seems to do the job quite well. The whole thing is just under 90 lines of vanilla C code which you can review for yourself.
make
The resulting executable is statically linked for maximum portabillity.
The tests are written using the pytest framework and the docker python bindings. It's recommended you setup a virtualenv to install the python dependencies to ensure you don't mess up your system's python packages.
If you don't have virtualenv installed follow the instructions here: https://virtualenv.pypa.io/en/latest/installation.html
virtualenv ve_pidunu
source ve_pidunu/bin/activate
pip install -r test/dependencies.txt
Now that we have installed the python dependencies we can run the tests like so:
make test # this also compiles the debug target for us