Skip to content

Commit 9f4b256

Browse files
Merge pull request #290139 from TimShererWithAquent/us340914
SFI remediation: azure-docs-pr| azure-sql-edge | DAIC databases
2 parents e6d5ee4 + d8cdcf3 commit 9f4b256

File tree

3 files changed

+6
-6
lines changed

3 files changed

+6
-6
lines changed

articles/azure-sql-edge/configure.md

Lines changed: 4 additions & 4 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -185,11 +185,11 @@ Your Azure SQL Edge configuration changes and database files are persisted in th
185185
The first option is to mount a directory on your host as a data volume in your container. To do that, use the `docker run` command with the `-v <host directory>:/var/opt/mssql` flag. This allows the data to be restored between container executions.
186186
187187
```bash
188-
docker run -e 'ACCEPT_EULA=Y' -e 'MSSQL_SA_PASSWORD=<YourStrong!Passw0rd>' -p 1433:1433 -v <host directory>/data:/var/opt/mssql/data -v <host directory>/log:/var/opt/mssql/log -v <host directory>/secrets:/var/opt/mssql/secrets -d mcr.microsoft.com/azure-sql-edge
188+
docker run -e 'ACCEPT_EULA=Y' -e 'MSSQL_SA_PASSWORD=<password>' -p 1433:1433 -v <host directory>/data:/var/opt/mssql/data -v <host directory>/log:/var/opt/mssql/log -v <host directory>/secrets:/var/opt/mssql/secrets -d mcr.microsoft.com/azure-sql-edge
189189
```
190190
191191
```PowerShell
192-
docker run -e "ACCEPT_EULA=Y" -e "MSSQL_SA_PASSWORD=<YourStrong!Passw0rd>" -p 1433:1433 -v <host directory>/data:/var/opt/mssql/data -v <host directory>/log:/var/opt/mssql/log -v <host directory>/secrets:/var/opt/mssql/secrets -d mcr.microsoft.com/azure-sql-edge
192+
docker run -e "ACCEPT_EULA=Y" -e "MSSQL_SA_PASSWORD=<password>" -p 1433:1433 -v <host directory>/data:/var/opt/mssql/data -v <host directory>/log:/var/opt/mssql/log -v <host directory>/secrets:/var/opt/mssql/secrets -d mcr.microsoft.com/azure-sql-edge
193193
```
194194
195195
This technique also enables you to share and view the files on the host outside of Docker.
@@ -205,11 +205,11 @@ This technique also enables you to share and view the files on the host outside
205205
The second option is to use a data volume container. You can create a data volume container by specifying a volume name instead of a host directory with the `-v` parameter. The following example creates a shared data volume named **sqlvolume**.
206206
207207
```bash
208-
docker run -e 'ACCEPT_EULA=Y' -e 'MSSQL_SA_PASSWORD=<YourStrong!Passw0rd>' -p 1433:1433 -v sqlvolume:/var/opt/mssql -d mcr.microsoft.com/azure-sql-edge
208+
docker run -e 'ACCEPT_EULA=Y' -e 'MSSQL_SA_PASSWORD=<password>' -p 1433:1433 -v sqlvolume:/var/opt/mssql -d mcr.microsoft.com/azure-sql-edge
209209
```
210210
211211
```PowerShell
212-
docker run -e "ACCEPT_EULA=Y" -e "MSSQL_SA_PASSWORD=<YourStrong!Passw0rd>" -p 1433:1433 -v sqlvolume:/var/opt/mssql -d mcr.microsoft.com/azure-sql-edge
212+
docker run -e "ACCEPT_EULA=Y" -e "MSSQL_SA_PASSWORD=<password>" -p 1433:1433 -v sqlvolume:/var/opt/mssql -d mcr.microsoft.com/azure-sql-edge
213213
```
214214
215215
> [!NOTE]

articles/azure-sql-edge/deploy-kubernetes.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ Create an SA password in the Kubernetes cluster. Kubernetes can manage sensitive
7171
The following command creates a password for the SA account:
7272

7373
```azurecli
74-
kubectl create secret generic mssql --from-literal=MSQL_SA_PASSWORD="MyC0m9l&xP@ssw0rd" -n <namespace name>
74+
kubectl create secret generic mssql --from-literal=MSQL_SA_PASSWORD="<password>" -n <namespace name>
7575
```
7676

7777
Replace `MyC0m9l&xP@ssw0rd` with a complex password.

articles/azure-sql-edge/troubleshoot.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ If the SQL Edge container fails to run, try the following tests:
6363
- If you get an error such as `failed to create endpoint CONTAINER_NAME on network bridge. Error starting proxy: listen tcp 0.0.0.0:1433 bind: address already in use.`, you're attempting to map the container port 1433 to a port that is already in use. This can happen if you're running SQL Edge locally on the host machine. It can also happen if you start two SQL Edge containers and try to map them both to the same host port. If this happens, use the `-p` parameter to map the container port 1433 to a different host port. For example:
6464

6565
```bash
66-
sudo docker run --cap-add SYS_PTRACE -e 'ACCEPT_EULA=1' -e 'MSSQL_SA_PASSWORD=yourStrong(!)Password' -p 1433:1433 --name azuresqledge -d mcr.microsoft.com/azure-sql-edge-developer.
66+
sudo docker run --cap-add SYS_PTRACE -e 'ACCEPT_EULA=1' -e 'MSSQL_SA_PASSWORD=<password>' -p 1433:1433 --name azuresqledge -d mcr.microsoft.com/azure-sql-edge-developer.
6767
```
6868

6969
- If you get an error such as `Got permission denied while trying to connect to the Docker daemon socket at unix:///var/run/docker.sock: Get http://%2Fvar%2Frun%2Fdocker.sock/v1.30tdout=1&tail=all: dial unix /var/run/docker.sock: connect: permission denied` when trying to start a container, then add your user to the docker group in Ubuntu. Then sign out and sign back in again, as this change affects new sessions.

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)