github.com/slene/docker@v1.8.0-rc1/docs/reference/builder.md (about) 1 <!--[metadata]> 2 +++ 3 title = "Dockerfile reference" 4 description = "Dockerfiles use a simple DSL which allows you to automate the steps you would normally manually take to create an image." 5 keywords = ["builder, docker, Dockerfile, automation, image creation"] 6 [menu.main] 7 parent = "mn_reference" 8 +++ 9 <![end-metadata]--> 10 11 # Dockerfile reference 12 13 **Docker can build images automatically** by reading the instructions 14 from a `Dockerfile`. A `Dockerfile` is a text document that contains all 15 the commands you would normally execute manually in order to build a 16 Docker image. By calling `docker build` from your terminal, you can have 17 Docker build your image step by step, executing the instructions 18 successively. 19 20 This page discusses the specifics of all the instructions you can use in your 21 `Dockerfile`. To further help you write a clear, readable, maintainable 22 `Dockerfile`, we've also written a [`Dockerfile` Best Practices 23 guide](/articles/dockerfile_best-practices). Lastly, you can test your 24 Dockerfile knowledge with the [Dockerfile tutorial](/userguide/level1). 25 26 ## Usage 27 28 To [*build*](/reference/commandline/cli/#build) an image from a source repository, 29 create a description file called `Dockerfile` at the root of your repository. 30 This file will describe the steps to assemble the image. 31 32 Then call `docker build` with the path of your source repository as the argument 33 (for example, `.`): 34 35 $ docker build . 36 37 The path to the source repository defines where to find the *context* of 38 the build. The build is run by the Docker daemon, not by the CLI, so the 39 whole context must be transferred to the daemon. The Docker CLI reports 40 "Sending build context to Docker daemon" when the context is sent to the daemon. 41 42 > **Warning** 43 > Avoid using your root directory, `/`, as the root of the source repository. The 44 > `docker build` command will use whatever directory contains the Dockerfile as the build 45 > context (including all of its subdirectories). The build context will be sent to the 46 > Docker daemon before building the image, which means if you use `/` as the source 47 > repository, the entire contents of your hard drive will get sent to the daemon (and 48 > thus to the machine running the daemon). You probably don't want that. 49 50 In most cases, it's best to put each Dockerfile in an empty directory. Then, 51 only add the files needed for building the Dockerfile to the directory. To 52 increase the build's performance, you can exclude files and directories by 53 adding a `.dockerignore` file to the directory. For information about how to 54 [create a `.dockerignore` file](#dockerignore-file) on this page. 55 56 You can specify a repository and tag at which to save the new image if 57 the build succeeds: 58 59 $ docker build -t shykes/myapp . 60 61 The Docker daemon will run your steps one-by-one, committing the result 62 to a new image if necessary, before finally outputting the ID of your 63 new image. The Docker daemon will automatically clean up the context you 64 sent. 65 66 Note that each instruction is run independently, and causes a new image 67 to be created - so `RUN cd /tmp` will not have any effect on the next 68 instructions. 69 70 Whenever possible, Docker will re-use the intermediate images, 71 accelerating `docker build` significantly (indicated by `Using cache` - 72 see the [`Dockerfile` Best Practices 73 guide](/articles/dockerfile_best-practices/#build-cache) for more information): 74 75 $ docker build -t SvenDowideit/ambassador . 76 Uploading context 10.24 kB 77 Uploading context 78 Step 1 : FROM docker-ut 79 ---> cbba202fe96b 80 Step 2 : MAINTAINER SvenDowideit@home.org.au 81 ---> Using cache 82 ---> 51182097be13 83 Step 3 : CMD env | grep _TCP= | sed 's/.*_PORT_\([0-9]*\)_TCP=tcp:\/\/\(.*\):\(.*\)/socat TCP4-LISTEN:\1,fork,reuseaddr TCP4:\2:\3 \&/' | sh && top 84 ---> Using cache 85 ---> 1a5ffc17324d 86 Successfully built 1a5ffc17324d 87 88 When you're done with your build, you're ready to look into [*Pushing a 89 repository to its registry*]( /userguide/dockerrepos/#contributing-to-docker-hub). 90 91 ## Format 92 93 Here is the format of the `Dockerfile`: 94 95 # Comment 96 INSTRUCTION arguments 97 98 The Instruction is not case-sensitive, however convention is for them to 99 be UPPERCASE in order to distinguish them from arguments more easily. 100 101 Docker runs the instructions in a `Dockerfile` in order. **The 102 first instruction must be \`FROM\`** in order to specify the [*Base 103 Image*](/terms/image/#base-image) from which you are building. 104 105 Docker will treat lines that *begin* with `#` as a 106 comment. A `#` marker anywhere else in the line will 107 be treated as an argument. This allows statements like: 108 109 # Comment 110 RUN echo 'we are running some # of cool things' 111 112 Here is the set of instructions you can use in a `Dockerfile` for building 113 images. 114 115 ### Environment replacement 116 117 > **Note**: prior to 1.3, `Dockerfile` environment variables were handled 118 > similarly, in that they would be replaced as described below. However, there 119 > was no formal definition on as to which instructions handled environment 120 > replacement at the time. After 1.3 this behavior will be preserved and 121 > canonical. 122 123 Environment variables (declared with [the `ENV` statement](#env)) can also be 124 used in certain instructions as variables to be interpreted by the 125 `Dockerfile`. Escapes are also handled for including variable-like syntax 126 into a statement literally. 127 128 Environment variables are notated in the `Dockerfile` either with 129 `$variable_name` or `${variable_name}`. They are treated equivalently and the 130 brace syntax is typically used to address issues with variable names with no 131 whitespace, like `${foo}_bar`. 132 133 The `${variable_name}` syntax also supports a few of the standard `bash` 134 modifiers as specified below: 135 136 * `${variable:-word}` indicates that if `variable` is set then the result 137 will be that value. If `variable` is not set then `word` will be the result. 138 * `${variable:+word}` indicates that if `variable` is set then `word` will be 139 the result, otherwise the result is the empty string. 140 141 In all cases, `word` can be any string, including additional environment 142 variables. 143 144 Escaping is possible by adding a `\` before the variable: `\$foo` or `\${foo}`, 145 for example, will translate to `$foo` and `${foo}` literals respectively. 146 147 Example (parsed representation is displayed after the `#`): 148 149 FROM busybox 150 ENV foo /bar 151 WORKDIR ${foo} # WORKDIR /bar 152 ADD . $foo # ADD . /bar 153 COPY \$foo /quux # COPY $foo /quux 154 155 The instructions that handle environment variables in the `Dockerfile` are: 156 157 * `ENV` 158 * `ADD` 159 * `COPY` 160 * `WORKDIR` 161 * `EXPOSE` 162 * `VOLUME` 163 * `USER` 164 165 `ONBUILD` instructions are **NOT** supported for environment replacement, even 166 the instructions above. 167 168 Environment variable substitution will use the same value for each variable 169 throughout the entire command. In other words, in this example: 170 171 ENV abc=hello 172 ENV abc=bye def=$abc 173 ENV ghi=$abc 174 175 will result in `def` having a value of `hello`, not `bye`. However, 176 `ghi` will have a value of `bye` because it is not part of the same command 177 that set `abc` to `bye`. 178 179 ### .dockerignore file 180 181 If a file named `.dockerignore` exists in the root of `PATH`, then Docker 182 interprets it as a newline-separated list of exclusion patterns. Docker excludes 183 files or directories relative to `PATH` that match these exclusion patterns. If 184 there are any `.dockerignore` files in `PATH` subdirectories, Docker treats 185 them as normal files. 186 187 Filepaths in `.dockerignore` are absolute with the current directory as the 188 root. Wildcards are allowed but the search is not recursive. Globbing (file name 189 expansion) is done using Go's 190 [filepath.Match](http://golang.org/pkg/path/filepath#Match) rules. 191 192 You can specify exceptions to exclusion rules. To do this, simply prefix a 193 pattern with an `!` (exclamation mark) in the same way you would in a 194 `.gitignore` file. Currently there is no support for regular expressions. 195 Formats like `[^temp*]` are ignored. 196 197 The following is an example `.dockerignore` file: 198 199 ``` 200 */temp* 201 */*/temp* 202 temp? 203 *.md 204 !LICENSE.md 205 ``` 206 207 This file causes the following build behavior: 208 209 | Rule | Behavior | 210 |----------------|------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| 211 | `*/temp*` | Exclude all files with names starting with`temp` in any subdirectory below the root directory. For example, a file named`/somedir/temporary.txt` is ignored. | 212 | `*/*/temp*` | Exclude files starting with name `temp` from any subdirectory that is two levels below the root directory. For example, the file `/somedir/subdir/temporary.txt` is ignored. | 213 | `temp?` | Exclude the files that match the pattern in the root directory. For example, the files `tempa`, `tempb` in the root directory are ignored. | 214 | `*.md ` | Exclude all markdown files in the root directory. | 215 | `!LICENSE.md` | Exception to the Markdown files exclusion is this file, `LICENSE.md`, Include this file in the build. | 216 217 The placement of `!` exception rules influences the matching algorithm; the 218 last line of the `.dockerignore` that matches a particular file determines 219 whether it is included or excluded. In the above example, the `LICENSE.md` file 220 matches both the `*.md` and `!LICENSE.md` rule. If you reverse the lines in the 221 example: 222 223 ``` 224 */temp* 225 */*/temp* 226 temp? 227 !LICENCSE.md 228 *.md 229 ``` 230 231 The build would exclude `LICENSE.md` because the last `*.md` rule adds all 232 Markdown files in the root directory back onto the ignore list. The 233 `!LICENSE.md` rule has no effect because the subsequent `*.md` rule overrides 234 it. 235 236 You can even use the `.dockerignore` file to ignore the `Dockerfile` and 237 `.dockerignore` files. This is useful if you are copying files from the root of 238 the build context into your new container but do not want to include the 239 `Dockerfile` or `.dockerignore` files (e.g. `ADD . /someDir/`). 240 241 242 ## FROM 243 244 FROM <image> 245 246 Or 247 248 FROM <image>:<tag> 249 250 Or 251 252 FROM <image>@<digest> 253 254 The `FROM` instruction sets the [*Base Image*](/terms/image/#base-image) 255 for subsequent instructions. As such, a valid `Dockerfile` must have `FROM` as 256 its first instruction. The image can be any valid image – it is especially easy 257 to start by **pulling an image** from the [*Public Repositories*]( 258 /userguide/dockerrepos). 259 260 `FROM` must be the first non-comment instruction in the `Dockerfile`. 261 262 `FROM` can appear multiple times within a single `Dockerfile` in order to create 263 multiple images. Simply make a note of the last image ID output by the commit 264 before each new `FROM` command. 265 266 The `tag` or `digest` values are optional. If you omit either of them, the builder 267 assumes a `latest` by default. The builder returns an error if it cannot match 268 the `tag` value. 269 270 ## MAINTAINER 271 272 MAINTAINER <name> 273 274 The `MAINTAINER` instruction allows you to set the *Author* field of the 275 generated images. 276 277 ## RUN 278 279 RUN has 2 forms: 280 281 - `RUN <command>` (the command is run in a shell - `/bin/sh -c` - *shell* form) 282 - `RUN ["executable", "param1", "param2"]` (*exec* form) 283 284 The `RUN` instruction will execute any commands in a new layer on top of the 285 current image and commit the results. The resulting committed image will be 286 used for the next step in the `Dockerfile`. 287 288 Layering `RUN` instructions and generating commits conforms to the core 289 concepts of Docker where commits are cheap and containers can be created from 290 any point in an image's history, much like source control. 291 292 The *exec* form makes it possible to avoid shell string munging, and to `RUN` 293 commands using a base image that does not contain `/bin/sh`. 294 295 > **Note**: 296 > To use a different shell, other than '/bin/sh', use the *exec* form 297 > passing in the desired shell. For example, 298 > `RUN ["/bin/bash", "-c", "echo hello"]` 299 300 > **Note**: 301 > The *exec* form is parsed as a JSON array, which means that 302 > you must use double-quotes (") around words not single-quotes ('). 303 304 > **Note**: 305 > Unlike the *shell* form, the *exec* form does not invoke a command shell. 306 > This means that normal shell processing does not happen. For example, 307 > `RUN [ "echo", "$HOME" ]` will not do variable substitution on `$HOME`. 308 > If you want shell processing then either use the *shell* form or execute 309 > a shell directly, for example: `RUN [ "sh", "-c", "echo", "$HOME" ]`. 310 311 The cache for `RUN` instructions isn't invalidated automatically during 312 the next build. The cache for an instruction like 313 `RUN apt-get dist-upgrade -y` will be reused during the next build. The 314 cache for `RUN` instructions can be invalidated by using the `--no-cache` 315 flag, for example `docker build --no-cache`. 316 317 See the [`Dockerfile` Best Practices 318 guide](/articles/dockerfile_best-practices/#build-cache) for more information. 319 320 The cache for `RUN` instructions can be invalidated by `ADD` instructions. See 321 [below](#add) for details. 322 323 ### Known issues (RUN) 324 325 - [Issue 783](https://github.com/docker/docker/issues/783) is about file 326 permissions problems that can occur when using the AUFS file system. You 327 might notice it during an attempt to `rm` a file, for example. 328 329 For systems that have recent aufs version (i.e., `dirperm1` mount option can 330 be set), docker will attempt to fix the issue automatically by mounting 331 the layers with `dirperm1` option. More details on `dirperm1` option can be 332 found at [`aufs` man page](http://aufs.sourceforge.net/aufs3/man.html) 333 334 If your system doesn't have support for `dirperm1`, the issue describes a workaround. 335 336 ## CMD 337 338 The `CMD` instruction has three forms: 339 340 - `CMD ["executable","param1","param2"]` (*exec* form, this is the preferred form) 341 - `CMD ["param1","param2"]` (as *default parameters to ENTRYPOINT*) 342 - `CMD command param1 param2` (*shell* form) 343 344 There can only be one `CMD` instruction in a `Dockerfile`. If you list more than one `CMD` 345 then only the last `CMD` will take effect. 346 347 **The main purpose of a `CMD` is to provide defaults for an executing 348 container.** These defaults can include an executable, or they can omit 349 the executable, in which case you must specify an `ENTRYPOINT` 350 instruction as well. 351 352 > **Note**: 353 > If `CMD` is used to provide default arguments for the `ENTRYPOINT` 354 > instruction, both the `CMD` and `ENTRYPOINT` instructions should be specified 355 > with the JSON array format. 356 357 > **Note**: 358 > The *exec* form is parsed as a JSON array, which means that 359 > you must use double-quotes (") around words not single-quotes ('). 360 361 > **Note**: 362 > Unlike the *shell* form, the *exec* form does not invoke a command shell. 363 > This means that normal shell processing does not happen. For example, 364 > `CMD [ "echo", "$HOME" ]` will not do variable substitution on `$HOME`. 365 > If you want shell processing then either use the *shell* form or execute 366 > a shell directly, for example: `CMD [ "sh", "-c", "echo", "$HOME" ]`. 367 368 When used in the shell or exec formats, the `CMD` instruction sets the command 369 to be executed when running the image. 370 371 If you use the *shell* form of the `CMD`, then the `<command>` will execute in 372 `/bin/sh -c`: 373 374 FROM ubuntu 375 CMD echo "This is a test." | wc - 376 377 If you want to **run your** `<command>` **without a shell** then you must 378 express the command as a JSON array and give the full path to the executable. 379 **This array form is the preferred format of `CMD`.** Any additional parameters 380 must be individually expressed as strings in the array: 381 382 FROM ubuntu 383 CMD ["/usr/bin/wc","--help"] 384 385 If you would like your container to run the same executable every time, then 386 you should consider using `ENTRYPOINT` in combination with `CMD`. See 387 [*ENTRYPOINT*](#entrypoint). 388 389 If the user specifies arguments to `docker run` then they will override the 390 default specified in `CMD`. 391 392 > **Note**: 393 > don't confuse `RUN` with `CMD`. `RUN` actually runs a command and commits 394 > the result; `CMD` does not execute anything at build time, but specifies 395 > the intended command for the image. 396 397 ## LABEL 398 399 LABEL <key>=<value> <key>=<value> <key>=<value> ... 400 401 The `LABEL` instruction adds metadata to an image. A `LABEL` is a 402 key-value pair. To include spaces within a `LABEL` value, use quotes and 403 backslashes as you would in command-line parsing. 404 405 LABEL "com.example.vendor"="ACME Incorporated" 406 407 An image can have more than one label. To specify multiple labels, separate each 408 key-value pair with whitespace. 409 410 LABEL com.example.label-with-value="foo" 411 LABEL version="1.0" 412 LABEL description="This text illustrates \ 413 that label-values can span multiple lines." 414 415 Docker recommends combining labels in a single `LABEL` instruction where 416 possible. Each `LABEL` instruction produces a new layer which can result in an 417 inefficient image if you use many labels. This example results in four image 418 layers. 419 420 LABEL multi.label1="value1" multi.label2="value2" other="value3" 421 422 Labels are additive including `LABEL`s in `FROM` images. As the system 423 encounters and then applies a new label, new `key`s override any previous labels 424 with identical keys. 425 426 To view an image's labels, use the `docker inspect` command. 427 428 "Labels": { 429 "com.example.vendor": "ACME Incorporated" 430 "com.example.label-with-value": "foo", 431 "version": "1.0", 432 "description": "This text illustrates that label-values can span multiple lines.", 433 "multi.label1": "value1", 434 "multi.label2": "value2", 435 "other": "value3" 436 }, 437 438 ## EXPOSE 439 440 EXPOSE <port> [<port>...] 441 442 The `EXPOSE` instructions informs Docker that the container will listen on the 443 specified network ports at runtime. Docker uses this information to interconnect 444 containers using links (see the [Docker User 445 Guide](/userguide/dockerlinks)) and to determine which ports to expose to the 446 host when [using the -P flag](/reference/run/#expose-incoming-ports). 447 448 > **Note**: 449 > `EXPOSE` doesn't define which ports can be exposed to the host or make ports 450 > accessible from the host by default. To expose ports to the host, at runtime, 451 > [use the `-p` flag](/userguide/dockerlinks) or 452 > [the -P flag](/reference/run/#expose-incoming-ports). 453 454 ## ENV 455 456 ENV <key> <value> 457 ENV <key>=<value> ... 458 459 The `ENV` instruction sets the environment variable `<key>` to the value 460 `<value>`. This value will be in the environment of all "descendent" `Dockerfile` 461 commands and can be [replaced inline](#environment-replacement) in many as well. 462 463 The `ENV` instruction has two forms. The first form, `ENV <key> <value>`, 464 will set a single variable to a value. The entire string after the first 465 space will be treated as the `<value>` - including characters such as 466 spaces and quotes. 467 468 The second form, `ENV <key>=<value> ...`, allows for multiple variables to 469 be set at one time. Notice that the second form uses the equals sign (=) 470 in the syntax, while the first form does not. Like command line parsing, 471 quotes and backslashes can be used to include spaces within values. 472 473 For example: 474 475 ENV myName="John Doe" myDog=Rex\ The\ Dog \ 476 myCat=fluffy 477 478 and 479 480 ENV myName John Doe 481 ENV myDog Rex The Dog 482 ENV myCat fluffy 483 484 will yield the same net results in the final container, but the first form 485 does it all in one layer. 486 487 The environment variables set using `ENV` will persist when a container is run 488 from the resulting image. You can view the values using `docker inspect`, and 489 change them using `docker run --env <key>=<value>`. 490 491 > **Note**: 492 > Environment persistence can cause unexpected effects. For example, 493 > setting `ENV DEBIAN_FRONTEND noninteractive` may confuse apt-get 494 > users on a Debian-based image. To set a value for a single command, use 495 > `RUN <key>=<value> <command>`. 496 497 ## ADD 498 499 ADD has two forms: 500 501 - `ADD <src>... <dest>` 502 - `ADD ["<src>",... "<dest>"]` (this form is required for paths containing 503 whitespace) 504 505 The `ADD` instruction copies new files, directories or remote file URLs from `<src>` 506 and adds them to the filesystem of the container at the path `<dest>`. 507 508 Multiple `<src>` resource may be specified but if they are files or 509 directories then they must be relative to the source directory that is 510 being built (the context of the build). 511 512 Each `<src>` may contain wildcards and matching will be done using Go's 513 [filepath.Match](http://golang.org/pkg/path/filepath#Match) rules. 514 For most command line uses this should act as expected, for example: 515 516 ADD hom* /mydir/ # adds all files starting with "hom" 517 ADD hom?.txt /mydir/ # ? is replaced with any single character 518 519 The `<dest>` is an absolute path, or a path relative to `WORKDIR`, into which 520 the source will be copied inside the destination container. 521 522 ADD test aDir/ # adds "test" to `WORKDIR`/aDir/ 523 524 All new files and directories are created with a UID and GID of 0. 525 526 In the case where `<src>` is a remote file URL, the destination will 527 have permissions of 600. If the remote file being retrieved has an HTTP 528 `Last-Modified` header, the timestamp from that header will be used 529 to set the `mtime` on the destination file. However, like any other file 530 processed during an `ADD`, `mtime` will not be included in the determination 531 of whether or not the file has changed and the cache should be updated. 532 533 > **Note**: 534 > If you build by passing a `Dockerfile` through STDIN (`docker 535 > build - < somefile`), there is no build context, so the `Dockerfile` 536 > can only contain a URL based `ADD` instruction. You can also pass a 537 > compressed archive through STDIN: (`docker build - < archive.tar.gz`), 538 > the `Dockerfile` at the root of the archive and the rest of the 539 > archive will get used at the context of the build. 540 541 > **Note**: 542 > If your URL files are protected using authentication, you 543 > will need to use `RUN wget`, `RUN curl` or use another tool from 544 > within the container as the `ADD` instruction does not support 545 > authentication. 546 547 > **Note**: 548 > The first encountered `ADD` instruction will invalidate the cache for all 549 > following instructions from the Dockerfile if the contents of `<src>` have 550 > changed. This includes invalidating the cache for `RUN` instructions. 551 > See the [`Dockerfile` Best Practices 552 guide](/articles/dockerfile_best-practices/#build-cache) for more information. 553 554 555 The copy obeys the following rules: 556 557 - The `<src>` path must be inside the *context* of the build; 558 you cannot `ADD ../something /something`, because the first step of a 559 `docker build` is to send the context directory (and subdirectories) to the 560 docker daemon. 561 562 - If `<src>` is a URL and `<dest>` does not end with a trailing slash, then a 563 file is downloaded from the URL and copied to `<dest>`. 564 565 - If `<src>` is a URL and `<dest>` does end with a trailing slash, then the 566 filename is inferred from the URL and the file is downloaded to 567 `<dest>/<filename>`. For instance, `ADD http://example.com/foobar /` would 568 create the file `/foobar`. The URL must have a nontrivial path so that an 569 appropriate filename can be discovered in this case (`http://example.com` 570 will not work). 571 572 - If `<src>` is a directory, the entire contents of the directory are copied, 573 including filesystem metadata. 574 > **Note**: 575 > The directory itself is not copied, just its contents. 576 577 - If `<src>` is a *local* tar archive in a recognized compression format 578 (identity, gzip, bzip2 or xz) then it is unpacked as a directory. Resources 579 from *remote* URLs are **not** decompressed. When a directory is copied or 580 unpacked, it has the same behavior as `tar -x`: the result is the union of: 581 582 1. Whatever existed at the destination path and 583 2. The contents of the source tree, with conflicts resolved in favor 584 of "2." on a file-by-file basis. 585 586 - If `<src>` is any other kind of file, it is copied individually along with 587 its metadata. In this case, if `<dest>` ends with a trailing slash `/`, it 588 will be considered a directory and the contents of `<src>` will be written 589 at `<dest>/base(<src>)`. 590 591 - If multiple `<src>` resources are specified, either directly or due to the 592 use of a wildcard, then `<dest>` must be a directory, and it must end with 593 a slash `/`. 594 595 - If `<dest>` does not end with a trailing slash, it will be considered a 596 regular file and the contents of `<src>` will be written at `<dest>`. 597 598 - If `<dest>` doesn't exist, it is created along with all missing directories 599 in its path. 600 601 ## COPY 602 603 COPY has two forms: 604 605 - `COPY <src>... <dest>` 606 - `COPY ["<src>",... "<dest>"]` (this form is required for paths containing 607 whitespace) 608 609 The `COPY` instruction copies new files or directories from `<src>` 610 and adds them to the filesystem of the container at the path `<dest>`. 611 612 Multiple `<src>` resource may be specified but they must be relative 613 to the source directory that is being built (the context of the build). 614 615 Each `<src>` may contain wildcards and matching will be done using Go's 616 [filepath.Match](http://golang.org/pkg/path/filepath#Match) rules. 617 For most command line uses this should act as expected, for example: 618 619 COPY hom* /mydir/ # adds all files starting with "hom" 620 COPY hom?.txt /mydir/ # ? is replaced with any single character 621 622 The `<dest>` is an absolute path, or a path relative to `WORKDIR`, into which 623 the source will be copied inside the destination container. 624 625 COPY test aDir/ # adds "test" to `WORKDIR`/aDir/ 626 627 All new files and directories are created with a UID and GID of 0. 628 629 > **Note**: 630 > If you build using STDIN (`docker build - < somefile`), there is no 631 > build context, so `COPY` can't be used. 632 633 The copy obeys the following rules: 634 635 - The `<src>` path must be inside the *context* of the build; 636 you cannot `COPY ../something /something`, because the first step of a 637 `docker build` is to send the context directory (and subdirectories) to the 638 docker daemon. 639 640 - If `<src>` is a directory, the entire contents of the directory are copied, 641 including filesystem metadata. 642 > **Note**: 643 > The directory itself is not copied, just its contents. 644 645 - If `<src>` is any other kind of file, it is copied individually along with 646 its metadata. In this case, if `<dest>` ends with a trailing slash `/`, it 647 will be considered a directory and the contents of `<src>` will be written 648 at `<dest>/base(<src>)`. 649 650 - If multiple `<src>` resources are specified, either directly or due to the 651 use of a wildcard, then `<dest>` must be a directory, and it must end with 652 a slash `/`. 653 654 - If `<dest>` does not end with a trailing slash, it will be considered a 655 regular file and the contents of `<src>` will be written at `<dest>`. 656 657 - If `<dest>` doesn't exist, it is created along with all missing directories 658 in its path. 659 660 ## ENTRYPOINT 661 662 ENTRYPOINT has two forms: 663 664 - `ENTRYPOINT ["executable", "param1", "param2"]` 665 (the preferred *exec* form) 666 - `ENTRYPOINT command param1 param2` 667 (*shell* form) 668 669 An `ENTRYPOINT` allows you to configure a container that will run as an executable. 670 671 For example, the following will start nginx with its default content, listening 672 on port 80: 673 674 docker run -i -t --rm -p 80:80 nginx 675 676 Command line arguments to `docker run <image>` will be appended after all 677 elements in an *exec* form `ENTRYPOINT`, and will override all elements specified 678 using `CMD`. 679 This allows arguments to be passed to the entry point, i.e., `docker run <image> -d` 680 will pass the `-d` argument to the entry point. 681 You can override the `ENTRYPOINT` instruction using the `docker run --entrypoint` 682 flag. 683 684 The *shell* form prevents any `CMD` or `run` command line arguments from being 685 used, but has the disadvantage that your `ENTRYPOINT` will be started as a 686 subcommand of `/bin/sh -c`, which does not pass signals. 687 This means that the executable will not be the container's `PID 1` - and 688 will _not_ receive Unix signals - so your executable will not receive a 689 `SIGTERM` from `docker stop <container>`. 690 691 Only the last `ENTRYPOINT` instruction in the `Dockerfile` will have an effect. 692 693 ### Exec form ENTRYPOINT example 694 695 You can use the *exec* form of `ENTRYPOINT` to set fairly stable default commands 696 and arguments and then use either form of `CMD` to set additional defaults that 697 are more likely to be changed. 698 699 FROM ubuntu 700 ENTRYPOINT ["top", "-b"] 701 CMD ["-c"] 702 703 When you run the container, you can see that `top` is the only process: 704 705 $ docker run -it --rm --name test top -H 706 top - 08:25:00 up 7:27, 0 users, load average: 0.00, 0.01, 0.05 707 Threads: 1 total, 1 running, 0 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie 708 %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 709 KiB Mem: 2056668 total, 1616832 used, 439836 free, 99352 buffers 710 KiB Swap: 1441840 total, 0 used, 1441840 free. 1324440 cached Mem 711 712 PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND 713 1 root 20 0 19744 2336 2080 R 0.0 0.1 0:00.04 top 714 715 To examine the result further, you can use `docker exec`: 716 717 $ docker exec -it test ps aux 718 USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TTY STAT START TIME COMMAND 719 root 1 2.6 0.1 19752 2352 ? Ss+ 08:24 0:00 top -b -H 720 root 7 0.0 0.1 15572 2164 ? R+ 08:25 0:00 ps aux 721 722 And you can gracefully request `top` to shut down using `docker stop test`. 723 724 The following `Dockerfile` shows using the `ENTRYPOINT` to run Apache in the 725 foreground (i.e., as `PID 1`): 726 727 ``` 728 FROM debian:stable 729 RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y --force-yes apache2 730 EXPOSE 80 443 731 VOLUME ["/var/www", "/var/log/apache2", "/etc/apache2"] 732 ENTRYPOINT ["/usr/sbin/apache2ctl", "-D", "FOREGROUND"] 733 ``` 734 735 If you need to write a starter script for a single executable, you can ensure that 736 the final executable receives the Unix signals by using `exec` and `gosu` 737 commands: 738 739 ```bash 740 #!/bin/bash 741 set -e 742 743 if [ "$1" = 'postgres' ]; then 744 chown -R postgres "$PGDATA" 745 746 if [ -z "$(ls -A "$PGDATA")" ]; then 747 gosu postgres initdb 748 fi 749 750 exec gosu postgres "$@" 751 fi 752 753 exec "$@" 754 ``` 755 756 Lastly, if you need to do some extra cleanup (or communicate with other containers) 757 on shutdown, or are co-ordinating more than one executable, you may need to ensure 758 that the `ENTRYPOINT` script receives the Unix signals, passes them on, and then 759 does some more work: 760 761 ``` 762 #!/bin/sh 763 # Note: I've written this using sh so it works in the busybox container too 764 765 # USE the trap if you need to also do manual cleanup after the service is stopped, 766 # or need to start multiple services in the one container 767 trap "echo TRAPed signal" HUP INT QUIT KILL TERM 768 769 # start service in background here 770 /usr/sbin/apachectl start 771 772 echo "[hit enter key to exit] or run 'docker stop <container>'" 773 read 774 775 # stop service and clean up here 776 echo "stopping apache" 777 /usr/sbin/apachectl stop 778 779 echo "exited $0" 780 ``` 781 782 If you run this image with `docker run -it --rm -p 80:80 --name test apache`, 783 you can then examine the container's processes with `docker exec`, or `docker top`, 784 and then ask the script to stop Apache: 785 786 ```bash 787 $ docker exec -it test ps aux 788 USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TTY STAT START TIME COMMAND 789 root 1 0.1 0.0 4448 692 ? Ss+ 00:42 0:00 /bin/sh /run.sh 123 cmd cmd2 790 root 19 0.0 0.2 71304 4440 ? Ss 00:42 0:00 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start 791 www-data 20 0.2 0.2 360468 6004 ? Sl 00:42 0:00 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start 792 www-data 21 0.2 0.2 360468 6000 ? Sl 00:42 0:00 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start 793 root 81 0.0 0.1 15572 2140 ? R+ 00:44 0:00 ps aux 794 $ docker top test 795 PID USER COMMAND 796 10035 root {run.sh} /bin/sh /run.sh 123 cmd cmd2 797 10054 root /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start 798 10055 33 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start 799 10056 33 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start 800 $ /usr/bin/time docker stop test 801 test 802 real 0m 0.27s 803 user 0m 0.03s 804 sys 0m 0.03s 805 ``` 806 807 > **Note:** you can over ride the `ENTRYPOINT` setting using `--entrypoint`, 808 > but this can only set the binary to *exec* (no `sh -c` will be used). 809 810 > **Note**: 811 > The *exec* form is parsed as a JSON array, which means that 812 > you must use double-quotes (") around words not single-quotes ('). 813 814 > **Note**: 815 > Unlike the *shell* form, the *exec* form does not invoke a command shell. 816 > This means that normal shell processing does not happen. For example, 817 > `ENTRYPOINT [ "echo", "$HOME" ]` will not do variable substitution on `$HOME`. 818 > If you want shell processing then either use the *shell* form or execute 819 > a shell directly, for example: `ENTRYPOINT [ "sh", "-c", "echo", "$HOME" ]`. 820 > Variables that are defined in the `Dockerfile`using `ENV`, will be substituted by 821 > the `Dockerfile` parser. 822 823 ### Shell form ENTRYPOINT example 824 825 You can specify a plain string for the `ENTRYPOINT` and it will execute in `/bin/sh -c`. 826 This form will use shell processing to substitute shell environment variables, 827 and will ignore any `CMD` or `docker run` command line arguments. 828 To ensure that `docker stop` will signal any long running `ENTRYPOINT` executable 829 correctly, you need to remember to start it with `exec`: 830 831 FROM ubuntu 832 ENTRYPOINT exec top -b 833 834 When you run this image, you'll see the single `PID 1` process: 835 836 $ docker run -it --rm --name test top 837 Mem: 1704520K used, 352148K free, 0K shrd, 0K buff, 140368121167873K cached 838 CPU: 5% usr 0% sys 0% nic 94% idle 0% io 0% irq 0% sirq 839 Load average: 0.08 0.03 0.05 2/98 6 840 PID PPID USER STAT VSZ %VSZ %CPU COMMAND 841 1 0 root R 3164 0% 0% top -b 842 843 Which will exit cleanly on `docker stop`: 844 845 $ /usr/bin/time docker stop test 846 test 847 real 0m 0.20s 848 user 0m 0.02s 849 sys 0m 0.04s 850 851 If you forget to add `exec` to the beginning of your `ENTRYPOINT`: 852 853 FROM ubuntu 854 ENTRYPOINT top -b 855 CMD --ignored-param1 856 857 You can then run it (giving it a name for the next step): 858 859 $ docker run -it --name test top --ignored-param2 860 Mem: 1704184K used, 352484K free, 0K shrd, 0K buff, 140621524238337K cached 861 CPU: 9% usr 2% sys 0% nic 88% idle 0% io 0% irq 0% sirq 862 Load average: 0.01 0.02 0.05 2/101 7 863 PID PPID USER STAT VSZ %VSZ %CPU COMMAND 864 1 0 root S 3168 0% 0% /bin/sh -c top -b cmd cmd2 865 7 1 root R 3164 0% 0% top -b 866 867 You can see from the output of `top` that the specified `ENTRYPOINT` is not `PID 1`. 868 869 If you then run `docker stop test`, the container will not exit cleanly - the 870 `stop` command will be forced to send a `SIGKILL` after the timeout: 871 872 $ docker exec -it test ps aux 873 PID USER COMMAND 874 1 root /bin/sh -c top -b cmd cmd2 875 7 root top -b 876 8 root ps aux 877 $ /usr/bin/time docker stop test 878 test 879 real 0m 10.19s 880 user 0m 0.04s 881 sys 0m 0.03s 882 883 ## VOLUME 884 885 VOLUME ["/data"] 886 887 The `VOLUME` instruction creates a mount point with the specified name 888 and marks it as holding externally mounted volumes from native host or other 889 containers. The value can be a JSON array, `VOLUME ["/var/log/"]`, or a plain 890 string with multiple arguments, such as `VOLUME /var/log` or `VOLUME /var/log 891 /var/db`. For more information/examples and mounting instructions via the 892 Docker client, refer to 893 [*Share Directories via Volumes*](/userguide/dockervolumes/#volume) 894 documentation. 895 896 The `docker run` command initializes the newly created volume with any data 897 that exists at the specified location within the base image. For example, 898 consider the following Dockerfile snippet: 899 900 FROM ubuntu 901 RUN mkdir /myvol 902 RUN echo "hello world" > /myvol/greeting 903 VOLUME /myvol 904 905 This Dockerfile results in an image that causes `docker run`, to 906 create a new mount point at `/myvol` and copy the `greeting` file 907 into the newly created volume. 908 909 > **Note**: 910 > The list is parsed as a JSON array, which means that 911 > you must use double-quotes (") around words not single-quotes ('). 912 913 ## USER 914 915 USER daemon 916 917 The `USER` instruction sets the user name or UID to use when running the image 918 and for any `RUN`, `CMD` and `ENTRYPOINT` instructions that follow it in the 919 `Dockerfile`. 920 921 ## WORKDIR 922 923 WORKDIR /path/to/workdir 924 925 The `WORKDIR` instruction sets the working directory for any `RUN`, `CMD`, 926 `ENTRYPOINT`, `COPY` and `ADD` instructions that follow it in the `Dockerfile`. 927 928 It can be used multiple times in the one `Dockerfile`. If a relative path 929 is provided, it will be relative to the path of the previous `WORKDIR` 930 instruction. For example: 931 932 WORKDIR /a 933 WORKDIR b 934 WORKDIR c 935 RUN pwd 936 937 The output of the final `pwd` command in this `Dockerfile` would be 938 `/a/b/c`. 939 940 The `WORKDIR` instruction can resolve environment variables previously set using 941 `ENV`. You can only use environment variables explicitly set in the `Dockerfile`. 942 For example: 943 944 ENV DIRPATH /path 945 WORKDIR $DIRPATH/$DIRNAME 946 947 The output of the final `pwd` command in this `Dockerfile` would be 948 `/path/$DIRNAME` 949 950 ## ONBUILD 951 952 ONBUILD [INSTRUCTION] 953 954 The `ONBUILD` instruction adds to the image a *trigger* instruction to 955 be executed at a later time, when the image is used as the base for 956 another build. The trigger will be executed in the context of the 957 downstream build, as if it had been inserted immediately after the 958 `FROM` instruction in the downstream `Dockerfile`. 959 960 Any build instruction can be registered as a trigger. 961 962 This is useful if you are building an image which will be used as a base 963 to build other images, for example an application build environment or a 964 daemon which may be customized with user-specific configuration. 965 966 For example, if your image is a reusable Python application builder, it 967 will require application source code to be added in a particular 968 directory, and it might require a build script to be called *after* 969 that. You can't just call `ADD` and `RUN` now, because you don't yet 970 have access to the application source code, and it will be different for 971 each application build. You could simply provide application developers 972 with a boilerplate `Dockerfile` to copy-paste into their application, but 973 that is inefficient, error-prone and difficult to update because it 974 mixes with application-specific code. 975 976 The solution is to use `ONBUILD` to register advance instructions to 977 run later, during the next build stage. 978 979 Here's how it works: 980 981 1. When it encounters an `ONBUILD` instruction, the builder adds a 982 trigger to the metadata of the image being built. The instruction 983 does not otherwise affect the current build. 984 2. At the end of the build, a list of all triggers is stored in the 985 image manifest, under the key `OnBuild`. They can be inspected with 986 the `docker inspect` command. 987 3. Later the image may be used as a base for a new build, using the 988 `FROM` instruction. As part of processing the `FROM` instruction, 989 the downstream builder looks for `ONBUILD` triggers, and executes 990 them in the same order they were registered. If any of the triggers 991 fail, the `FROM` instruction is aborted which in turn causes the 992 build to fail. If all triggers succeed, the `FROM` instruction 993 completes and the build continues as usual. 994 4. Triggers are cleared from the final image after being executed. In 995 other words they are not inherited by "grand-children" builds. 996 997 For example you might add something like this: 998 999 [...] 1000 ONBUILD ADD . /app/src 1001 ONBUILD RUN /usr/local/bin/python-build --dir /app/src 1002 [...] 1003 1004 > **Warning**: Chaining `ONBUILD` instructions using `ONBUILD ONBUILD` isn't allowed. 1005 1006 > **Warning**: The `ONBUILD` instruction may not trigger `FROM` or `MAINTAINER` instructions. 1007 1008 ## Dockerfile examples 1009 1010 # Nginx 1011 # 1012 # VERSION 0.0.1 1013 1014 FROM ubuntu 1015 MAINTAINER Victor Vieux <victor@docker.com> 1016 1017 LABEL Description="This image is used to start the foobar executable" Vendor="ACME Products" Version="1.0" 1018 RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y inotify-tools nginx apache2 openssh-server 1019 1020 # Firefox over VNC 1021 # 1022 # VERSION 0.3 1023 1024 FROM ubuntu 1025 1026 # Install vnc, xvfb in order to create a 'fake' display and firefox 1027 RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y x11vnc xvfb firefox 1028 RUN mkdir ~/.vnc 1029 # Setup a password 1030 RUN x11vnc -storepasswd 1234 ~/.vnc/passwd 1031 # Autostart firefox (might not be the best way, but it does the trick) 1032 RUN bash -c 'echo "firefox" >> /.bashrc' 1033 1034 EXPOSE 5900 1035 CMD ["x11vnc", "-forever", "-usepw", "-create"] 1036 1037 # Multiple images example 1038 # 1039 # VERSION 0.1 1040 1041 FROM ubuntu 1042 RUN echo foo > bar 1043 # Will output something like ===> 907ad6c2736f 1044 1045 FROM ubuntu 1046 RUN echo moo > oink 1047 # Will output something like ===> 695d7793cbe4 1048 1049 # You᾿ll now have two images, 907ad6c2736f with /bar, and 695d7793cbe4 with 1050 # /oink. 1051