Note: Still trying to navigate communities here on Lemmy to replace those from Reddit. If there is a better place such a question, I would welcome the suggestion.
I’m running a Synology NAS, which uses some flavor of Linux distribution. From there, among everything else running, I have a docker container hosting a Minecraft Bedrock Server. The MCBE server is great for fun, but not so great for resource usage. To handle this, most folks setup something to schedule the server to restart.
Within Synology, there is a task scheduler where I can run a user-defined script to restart the whole container:
docker restart mcbe-world
This works, but it’s a dirty reboot though. I worried about corrupting the world (which I do regularly backup). From within the Minecraft server terminal, the /stop
command will gracefully shut it down.
I can’t update the container with another application, like screen, because each MCBE update means replacing the entire container (and so destroying the changes). I am looking to somehow redirect a command to the server if possible.
Using docker exec -it mcbe-world
, I can execute what I want within the container.
The person here said, one can “inject commands by running the command as the appropriate account and redirecting it into the server” and they gave the example sudo su -s /bin/bash -c "echo say foobar > /run/service@name"
Unfortunately, this isn’t so clear and straight forward to me.
Would anyone here be able to articulate this more clearly for me or have an idea as to how I might issue that /stop command from the Synology scheduled script BEFORE restarting the container?
Thanks!
UPDATE: Solution here: https://beehaw.org/comment/1088961
This looked so promising.
Via SSH, I can indeed use
docker attach
and from within I can issue astop
for MC server. Works fine.However, the Synology task scheduler via DSM doesn’t seem to be able to similarly attach and then issue the stop command. I get this back via email (for when a scheduled task fails):
If you aren’t starting your container with the
-it
options (fordocker run
), try setting them so that it allocates a tty. The fact that it works with SSH however makes me think that perhaps the Synology task runner can’t run interactive commands likedocker attach
because it has no stdin. In that case you’ll need to do something like this: https://serverfault.com/questions/885765/how-to-send-text-to-stdin-of-docker-container/947763#947763 to pipe the stop command into the stdin of the bedrock server.If you aren’t starting your container with the
-it
options, try setting it so that it allocates a tty. The fact that it works with SSH however makes me think that perhaps the Synology task runner can’t run interactive commands likedocker attach
because it has no stdin. In that case you’ll need to do something like this: https://serverfault.com/questions/885765/how-to-send-text-to-stdin-of-docker-container/947763#947763 to pipe the stop command into the stdin of the bedrock server.