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Dockerfile reference
Docker can build images automatically by reading the instructions from a
Dockerfile. A Dockerfile is a text document that contains all the commands a
user could call on the command line to assemble an image. Using docker build
users can create an automated build that executes several command-line
instructions in succession.
This page describes the commands you can use in a Dockerfile. When you are
done reading this page, refer to the Dockerfile Best
Practices for a tip-oriented guide.
Usage
The docker build command builds an image from
a Dockerfile and a context. The build's context is the files at a specified
location PATH or URL. The PATH is a directory on your local filesystem.
The URL is a the location of a Git repository.
A context is processed recursively. So, a PATH includes any subdirectories and
the URL includes the repository and its submodules. A simple build command
that uses the current directory as context:
$ docker build .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 6.51 MB
...
The build is run by the Docker daemon, not by the CLI. The first thing a build process does is send the entire context (recursively) to the daemon. In most cases, it's best to start with an empty directory as context and keep your Dockerfile in that directory. Add only the files needed for building the Dockerfile.
Warning
: Do not use your root directory,
/, as thePATHas it causes the build to transfer the entire contents of your hard drive to the Docker daemon.
To use a file in the build context, the Dockerfile refers to the file specified
in an instruction, for example, a COPY instruction. To increase the build's
performance, exclude files and directories by adding a .dockerignore file to
the context directory. For information about how to create a .dockerignore
file see the documentation on this page.
Traditionally, the Dockerfile is called Dockerfile and located in the root
of the context. You use the -f flag with docker build to point to a Dockerfile
anywhere in your file system.
$ docker build -f /path/to/a/Dockerfile .
You can specify a repository and tag at which to save the new image if the build succeeds:
$ docker build -t shykes/myapp .
To tag the image into multiple repositories after the build,
add multiple -t parameters when you run the build command:
$ docker build -t shykes/myapp:1.0.2 -t shykes/myapp:latest .
The Docker daemon runs the instructions in the Dockerfile one-by-one,
committing the result of each instruction
to a new image if necessary, before finally outputting the ID of your
new image. The Docker daemon will automatically clean up the context you
sent.
Note that each instruction is run independently, and causes a new image
to be created - so RUN cd /tmp will not have any effect on the next
instructions.
Whenever possible, Docker will re-use the intermediate images (cache),
to accelerate the docker build process significantly. This is indicated by
the Using cache message in the console output.
(For more information, see the Build cache section) in the
Dockerfile best practices guide:
$ docker build -t svendowideit/ambassador .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 15.36 kB
Step 0 : FROM alpine:3.2
---> 31f630c65071
Step 1 : MAINTAINER SvenDowideit@home.org.au
---> Using cache
---> 2a1c91448f5f
Step 2 : RUN apk update && apk add socat && rm -r /var/cache/
---> Using cache
---> 21ed6e7fbb73
Step 3 : CMD env | grep _TCP= | sed 's/.*_PORT_\([0-9]*\)_TCP=tcp:\/\/\(.*\):\(.*\)/socat -t 100000000 TCP4-LISTEN:\1,fork,reuseaddr TCP4:\2:\3 \& wait/' | sh
---> Using cache
---> 7ea8aef582cc
Successfully built 7ea8aef582cc
When you're done with your build, you're ready to look into Pushing a repository to its registry.
Format
Here is the format of the Dockerfile:
# Comment
INSTRUCTION arguments
The instruction is not case-sensitive, however convention is for them to be UPPERCASE in order to distinguish them from arguments more easily.
Docker runs the instructions in a Dockerfile in order. The
first instruction must be `FROM` in order to specify the Base
Image from which you are building.
Docker will treat lines that begin with # as a
comment. A # marker anywhere else in the line will
be treated as an argument. This allows statements like:
# Comment
RUN echo 'we are running some # of cool things'
Here is the set of instructions you can use in a Dockerfile for building
images.
Environment replacement
Environment variables (declared with the ENV statement) can also be
used in certain instructions as variables to be interpreted by the
Dockerfile. Escapes are also handled for including variable-like syntax
into a statement literally.
Environment variables are notated in the Dockerfile either with
$variable_name or ${variable_name}. They are treated equivalently and the
brace syntax is typically used to address issues with variable names with no
whitespace, like ${foo}_bar.
The ${variable_name} syntax also supports a few of the standard bash
modifiers as specified below:
${variable:-word}indicates that ifvariableis set then the result will be that value. Ifvariableis not set thenwordwill be the result.${variable:+word}indicates that ifvariableis set thenwordwill be the result, otherwise the result is the empty string.
In all cases, word can be any string, including additional environment
variables.
Escaping is possible by adding a \ before the variable: \$foo or \${foo},
for example, will translate to $foo and ${foo} literals respectively.
Example (parsed representation is displayed after the #):
FROM busybox
ENV foo /bar
WORKDIR ${foo} # WORKDIR /bar
ADD . $foo # ADD . /bar
COPY \$foo /quux # COPY $foo /quux
Environment variables are supported by the following list of instructions in
the Dockerfile:
ADDCOPYENVEXPOSELABELUSERWORKDIRVOLUMESTOPSIGNAL
as well as:
ONBUILD(when combined with one of the supported instructions above)
Note
prior to 1.4,
ONBUILDinstructions did NOT support environment variable, even when combined with any of the instructions listed above.
Environment variable substitution will use the same value for each variable throughout the entire command. In other words, in this example:
ENV abc=hello
ENV abc=bye def=$abc
ENV ghi=$abc
will result in def having a value of hello, not bye. However,
ghi will have a value of bye because it is not part of the same command
that set abc to bye.
.dockerignore file
Before the docker CLI sends the context to the docker daemon, it looks
for a file named .dockerignore in the root directory of the context.
If this file exists, the CLI modifies the context to exclude files and
directories that match patterns in it. This helps to avoid
unnecessarily sending large or sensitive files and directories to the
daemon and potentially adding them to images using ADD or COPY.
The CLI interprets the .dockerignore file as a newline-separated
list of patterns similar to the file globs of Unix shells. For the
purposes of matching, the root of the context is considered to be both
the working and the root directory. For example, the patterns
/foo/bar and foo/bar both exclude a file or directory named bar
in the foo subdirectory of PATH or in the root of the git
repository located at URL. Neither excludes anything else.
Here is an example .dockerignore file:
*/temp*
*/*/temp*
temp?
This file causes the following build behavior:
| Rule | Behavior |
|---|---|
*/temp* |
Exclude files and directories whose names start with temp in any immediate subdirectory of the root. For example, the plain file /somedir/temporary.txt is excluded, as is the directory /somedir/temp. |
*/*/temp* |
Exclude files and directories starting with temp from any subdirectory that is two levels below the root. For example, /somedir/subdir/temporary.txt is excluded. |
temp? |
Exclude files and directories in the root directory whose names are a one-character extension of temp. For example, /tempa and /tempb are excluded. |
Matching is done using Go's
filepath.Match rules. A
preprocessing step removes leading and trailing whitespace and
eliminates . and .. elements using Go's
filepath.Clean. Lines
that are blank after preprocessing are ignored.
Lines starting with ! (exclamation mark) can be used to make exceptions
to exclusions. The following is an example .dockerignore file that
uses this mechanism:
*.md
!README.md
All markdown files except README.md are excluded from the context.
The placement of ! exception rules influences the behavior: the last
line of the .dockerignore that matches a particular file determines
whether it is included or excluded. Consider the following example:
*.md
!README*.md
README-secret.md
No markdown files are included in the context except README files other than
README-secret.md.
Now consider this example:
*.md
README-secret.md
!README*.md
All of the README files are included. The middle line has no effect because
!README*.md matches README-secret.md and comes last.
You can even use the .dockerignore file to exclude the Dockerfile
and .dockerignore files. These files are still sent to the daemon
because it needs them to do its job. But the ADD and COPY commands
do not copy them to the the image.
Finally, you may want to specify which files to include in the
context, rather than which to exclude. To achieve this, specify * as
the first pattern, followed by one or more ! exception patterns.
Note: For historical reasons, the pattern . is ignored.
FROM
FROM <image>
Or
FROM <image>:<tag>
Or
FROM <image>@<digest>
The FROM instruction sets the Base Image
for subsequent instructions. As such, a valid Dockerfile must have FROM as
its first instruction. The image can be any valid image – it is especially easy
to start by pulling an image from the Public Repositories.
-
FROMmust be the first non-comment instruction in theDockerfile. -
FROMcan appear multiple times within a singleDockerfilein order to create multiple images. Simply make a note of the last image ID output by the commit before each newFROMcommand. -
The
tagordigestvalues are optional. If you omit either of them, the builder assumes alatestby default. The builder returns an error if it cannot match thetagvalue.
MAINTAINER
MAINTAINER <name>
The MAINTAINER instruction allows you to set the Author field of the
generated images.
RUN
RUN has 2 forms:
RUN <command>(shell form, the command is run in a shell -/bin/sh -c)RUN ["executable", "param1", "param2"](exec form)
The RUN instruction will execute any commands in a new layer on top of the
current image and commit the results. The resulting committed image will be
used for the next step in the Dockerfile.
Layering RUN instructions and generating commits conforms to the core
concepts of Docker where commits are cheap and containers can be created from
any point in an image's history, much like source control.
The exec form makes it possible to avoid shell string munging, and to RUN
commands using a base image that does not contain /bin/sh.
In the shell form you can use a \ (backslash) to continue a single
RUN instruction onto the next line. For example, consider these two lines:
RUN /bin/bash -c 'source $HOME/.bashrc ;\
echo $HOME'
Together they are equivalent to this single line:
RUN /bin/bash -c 'source $HOME/.bashrc ; echo $HOME'
Note
To use a different shell, other than '/bin/sh', use the exec form passing in the desired shell. For example,
RUN ["/bin/bash", "-c", "echo hello"]
Note
The exec form is parsed as a JSON array, which means that you must use double-quotes (") around words not single-quotes (').
Note
Unlike the shell form, the exec form does not invoke a command shell. This means that normal shell processing does not happen. For example,
RUN [ "echo", "$HOME" ]will not do variable substitution on$HOME. If you want shell processing then either use the shell form or execute a shell directly, for example:RUN [ "sh", "-c", "echo", "$HOME" ].
The cache for RUN instructions isn't invalidated automatically during
the next build. The cache for an instruction like
RUN apt-get dist-upgrade -y will be reused during the next build. The
cache for RUN instructions can be invalidated by using the --no-cache
flag, for example docker build --no-cache.
See the Dockerfile Best Practices
guide for more information.
The cache for RUN instructions can be invalidated by ADD instructions. See
below for details.
Known issues (RUN)
-
Issue 783 is about file permissions problems that can occur when using the AUFS file system. You might notice it during an attempt to
rma file, for example.For systems that have recent aufs version (i.e.,
dirperm1mount option can be set), docker will attempt to fix the issue automatically by mounting the layers withdirperm1option. More details ondirperm1option can be found ataufsman pageIf your system doesn't have support for
dirperm1, the issue describes a workaround.
CMD
The CMD instruction has three forms:
CMD ["executable","param1","param2"](exec form, this is the preferred form)CMD ["param1","param2"](as default parameters to ENTRYPOINT)CMD command param1 param2(shell form)
There can only be one CMD instruction in a Dockerfile. If you list more than one CMD
then only the last CMD will take effect.
The main purpose of a CMD is to provide defaults for an executing
container. These defaults can include an executable, or they can omit
the executable, in which case you must specify an ENTRYPOINT
instruction as well.
Note
If
CMDis used to provide default arguments for theENTRYPOINTinstruction, both theCMDandENTRYPOINTinstructions should be specified with the JSON array format.
Note
The exec form is parsed as a JSON array, which means that you must use double-quotes (") around words not single-quotes (').
Note
Unlike the shell form, the exec form does not invoke a command shell. This means that normal shell processing does not happen. For example,
CMD [ "echo", "$HOME" ]will not do variable substitution on$HOME. If you want shell processing then either use the shell form or execute a shell directly, for example:CMD [ "sh", "-c", "echo", "$HOME" ].
When used in the shell or exec formats, the CMD instruction sets the command
to be executed when running the image.
If you use the shell form of the CMD, then the <command> will execute in
/bin/sh -c:
FROM ubuntu
CMD echo "This is a test." | wc -
If you want to run your <command> without a shell then you must
express the command as a JSON array and give the full path to the executable.
This array form is the preferred format of CMD. Any additional parameters
must be individually expressed as strings in the array:
FROM ubuntu
CMD ["/usr/bin/wc","--help"]
If you would like your container to run the same executable every time, then
you should consider using ENTRYPOINT in combination with CMD. See
ENTRYPOINT.
If the user specifies arguments to docker run then they will override the
default specified in CMD.
Note
don't confuse
RUNwithCMD.RUNactually runs a command and commits the result;CMDdoes not execute anything at build time, but specifies the intended command for the image.
LABEL
LABEL <key>=<value> <key>=<value> <key>=<value> ...
The LABEL instruction adds metadata to an image. A LABEL is a
key-value pair. To include spaces within a LABEL value, use quotes and
backslashes as you would in command-line parsing. A few usage examples:
LABEL "com.example.vendor"="ACME Incorporated"
LABEL com.example.label-with-value="foo"
LABEL version="1.0"
LABEL description="This text illustrates \
that label-values can span multiple lines."
An image can have more than one label. To specify multiple labels,
Docker recommends combining labels into a single LABEL instruction where
possible. Each LABEL instruction produces a new layer which can result in an
inefficient image if you use many labels. This example results in a single image
layer.
LABEL multi.label1="value1" multi.label2="value2" other="value3"
The above can also be written as:
LABEL multi.label1="value1" \
multi.label2="value2" \
other="value3"
Labels are additive including LABELs in FROM images. If Docker
encounters a label/key that already exists, the new value overrides any previous
labels with identical keys.
To view an image's labels, use the docker inspect command.
"Labels": {
"com.example.vendor": "ACME Incorporated"
"com.example.label-with-value": "foo",
"version": "1.0",
"description": "This text illustrates that label-values can span multiple lines.",
"multi.label1": "value1",
"multi.label2": "value2",
"other": "value3"
},
EXPOSE
EXPOSE <port> [<port>...]
The EXPOSE instruction informs Docker that the container listens on the
specified network ports at runtime. EXPOSE does not make the ports of the
container accessible to the host. To do that, you must use either the -p flag
to publish a range of ports or the -P flag to publish all of the exposed ports.
You can expose one port number and publish it externally under another number.
Docker uses exposed and published ports to interconnect containers using links (see Linking containers together) and to set up port redirection on the host system when using the -P flag.
ENV
ENV <key> <value>
ENV <key>=<value> ...
The ENV instruction sets the environment variable <key> to the value
<value>. This value will be in the environment of all "descendent" Dockerfile
commands and can be replaced inline in many as well.
The ENV instruction has two forms. The first form, ENV <key> <value>,
will set a single variable to a value. The entire string after the first
space will be treated as the <value> - including characters such as
spaces and quotes.
The second form, ENV <key>=<value> ..., allows for multiple variables to
be set at one time. Notice that the second form uses the equals sign (=)
in the syntax, while the first form does not. Like command line parsing,
quotes and backslashes can be used to include spaces within values.
For example:
ENV myName="John Doe" myDog=Rex\ The\ Dog \
myCat=fluffy
and
ENV myName John Doe
ENV myDog Rex The Dog
ENV myCat fluffy
will yield the same net results in the final container, but the first form is preferred because it produces a single cache layer.
The environment variables set using ENV will persist when a container is run
from the resulting image. You can view the values using docker inspect, and
change them using docker run --env <key>=<value>.
Note
Environment persistence can cause unexpected side effects. For example, setting
ENV DEBIAN_FRONTEND noninteractivemay confuse apt-get users on a Debian-based image. To set a value for a single command, useRUN <key>=<value> <command>.
ADD
ADD has two forms:
ADD <src>... <dest>ADD ["<src>",... "<dest>"](this form is required for paths containing whitespace)
The ADD instruction copies new files, directories or remote file URLs from <src>
and adds them to the filesystem of the container at the path <dest>.
Multiple <src> resource may be specified but if they are files or
directories then they must be relative to the source directory that is
being built (the context of the build).
Each <src> may contain wildcards and matching will be done using Go's
filepath.Match rules. For example:
ADD hom* /mydir/ # adds all files starting with "hom"
ADD hom?.txt /mydir/ # ? is replaced with any single character, e.g., "home.txt"
The <dest> is an absolute path, or a path relative to WORKDIR, into which
the source will be copied inside the destination container.
ADD test relativeDir/ # adds "test" to `WORKDIR`/relativeDir/
ADD test /absoluteDir # adds "test" to /absoluteDir
All new files and directories are created with a UID and GID of 0.
In the case where <src> is a remote file URL, the destination will
have permissions of 600. If the remote file being retrieved has an HTTP
Last-Modified header, the timestamp from that header will be used
to set the mtime on the destination file. However, like any other file
processed during an ADD, mtime will not be included in the determination
of whether or not the file has changed and the cache should be updated.
Note
If you build by passing a
Dockerfilethrough STDIN (docker build - < somefile), there is no build context, so theDockerfilecan only contain a URL basedADDinstruction. You can also pass a compressed archive through STDIN: (docker build - < archive.tar.gz), theDockerfileat the root of the archive and the rest of the archive will get used at the context of the build.
Note
If your URL files are protected using authentication, you will need to use
RUN wget,RUN curlor use another tool from within the container as theADDinstruction does not support authentication.
Note
The first encountered
ADDinstruction will invalidate the cache for all following instructions from the Dockerfile if the contents of<src>have changed. This includes invalidating the cache forRUNinstructions. See theDockerfileBest Practices guide for more information.
ADD obeys the following rules:
-
The
<src>path must be inside the context of the build; you cannotADD ../something /something, because the first step of adocker buildis to send the context directory (and subdirectories) to the docker daemon. -
If
<src>is a URL and<dest>does not end with a trailing slash, then a file is downloaded from the URL and copied to<dest>. -
If
<src>is a URL and<dest>does end with a trailing slash, then the filename is inferred from the URL and the file is downloaded to<dest>/<filename>. For instance,ADD http://example.com/foobar /would create the file/foobar. The URL must have a nontrivial path so that an appropriate filename can be discovered in this case (http://example.comwill not work). -
If
<src>is a directory, the entire contents of the directory are copied, including filesystem metadata.
Note
The directory itself is not copied, just its contents.
-
If
<src>is a local tar archive in a recognized compression format (identity, gzip, bzip2 or xz) then it is unpacked as a directory. Resources from remote URLs are not decompressed. When a directory is copied or unpacked, it has the same behavior astar -x: the result is the union of:- Whatever existed at the destination path and
- The contents of the source tree, with conflicts resolved in favor of "2." on a file-by-file basis.
-
If
<src>is any other kind of file, it is copied individually along with its metadata. In this case, if<dest>ends with a trailing slash/, it will be considered a directory and the contents of<src>will be written at<dest>/base(<src>). -
If multiple
<src>resources are specified, either directly or due to the use of a wildcard, then<dest>must be a directory, and it must end with a slash/. -
If
<dest>does not end with a trailing slash, it will be considered a regular file and the contents of<src>will be written at<dest>. -
If
<dest>doesn't exist, it is created along with all missing directories in its path.
COPY
COPY has two forms:
COPY <src>... <dest>COPY ["<src>",... "<dest>"](this form is required for paths containing whitespace)
The COPY instruction copies new files or directories from <src>
and adds them to the filesystem of the container at the path <dest>.
Multiple <src> resource may be specified but they must be relative
to the source directory that is being built (the context of the build).
Each <src> may contain wildcards and matching will be done using Go's
filepath.Match rules. For example:
COPY hom* /mydir/ # adds all files starting with "hom"
COPY hom?.txt /mydir/ # ? is replaced with any single character, e.g., "home.txt"
The <dest> is an absolute path, or a path relative to WORKDIR, into which
the source will be copied inside the destination container.
COPY test relativeDir/ # adds "test" to `WORKDIR`/relativeDir/
COPY test /absoluteDir # adds "test" to /absoluteDir
All new files and directories are created with a UID and GID of 0.
Note
If you build using STDIN (
docker build - < somefile), there is no build context, soCOPYcan't be used.
COPY obeys the following rules:
-
The
<src>path must be inside the context of the build; you cannotCOPY ../something /something, because the first step of adocker buildis to send the context directory (and subdirectories) to the docker daemon. -
If
<src>is a directory, the entire contents of the directory are copied, including filesystem metadata.
Note
The directory itself is not copied, just its contents.
-
If
<src>is any other kind of file, it is copied individually along with its metadata. In this case, if<dest>ends with a trailing slash/, it will be considered a directory and the contents of<src>will be written at<dest>/base(<src>). -
If multiple
<src>resources are specified, either directly or due to the use of a wildcard, then<dest>must be a directory, and it must end with a slash/. -
If
<dest>does not end with a trailing slash, it will be considered a regular file and the contents of<src>will be written at<dest>. -
If
<dest>doesn't exist, it is created along with all missing directories in its path.
ENTRYPOINT
ENTRYPOINT has two forms:
ENTRYPOINT ["executable", "param1", "param2"](exec form, preferred)ENTRYPOINT command param1 param2(shell form)
An ENTRYPOINT allows you to configure a container that will run as an executable.
For example, the following will start nginx with its default content, listening on port 80:
docker run -i -t --rm -p 80:80 nginx
Command line arguments to docker run <image> will be appended after all
elements in an exec form ENTRYPOINT, and will override all elements specified
using CMD.
This allows arguments to be passed to the entry point, i.e., docker run <image> -d
will pass the -d argument to the entry point.
You can override the ENTRYPOINT instruction using the docker run --entrypoint
flag.
The shell form prevents any CMD or run command line arguments from being
used, but has the disadvantage that your ENTRYPOINT will be started as a
subcommand of /bin/sh -c, which does not pass signals.
This means that the executable will not be the container's PID 1 - and
will not receive Unix signals - so your executable will not receive a
SIGTERM from docker stop <container>.
Only the last ENTRYPOINT instruction in the Dockerfile will have an effect.
Exec form ENTRYPOINT example
You can use the exec form of ENTRYPOINT to set fairly stable default commands
and arguments and then use either form of CMD to set additional defaults that
are more likely to be changed.
FROM ubuntu
ENTRYPOINT ["top", "-b"]
CMD ["-c"]
When you run the container, you can see that top is the only process:
$ docker run -it --rm --name test top -H
top - 08:25:00 up 7:27, 0 users, load average: 0.00, 0.01, 0.05
Threads: 1 total, 1 running, 0 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie
%Cpu(s): 0.1 us, 0.1 sy, 0.0 ni, 99.7 id, 0.0 wa, 0.0 hi, 0.0 si, 0.0 st
KiB Mem: 2056668 total, 1616832 used, 439836 free, 99352 buffers
KiB Swap: 1441840 total, 0 used, 1441840 free. 1324440 cached Mem
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
1 root 20 0 19744 2336 2080 R 0.0 0.1 0:00.04 top
To examine the result further, you can use docker exec:
$ docker exec -it test ps aux
USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TTY STAT START TIME COMMAND
root 1 2.6 0.1 19752 2352 ? Ss+ 08:24 0:00 top -b -H
root 7 0.0 0.1 15572 2164 ? R+ 08:25 0:00 ps aux
And you can gracefully request top to shut down using docker stop test.
The following Dockerfile shows using the ENTRYPOINT to run Apache in the
foreground (i.e., as PID 1):
FROM debian:stable
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y --force-yes apache2
EXPOSE 80 443
VOLUME ["/var/www", "/var/log/apache2", "/etc/apache2"]
ENTRYPOINT ["/usr/sbin/apache2ctl", "-D", "FOREGROUND"]
If you need to write a starter script for a single executable, you can ensure that
the final executable receives the Unix signals by using exec and gosu
commands:
#!/bin/bash
set -e
if [ "$1" = 'postgres' ]; then
chown -R postgres "$PGDATA"
if [ -z "$(ls -A "$PGDATA")" ]; then
gosu postgres initdb
fi
exec gosu postgres "$@"
fi
exec "$@"
Lastly, if you need to do some extra cleanup (or communicate with other containers)
on shutdown, or are co-ordinating more than one executable, you may need to ensure
that the ENTRYPOINT script receives the Unix signals, passes them on, and then
does some more work:
#!/bin/sh
# Note: I've written this using sh so it works in the busybox container too
# USE the trap if you need to also do manual cleanup after the service is stopped,
# or need to start multiple services in the one container
trap "echo TRAPed signal" HUP INT QUIT KILL TERM
# start service in background here
/usr/sbin/apachectl start
echo "[hit enter key to exit] or run 'docker stop <container>'"
read
# stop service and clean up here
echo "stopping apache"
/usr/sbin/apachectl stop
echo "exited $0"
If you run this image with docker run -it --rm -p 80:80 --name test apache,
you can then examine the container's processes with docker exec, or docker top,
and then ask the script to stop Apache:
$ docker exec -it test ps aux
USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TTY STAT START TIME COMMAND
root 1 0.1 0.0 4448 692 ? Ss+ 00:42 0:00 /bin/sh /run.sh 123 cmd cmd2
root 19 0.0 0.2 71304 4440 ? Ss 00:42 0:00 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start
www-data 20 0.2 0.2 360468 6004 ? Sl 00:42 0:00 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start
www-data 21 0.2 0.2 360468 6000 ? Sl 00:42 0:00 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start
root 81 0.0 0.1 15572 2140 ? R+ 00:44 0:00 ps aux
$ docker top test
PID USER COMMAND
10035 root {run.sh} /bin/sh /run.sh 123 cmd cmd2
10054 root /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start
10055 33 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start
10056 33 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start
$ /usr/bin/time docker stop test
test
real 0m 0.27s
user 0m 0.03s
sys 0m 0.03s
Note: you can over ride the
ENTRYPOINTsetting using--entrypoint, but this can only set the binary to exec (nosh -cwill be used).
Note
The exec form is parsed as a JSON array, which means that you must use double-quotes (") around words not single-quotes (').
Note
Unlike the shell form, the exec form does not invoke a command shell. This means that normal shell processing does not happen. For example,
ENTRYPOINT [ "echo", "$HOME" ]will not do variable substitution on$HOME. If you want shell processing then either use the shell form or execute a shell directly, for example:ENTRYPOINT [ "sh", "-c", "echo", "$HOME" ]. Variables that are defined in theDockerfileusingENV, will be substituted by theDockerfileparser.
Shell form ENTRYPOINT example
You can specify a plain string for the ENTRYPOINT and it will execute in /bin/sh -c.
This form will use shell processing to substitute shell environment variables,
and will ignore any CMD or docker run command line arguments.
To ensure that docker stop will signal any long running ENTRYPOINT executable
correctly, you need to remember to start it with exec:
FROM ubuntu
ENTRYPOINT exec top -b
When you run this image, you'll see the single PID 1 process:
$ docker run -it --rm --name test top
Mem: 1704520K used, 352148K free, 0K shrd, 0K buff, 140368121167873K cached
CPU: 5% usr 0% sys 0% nic 94% idle 0% io 0% irq 0% sirq
Load average: 0.08 0.03 0.05 2/98 6
PID PPID USER STAT VSZ %VSZ %CPU COMMAND
1 0 root R 3164 0% 0% top -b
Which will exit cleanly on docker stop:
$ /usr/bin/time docker stop test
test
real 0m 0.20s
user 0m 0.02s
sys 0m 0.04s
If you forget to add exec to the beginning of your ENTRYPOINT:
FROM ubuntu
ENTRYPOINT top -b
CMD --ignored-param1
You can then run it (giving it a name for the next step):
$ docker run -it --name test top --ignored-param2
Mem: 1704184K used, 352484K free, 0K shrd, 0K buff, 140621524238337K cached
CPU: 9% usr 2% sys 0% nic 88% idle 0% io 0% irq 0% sirq
Load average: 0.01 0.02 0.05 2/101 7
PID PPID USER STAT VSZ %VSZ %CPU COMMAND
1 0 root S 3168 0% 0% /bin/sh -c top -b cmd cmd2
7 1 root R 3164 0% 0% top -b
You can see from the output of top that the specified ENTRYPOINT is not PID 1.
If you then run docker stop test, the container will not exit cleanly - the
stop command will be forced to send a SIGKILL after the timeout:
$ docker exec -it test ps aux
PID USER COMMAND
1 root /bin/sh -c top -b cmd cmd2
7 root top -b
8 root ps aux
$ /usr/bin/time docker stop test
test
real 0m 10.19s
user 0m 0.04s
sys 0m 0.03s
VOLUME
VOLUME ["/data"]
The VOLUME instruction creates a mount point with the specified name
and marks it as holding externally mounted volumes from native host or other
containers. The value can be a JSON array, VOLUME ["/var/log/"], or a plain
string with multiple arguments, such as VOLUME /var/log or VOLUME /var/log /var/db. For more information/examples and mounting instructions via the
Docker client, refer to
Share Directories via Volumes
documentation.
The docker run command initializes the newly created volume with any data
that exists at the specified location within the base image. For example,
consider the following Dockerfile snippet:
FROM ubuntu
RUN mkdir /myvol
RUN echo "hello world" > /myvol/greeting
VOLUME /myvol
This Dockerfile results in an image that causes docker run, to
create a new mount point at /myvol and copy the greeting file
into the newly created volume.
Note
If any build steps change the data within the volume after it has been declared, those changes will be discarded.
Note
The list is parsed as a JSON array, which means that you must use double-quotes (") around words not single-quotes (').
USER
USER daemon
The USER instruction sets the user name or UID to use when running the image
and for any RUN, CMD and ENTRYPOINT instructions that follow it in the
Dockerfile.
WORKDIR
WORKDIR /path/to/workdir
The WORKDIR instruction sets the working directory for any RUN, CMD,
ENTRYPOINT, COPY and ADD instructions that follow it in the Dockerfile.
It can be used multiple times in the one Dockerfile. If a relative path
is provided, it will be relative to the path of the previous WORKDIR
instruction. For example:
WORKDIR /a
WORKDIR b
WORKDIR c
RUN pwd
The output of the final pwd command in this Dockerfile would be
/a/b/c.
The WORKDIR instruction can resolve environment variables previously set using
ENV. You can only use environment variables explicitly set in the Dockerfile.
For example:
ENV DIRPATH /path
WORKDIR $DIRPATH/$DIRNAME
RUN pwd
The output of the final pwd command in this Dockerfile would be
/path/$DIRNAME
ARG
ARG <name>[=<default value>]
The ARG instruction defines a variable that users can pass at build-time to
the builder with the docker build command using the --build-arg <varname>=<value> flag. If a user specifies a build argument that was not
defined in the Dockerfile, the build outputs an error.
One or more build-args were not consumed, failing build.
The Dockerfile author can define a single variable by specifying ARG once or many
variables by specifying ARG more than once. For example, a valid Dockerfile:
FROM busybox
ARG user1
ARG buildno
...
A Dockerfile author may optionally specify a default value for an ARG instruction:
FROM busybox
ARG user1=someuser
ARG buildno=1
...
If an ARG value has a default and if there is no value passed at build-time, the
builder uses the default.
An ARG variable definition comes into effect from the line on which it is
defined in the Dockerfile not from the argument's use on the command-line or
elsewhere. For example, consider this Dockerfile:
1 FROM busybox
2 USER ${user:-some_user}
3 ARG user
4 USER $user
...
A user builds this file by calling:
$ docker build --build-arg user=what_user Dockerfile
The USER at line 2 evaluates to some_user as the user variable is defined on the
subsequent line 3. The USER at line 4 evaluates to what_user as user is
defined and the what_user value was passed on the command line. Prior to its definition by an
ARG instruction, any use of a variable results in an empty string.
Note: It is not recommended to use build-time variables for passing secrets like github keys, user credentials etc.
You can use an ARG or an ENV instruction to specify variables that are
available to the RUN instruction. Environment variables defined using the
ENV instruction always override an ARG instruction of the same name. Consider
this Dockerfile with an ENV and ARG instruction.
1 FROM ubuntu
2 ARG CONT_IMG_VER
3 ENV CONT_IMG_VER v1.0.0
4 RUN echo $CONT_IMG_VER
Then, assume this image is built with this command:
$ docker build --build-arg CONT_IMG_VER=v2.0.1 Dockerfile
In this case, the RUN instruction uses v1.0.0 instead of the ARG setting
passed by the user:v2.0.1 This behavior is similar to a shell
script where a locally scoped variable overrides the variables passed as
arguments or inherited from environment, from its point of definition.
Using the example above but a different ENV specification you can create more
useful interactions between ARG and ENV instructions:
1 FROM ubuntu
2 ARG CONT_IMG_VER
3 ENV CONT_IMG_VER ${CONT_IMG_VER:-v1.0.0}
4 RUN echo $CONT_IMG_VER
Unlike an ARG instruction, ENV values are always persisted in the built
image. Consider a docker build without the --build-arg flag:
$ docker build Dockerfile
Using this Dockerfile example, CONT_IMG_VER is still persisted in the image but
its value would be v1.0.0 as it is the default set in line 3 by the ENV instruction.
The variable expansion technique in this example allows you to pass arguments
from the command line and persist them in the final image by leveraging the
ENV instruction. Variable expansion is only supported for a limited set of
Dockerfile instructions.
Docker has a set of predefined ARG variables that you can use without a
corresponding ARG instruction in the Dockerfile.
HTTP_PROXYhttp_proxyHTTPS_PROXYhttps_proxyFTP_PROXYftp_proxyNO_PROXYno_proxy
To use these, simply pass them on the command line using the --build-arg <varname>=<value> flag.
ONBUILD
ONBUILD [INSTRUCTION]
The ONBUILD instruction adds to the image a trigger instruction to
be executed at a later time, when the image is used as the base for
another build. The trigger will be executed in the context of the
downstream build, as if it had been inserted immediately after the
FROM instruction in the downstream Dockerfile.
Any build instruction can be registered as a trigger.
This is useful if you are building an image which will be used as a base to build other images, for example an application build environment or a daemon which may be customized with user-specific configuration.
For example, if your image is a reusable Python application builder, it
will require application source code to be added in a particular
directory, and it might require a build script to be called after
that. You can't just call ADD and RUN now, because you don't yet
have access to the application source code, and it will be different for
each application build. You could simply provide application developers
with a boilerplate Dockerfile to copy-paste into their application, but
that is inefficient, error-prone and difficult to update because it
mixes with application-specific code.
The solution is to use ONBUILD to register advance instructions to
run later, during the next build stage.
Here's how it works:
- When it encounters an
ONBUILDinstruction, the builder adds a trigger to the metadata of the image being built. The instruction does not otherwise affect the current build. - At the end of the build, a list of all triggers is stored in the
image manifest, under the key
OnBuild. They can be inspected with thedocker inspectcommand. - Later the image may be used as a base for a new build, using the
FROMinstruction. As part of processing theFROMinstruction, the downstream builder looks forONBUILDtriggers, and executes them in the same order they were registered. If any of the triggers fail, theFROMinstruction is aborted which in turn causes the build to fail. If all triggers succeed, theFROMinstruction completes and the build continues as usual. - Triggers are cleared from the final image after being executed. In other words they are not inherited by "grand-children" builds.
For example you might add something like this:
[...]
ONBUILD ADD . /app/src
ONBUILD RUN /usr/local/bin/python-build --dir /app/src
[...]
Warning
: Chaining
ONBUILDinstructions usingONBUILD ONBUILDisn't allowed.
Warning
: The
ONBUILDinstruction may not triggerFROMorMAINTAINERinstructions.
STOPSIGNAL
STOPSIGNAL signal
The STOPSIGNAL instruction sets the system call signal that will be sent to the container to exit.
This signal can be a valid unsigned number that matches a position in the kernel's syscall table, for instance 9,
or a signal name in the format SIGNAME, for instance SIGKILL.
Dockerfile examples
Below you can see some examples of Dockerfile syntax. If you're interested in something more realistic, take a look at the list of Dockerization examples.
# Nginx
#
# VERSION 0.0.1
FROM ubuntu
MAINTAINER Victor Vieux <victor@docker.com>
LABEL Description="This image is used to start the foobar executable" Vendor="ACME Products" Version="1.0"
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y inotify-tools nginx apache2 openssh-server
# Firefox over VNC
#
# VERSION 0.3
FROM ubuntu
# Install vnc, xvfb in order to create a 'fake' display and firefox
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y x11vnc xvfb firefox
RUN mkdir ~/.vnc
# Setup a password
RUN x11vnc -storepasswd 1234 ~/.vnc/passwd
# Autostart firefox (might not be the best way, but it does the trick)
RUN bash -c 'echo "firefox" >> /.bashrc'
EXPOSE 5900
CMD ["x11vnc", "-forever", "-usepw", "-create"]
# Multiple images example
#
# VERSION 0.1
FROM ubuntu
RUN echo foo > bar
# Will output something like ===> 907ad6c2736f
FROM ubuntu
RUN echo moo > oink
# Will output something like ===> 695d7793cbe4
# You᾿ll now have two images, 907ad6c2736f with /bar, and 695d7793cbe4 with
# /oink.