1.7 KiB
Usage
From git directory
git checkout 3.0
git pull
docker build .
Catch is when you run without image tags you need to catch the ID when building
[..]
---> 889fa2f99933
Successfully built 889fa2f99933
More comfortable is
git checkout 3.0
git pull
docker build -t mytestssl .
docker run --rm -t mytestssl example.com
You can also supply command line options like:
docker run -t mytestssl --help
docker run --rm -t mytestssl -p --header example.com
From dockerhub or GHCR
You can pull the image from dockerhub or ghcr and e.g run:
docker run --rm -t drwetter/testssl.sh:3.0 --protocols --server-preference example.com
respectively
docker run --rm -it ghcr.io/testssl/testssl.sh:3.0 --protocols --server-preference example.com
As of now other tags supported are: latest
or 3.2
.. They are the same, i.e. the stable version. 3.0
is the old stable version.
docker run --rm -t drwetter/testssl.sh:3.0 example.com
or, for GHCR: docker run --rm -t ghcr.io/testssl/testssl.sh:3.0 example.com
.
Keep in mind that any output file (--log, --html, --json etc.) will be created in the container. If you wish to have this created in a local directory on your host you can mount a volume into the container and change the output prefix where the container user has write access to, e.g.:
docker run --rm -t -v /tmp:/data drwetter/testssl.sh:3.0 --htmlfile /data/ example.com
which writes the HTML output to /tmp/example.com_p443-<date>-<time>.html.
The uid/gid is the one from the docker user but normally the file is 644. testssl.sh's docker container uses a non-root user (usually with user/groupid 1000:1000).