github.com/yogeshlonkar/moby@v1.13.2-0.20201203103638-c0b64beaea94/docs/reference/run.md (about) 1 --- 2 title: "Docker run reference" 3 description: "Configure containers at runtime" 4 keywords: "docker, run, configure, runtime" 5 --- 6 7 <!-- This file is maintained within the docker/docker Github 8 repository at https://github.com/docker/docker/. Make all 9 pull requests against that repo. If you see this file in 10 another repository, consider it read-only there, as it will 11 periodically be overwritten by the definitive file. Pull 12 requests which include edits to this file in other repositories 13 will be rejected. 14 --> 15 16 # Docker run reference 17 18 Docker runs processes in isolated containers. A container is a process 19 which runs on a host. The host may be local or remote. When an operator 20 executes `docker run`, the container process that runs is isolated in 21 that it has its own file system, its own networking, and its own 22 isolated process tree separate from the host. 23 24 This page details how to use the `docker run` command to define the 25 container's resources at runtime. 26 27 ## General form 28 29 The basic `docker run` command takes this form: 30 31 $ docker run [OPTIONS] IMAGE[:TAG|@DIGEST] [COMMAND] [ARG...] 32 33 The `docker run` command must specify an [*IMAGE*](glossary.md#image) 34 to derive the container from. An image developer can define image 35 defaults related to: 36 37 * detached or foreground running 38 * container identification 39 * network settings 40 * runtime constraints on CPU and memory 41 42 With the `docker run [OPTIONS]` an operator can add to or override the 43 image defaults set by a developer. And, additionally, operators can 44 override nearly all the defaults set by the Docker runtime itself. The 45 operator's ability to override image and Docker runtime defaults is why 46 [*run*](commandline/run.md) has more options than any 47 other `docker` command. 48 49 To learn how to interpret the types of `[OPTIONS]`, see [*Option 50 types*](commandline/cli.md#option-types). 51 52 > **Note**: Depending on your Docker system configuration, you may be 53 > required to preface the `docker run` command with `sudo`. To avoid 54 > having to use `sudo` with the `docker` command, your system 55 > administrator can create a Unix group called `docker` and add users to 56 > it. For more information about this configuration, refer to the Docker 57 > installation documentation for your operating system. 58 59 60 ## Operator exclusive options 61 62 Only the operator (the person executing `docker run`) can set the 63 following options. 64 65 - [Detached vs foreground](#detached-vs-foreground) 66 - [Detached (-d)](#detached--d) 67 - [Foreground](#foreground) 68 - [Container identification](#container-identification) 69 - [Name (--name)](#name---name) 70 - [PID equivalent](#pid-equivalent) 71 - [IPC settings (--ipc)](#ipc-settings---ipc) 72 - [Network settings](#network-settings) 73 - [Restart policies (--restart)](#restart-policies---restart) 74 - [Clean up (--rm)](#clean-up---rm) 75 - [Runtime constraints on resources](#runtime-constraints-on-resources) 76 - [Runtime privilege and Linux capabilities](#runtime-privilege-and-linux-capabilities) 77 78 ## Detached vs foreground 79 80 When starting a Docker container, you must first decide if you want to 81 run the container in the background in a "detached" mode or in the 82 default foreground mode: 83 84 -d=false: Detached mode: Run container in the background, print new container id 85 86 ### Detached (-d) 87 88 To start a container in detached mode, you use `-d=true` or just `-d` option. By 89 design, containers started in detached mode exit when the root process used to 90 run the container exits. A container in detached mode cannot be automatically 91 removed when it stops, this means you cannot use the `--rm` option with `-d` option. 92 93 Do not pass a `service x start` command to a detached container. For example, this 94 command attempts to start the `nginx` service. 95 96 $ docker run -d -p 80:80 my_image service nginx start 97 98 This succeeds in starting the `nginx` service inside the container. However, it 99 fails the detached container paradigm in that, the root process (`service nginx 100 start`) returns and the detached container stops as designed. As a result, the 101 `nginx` service is started but could not be used. Instead, to start a process 102 such as the `nginx` web server do the following: 103 104 $ docker run -d -p 80:80 my_image nginx -g 'daemon off;' 105 106 To do input/output with a detached container use network connections or shared 107 volumes. These are required because the container is no longer listening to the 108 command line where `docker run` was run. 109 110 To reattach to a detached container, use `docker` 111 [*attach*](commandline/attach.md) command. 112 113 ### Foreground 114 115 In foreground mode (the default when `-d` is not specified), `docker 116 run` can start the process in the container and attach the console to 117 the process's standard input, output, and standard error. It can even 118 pretend to be a TTY (this is what most command line executables expect) 119 and pass along signals. All of that is configurable: 120 121 -a=[] : Attach to `STDIN`, `STDOUT` and/or `STDERR` 122 -t : Allocate a pseudo-tty 123 --sig-proxy=true: Proxy all received signals to the process (non-TTY mode only) 124 -i : Keep STDIN open even if not attached 125 126 If you do not specify `-a` then Docker will [attach to both stdout and stderr 127 ]( https://github.com/docker/docker/blob/4118e0c9eebda2412a09ae66e90c34b85fae3275/runconfig/opts/parse.go#L267). 128 You can specify to which of the three standard streams (`STDIN`, `STDOUT`, 129 `STDERR`) you'd like to connect instead, as in: 130 131 $ docker run -a stdin -a stdout -i -t ubuntu /bin/bash 132 133 For interactive processes (like a shell), you must use `-i -t` together in 134 order to allocate a tty for the container process. `-i -t` is often written `-it` 135 as you'll see in later examples. Specifying `-t` is forbidden when the client 136 standard output is redirected or piped, such as in: 137 138 $ echo test | docker run -i busybox cat 139 140 >**Note**: A process running as PID 1 inside a container is treated 141 >specially by Linux: it ignores any signal with the default action. 142 >So, the process will not terminate on `SIGINT` or `SIGTERM` unless it is 143 >coded to do so. 144 145 ## Container identification 146 147 ### Name (--name) 148 149 The operator can identify a container in three ways: 150 151 | Identifier type | Example value | 152 | --------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------ | 153 | UUID long identifier | "f78375b1c487e03c9438c729345e54db9d20cfa2ac1fc3494b6eb60872e74778" | 154 | UUID short identifier | "f78375b1c487" | 155 | Name | "evil_ptolemy" | 156 157 The UUID identifiers come from the Docker daemon. If you do not assign a 158 container name with the `--name` option, then the daemon generates a random 159 string name for you. Defining a `name` can be a handy way to add meaning to a 160 container. If you specify a `name`, you can use it when referencing the 161 container within a Docker network. This works for both background and foreground 162 Docker containers. 163 164 > **Note**: Containers on the default bridge network must be linked to 165 > communicate by name. 166 167 ### PID equivalent 168 169 Finally, to help with automation, you can have Docker write the 170 container ID out to a file of your choosing. This is similar to how some 171 programs might write out their process ID to a file (you've seen them as 172 PID files): 173 174 --cidfile="": Write the container ID to the file 175 176 ### Image[:tag] 177 178 While not strictly a means of identifying a container, you can specify a version of an 179 image you'd like to run the container with by adding `image[:tag]` to the command. For 180 example, `docker run ubuntu:14.04`. 181 182 ### Image[@digest] 183 184 Images using the v2 or later image format have a content-addressable identifier 185 called a digest. As long as the input used to generate the image is unchanged, 186 the digest value is predictable and referenceable. 187 188 The following example runs a container from the `alpine` image with the 189 `sha256:9cacb71397b640eca97488cf08582ae4e4068513101088e9f96c9814bfda95e0` digest: 190 191 $ docker run alpine@sha256:9cacb71397b640eca97488cf08582ae4e4068513101088e9f96c9814bfda95e0 date 192 193 ## PID settings (--pid) 194 195 --pid="" : Set the PID (Process) Namespace mode for the container, 196 'container:<name|id>': joins another container's PID namespace 197 'host': use the host's PID namespace inside the container 198 199 By default, all containers have the PID namespace enabled. 200 201 PID namespace provides separation of processes. The PID Namespace removes the 202 view of the system processes, and allows process ids to be reused including 203 pid 1. 204 205 In certain cases you want your container to share the host's process namespace, 206 basically allowing processes within the container to see all of the processes 207 on the system. For example, you could build a container with debugging tools 208 like `strace` or `gdb`, but want to use these tools when debugging processes 209 within the container. 210 211 ### Example: run htop inside a container 212 213 Create this Dockerfile: 214 215 ``` 216 FROM alpine:latest 217 RUN apk add --update htop && rm -rf /var/cache/apk/* 218 CMD ["htop"] 219 ``` 220 221 Build the Dockerfile and tag the image as `myhtop`: 222 223 ```bash 224 $ docker build -t myhtop . 225 ``` 226 227 Use the following command to run `htop` inside a container: 228 229 ``` 230 $ docker run -it --rm --pid=host myhtop 231 ``` 232 233 Joining another container's pid namespace can be used for debugging that container. 234 235 ### Example 236 237 Start a container running a redis server: 238 239 ```bash 240 $ docker run --name my-redis -d redis 241 ``` 242 243 Debug the redis container by running another container that has strace in it: 244 245 ```bash 246 $ docker run -it --pid=container:my-redis my_strace_docker_image bash 247 $ strace -p 1 248 ``` 249 250 ## UTS settings (--uts) 251 252 --uts="" : Set the UTS namespace mode for the container, 253 'host': use the host's UTS namespace inside the container 254 255 The UTS namespace is for setting the hostname and the domain that is visible 256 to running processes in that namespace. By default, all containers, including 257 those with `--network=host`, have their own UTS namespace. The `host` setting will 258 result in the container using the same UTS namespace as the host. Note that 259 `--hostname` is invalid in `host` UTS mode. 260 261 You may wish to share the UTS namespace with the host if you would like the 262 hostname of the container to change as the hostname of the host changes. A 263 more advanced use case would be changing the host's hostname from a container. 264 265 ## IPC settings (--ipc) 266 267 --ipc="" : Set the IPC mode for the container, 268 'container:<name|id>': reuses another container's IPC namespace 269 'host': use the host's IPC namespace inside the container 270 271 By default, all containers have the IPC namespace enabled. 272 273 IPC (POSIX/SysV IPC) namespace provides separation of named shared memory 274 segments, semaphores and message queues. 275 276 Shared memory segments are used to accelerate inter-process communication at 277 memory speed, rather than through pipes or through the network stack. Shared 278 memory is commonly used by databases and custom-built (typically C/OpenMPI, 279 C++/using boost libraries) high performance applications for scientific 280 computing and financial services industries. If these types of applications 281 are broken into multiple containers, you might need to share the IPC mechanisms 282 of the containers. 283 284 ## Network settings 285 286 --dns=[] : Set custom dns servers for the container 287 --network="bridge" : Connect a container to a network 288 'bridge': create a network stack on the default Docker bridge 289 'none': no networking 290 'container:<name|id>': reuse another container's network stack 291 'host': use the Docker host network stack 292 '<network-name>|<network-id>': connect to a user-defined network 293 --network-alias=[] : Add network-scoped alias for the container 294 --add-host="" : Add a line to /etc/hosts (host:IP) 295 --mac-address="" : Sets the container's Ethernet device's MAC address 296 --ip="" : Sets the container's Ethernet device's IPv4 address 297 --ip6="" : Sets the container's Ethernet device's IPv6 address 298 --link-local-ip=[] : Sets one or more container's Ethernet device's link local IPv4/IPv6 addresses 299 300 By default, all containers have networking enabled and they can make any 301 outgoing connections. The operator can completely disable networking 302 with `docker run --network none` which disables all incoming and outgoing 303 networking. In cases like this, you would perform I/O through files or 304 `STDIN` and `STDOUT` only. 305 306 Publishing ports and linking to other containers only works with the default (bridge). The linking feature is a legacy feature. You should always prefer using Docker network drivers over linking. 307 308 Your container will use the same DNS servers as the host by default, but 309 you can override this with `--dns`. 310 311 By default, the MAC address is generated using the IP address allocated to the 312 container. You can set the container's MAC address explicitly by providing a 313 MAC address via the `--mac-address` parameter (format:`12:34:56:78:9a:bc`).Be 314 aware that Docker does not check if manually specified MAC addresses are unique. 315 316 Supported networks : 317 318 <table> 319 <thead> 320 <tr> 321 <th class="no-wrap">Network</th> 322 <th>Description</th> 323 </tr> 324 </thead> 325 <tbody> 326 <tr> 327 <td class="no-wrap"><strong>none</strong></td> 328 <td> 329 No networking in the container. 330 </td> 331 </tr> 332 <tr> 333 <td class="no-wrap"><strong>bridge</strong> (default)</td> 334 <td> 335 Connect the container to the bridge via veth interfaces. 336 </td> 337 </tr> 338 <tr> 339 <td class="no-wrap"><strong>host</strong></td> 340 <td> 341 Use the host's network stack inside the container. 342 </td> 343 </tr> 344 <tr> 345 <td class="no-wrap"><strong>container</strong>:<name|id></td> 346 <td> 347 Use the network stack of another container, specified via 348 its <i>name</i> or <i>id</i>. 349 </td> 350 </tr> 351 <tr> 352 <td class="no-wrap"><strong>NETWORK</strong></td> 353 <td> 354 Connects the container to a user created network (using <code>docker network create</code> command) 355 </td> 356 </tr> 357 </tbody> 358 </table> 359 360 #### Network: none 361 362 With the network is `none` a container will not have 363 access to any external routes. The container will still have a 364 `loopback` interface enabled in the container but it does not have any 365 routes to external traffic. 366 367 #### Network: bridge 368 369 With the network set to `bridge` a container will use docker's 370 default networking setup. A bridge is setup on the host, commonly named 371 `docker0`, and a pair of `veth` interfaces will be created for the 372 container. One side of the `veth` pair will remain on the host attached 373 to the bridge while the other side of the pair will be placed inside the 374 container's namespaces in addition to the `loopback` interface. An IP 375 address will be allocated for containers on the bridge's network and 376 traffic will be routed though this bridge to the container. 377 378 Containers can communicate via their IP addresses by default. To communicate by 379 name, they must be linked. 380 381 #### Network: host 382 383 With the network set to `host` a container will share the host's 384 network stack and all interfaces from the host will be available to the 385 container. The container's hostname will match the hostname on the host 386 system. Note that `--mac-address` is invalid in `host` netmode. Even in `host` 387 network mode a container has its own UTS namespace by default. As such 388 `--hostname` is allowed in `host` network mode and will only change the 389 hostname inside the container. 390 Similar to `--hostname`, the `--add-host`, `--dns`, `--dns-search`, and 391 `--dns-option` options can be used in `host` network mode. These options update 392 `/etc/hosts` or `/etc/resolv.conf` inside the container. No change are made to 393 `/etc/hosts` and `/etc/resolv.conf` on the host. 394 395 Compared to the default `bridge` mode, the `host` mode gives *significantly* 396 better networking performance since it uses the host's native networking stack 397 whereas the bridge has to go through one level of virtualization through the 398 docker daemon. It is recommended to run containers in this mode when their 399 networking performance is critical, for example, a production Load Balancer 400 or a High Performance Web Server. 401 402 > **Note**: `--network="host"` gives the container full access to local system 403 > services such as D-bus and is therefore considered insecure. 404 405 #### Network: container 406 407 With the network set to `container` a container will share the 408 network stack of another container. The other container's name must be 409 provided in the format of `--network container:<name|id>`. Note that `--add-host` 410 `--hostname` `--dns` `--dns-search` `--dns-option` and `--mac-address` are 411 invalid in `container` netmode, and `--publish` `--publish-all` `--expose` are 412 also invalid in `container` netmode. 413 414 Example running a Redis container with Redis binding to `localhost` then 415 running the `redis-cli` command and connecting to the Redis server over the 416 `localhost` interface. 417 418 $ docker run -d --name redis example/redis --bind 127.0.0.1 419 $ # use the redis container's network stack to access localhost 420 $ docker run --rm -it --network container:redis example/redis-cli -h 127.0.0.1 421 422 #### User-defined network 423 424 You can create a network using a Docker network driver or an external network 425 driver plugin. You can connect multiple containers to the same network. Once 426 connected to a user-defined network, the containers can communicate easily using 427 only another container's IP address or name. 428 429 For `overlay` networks or custom plugins that support multi-host connectivity, 430 containers connected to the same multi-host network but launched from different 431 Engines can also communicate in this way. 432 433 The following example creates a network using the built-in `bridge` network 434 driver and running a container in the created network 435 436 ``` 437 $ docker network create -d bridge my-net 438 $ docker run --network=my-net -itd --name=container3 busybox 439 ``` 440 441 ### Managing /etc/hosts 442 443 Your container will have lines in `/etc/hosts` which define the hostname of the 444 container itself as well as `localhost` and a few other common things. The 445 `--add-host` flag can be used to add additional lines to `/etc/hosts`. 446 447 $ docker run -it --add-host db-static:86.75.30.9 ubuntu cat /etc/hosts 448 172.17.0.22 09d03f76bf2c 449 fe00::0 ip6-localnet 450 ff00::0 ip6-mcastprefix 451 ff02::1 ip6-allnodes 452 ff02::2 ip6-allrouters 453 127.0.0.1 localhost 454 ::1 localhost ip6-localhost ip6-loopback 455 86.75.30.9 db-static 456 457 If a container is connected to the default bridge network and `linked` 458 with other containers, then the container's `/etc/hosts` file is updated 459 with the linked container's name. 460 461 > **Note** Since Docker may live update the container’s `/etc/hosts` file, there 462 may be situations when processes inside the container can end up reading an 463 empty or incomplete `/etc/hosts` file. In most cases, retrying the read again 464 should fix the problem. 465 466 ## Restart policies (--restart) 467 468 Using the `--restart` flag on Docker run you can specify a restart policy for 469 how a container should or should not be restarted on exit. 470 471 When a restart policy is active on a container, it will be shown as either `Up` 472 or `Restarting` in [`docker ps`](commandline/ps.md). It can also be 473 useful to use [`docker events`](commandline/events.md) to see the 474 restart policy in effect. 475 476 Docker supports the following restart policies: 477 478 <table> 479 <thead> 480 <tr> 481 <th>Policy</th> 482 <th>Result</th> 483 </tr> 484 </thead> 485 <tbody> 486 <tr> 487 <td><strong>no</strong></td> 488 <td> 489 Do not automatically restart the container when it exits. This is the 490 default. 491 </td> 492 </tr> 493 <tr> 494 <td> 495 <span style="white-space: nowrap"> 496 <strong>on-failure</strong>[:max-retries] 497 </span> 498 </td> 499 <td> 500 Restart only if the container exits with a non-zero exit status. 501 Optionally, limit the number of restart retries the Docker 502 daemon attempts. 503 </td> 504 </tr> 505 <tr> 506 <td><strong>always</strong></td> 507 <td> 508 Always restart the container regardless of the exit status. 509 When you specify always, the Docker daemon will try to restart 510 the container indefinitely. The container will also always start 511 on daemon startup, regardless of the current state of the container. 512 </td> 513 </tr> 514 <tr> 515 <td><strong>unless-stopped</strong></td> 516 <td> 517 Always restart the container regardless of the exit status, but 518 do not start it on daemon startup if the container has been put 519 to a stopped state before. 520 </td> 521 </tr> 522 </tbody> 523 </table> 524 525 An ever increasing delay (double the previous delay, starting at 100 526 milliseconds) is added before each restart to prevent flooding the server. 527 This means the daemon will wait for 100 ms, then 200 ms, 400, 800, 1600, 528 and so on until either the `on-failure` limit is hit, or when you `docker stop` 529 or `docker rm -f` the container. 530 531 If a container is successfully restarted (the container is started and runs 532 for at least 10 seconds), the delay is reset to its default value of 100 ms. 533 534 You can specify the maximum amount of times Docker will try to restart the 535 container when using the **on-failure** policy. The default is that Docker 536 will try forever to restart the container. The number of (attempted) restarts 537 for a container can be obtained via [`docker inspect`](commandline/inspect.md). For example, to get the number of restarts 538 for container "my-container"; 539 540 {% raw %} 541 $ docker inspect -f "{{ .RestartCount }}" my-container 542 # 2 543 {% endraw %} 544 545 Or, to get the last time the container was (re)started; 546 547 {% raw %} 548 $ docker inspect -f "{{ .State.StartedAt }}" my-container 549 # 2015-03-04T23:47:07.691840179Z 550 {% endraw %} 551 552 553 Combining `--restart` (restart policy) with the `--rm` (clean up) flag results 554 in an error. On container restart, attached clients are disconnected. See the 555 examples on using the [`--rm` (clean up)](#clean-up-rm) flag later in this page. 556 557 ### Examples 558 559 $ docker run --restart=always redis 560 561 This will run the `redis` container with a restart policy of **always** 562 so that if the container exits, Docker will restart it. 563 564 $ docker run --restart=on-failure:10 redis 565 566 This will run the `redis` container with a restart policy of **on-failure** 567 and a maximum restart count of 10. If the `redis` container exits with a 568 non-zero exit status more than 10 times in a row Docker will abort trying to 569 restart the container. Providing a maximum restart limit is only valid for the 570 **on-failure** policy. 571 572 ## Exit Status 573 574 The exit code from `docker run` gives information about why the container 575 failed to run or why it exited. When `docker run` exits with a non-zero code, 576 the exit codes follow the `chroot` standard, see below: 577 578 **_125_** if the error is with Docker daemon **_itself_** 579 580 $ docker run --foo busybox; echo $? 581 # flag provided but not defined: --foo 582 See 'docker run --help'. 583 125 584 585 **_126_** if the **_contained command_** cannot be invoked 586 587 $ docker run busybox /etc; echo $? 588 # docker: Error response from daemon: Container command '/etc' could not be invoked. 589 126 590 591 **_127_** if the **_contained command_** cannot be found 592 593 $ docker run busybox foo; echo $? 594 # docker: Error response from daemon: Container command 'foo' not found or does not exist. 595 127 596 597 **_Exit code_** of **_contained command_** otherwise 598 599 $ docker run busybox /bin/sh -c 'exit 3'; echo $? 600 # 3 601 602 ## Clean up (--rm) 603 604 By default a container's file system persists even after the container 605 exits. This makes debugging a lot easier (since you can inspect the 606 final state) and you retain all your data by default. But if you are 607 running short-term **foreground** processes, these container file 608 systems can really pile up. If instead you'd like Docker to 609 **automatically clean up the container and remove the file system when 610 the container exits**, you can add the `--rm` flag: 611 612 --rm=false: Automatically remove the container when it exits (incompatible with -d) 613 614 > **Note**: When you set the `--rm` flag, Docker also removes the volumes 615 associated with the container when the container is removed. This is similar 616 to running `docker rm -v my-container`. Only volumes that are specified without a 617 name are removed. For example, with 618 `docker run --rm -v /foo -v awesome:/bar busybox top`, the volume for `/foo` will be removed, 619 but the volume for `/bar` will not. Volumes inherited via `--volumes-from` will be removed 620 with the same logic -- if the original volume was specified with a name it will **not** be removed. 621 622 ## Security configuration 623 --security-opt="label=user:USER" : Set the label user for the container 624 --security-opt="label=role:ROLE" : Set the label role for the container 625 --security-opt="label=type:TYPE" : Set the label type for the container 626 --security-opt="label=level:LEVEL" : Set the label level for the container 627 --security-opt="label=disable" : Turn off label confinement for the container 628 --security-opt="apparmor=PROFILE" : Set the apparmor profile to be applied to the container 629 --security-opt="no-new-privileges" : Disable container processes from gaining new privileges 630 --security-opt="seccomp=unconfined" : Turn off seccomp confinement for the container 631 --security-opt="seccomp=profile.json": White listed syscalls seccomp Json file to be used as a seccomp filter 632 633 634 You can override the default labeling scheme for each container by specifying 635 the `--security-opt` flag. Specifying the level in the following command 636 allows you to share the same content between containers. 637 638 $ docker run --security-opt label=level:s0:c100,c200 -it fedora bash 639 640 > **Note**: Automatic translation of MLS labels is not currently supported. 641 642 To disable the security labeling for this container versus running with the 643 `--privileged` flag, use the following command: 644 645 $ docker run --security-opt label=disable -it fedora bash 646 647 If you want a tighter security policy on the processes within a container, 648 you can specify an alternate type for the container. You could run a container 649 that is only allowed to listen on Apache ports by executing the following 650 command: 651 652 $ docker run --security-opt label=type:svirt_apache_t -it centos bash 653 654 > **Note**: You would have to write policy defining a `svirt_apache_t` type. 655 656 If you want to prevent your container processes from gaining additional 657 privileges, you can execute the following command: 658 659 $ docker run --security-opt no-new-privileges -it centos bash 660 661 This means that commands that raise privileges such as `su` or `sudo` will no longer work. 662 It also causes any seccomp filters to be applied later, after privileges have been dropped 663 which may mean you can have a more restrictive set of filters. 664 For more details, see the [kernel documentation](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/prctl/no_new_privs.txt). 665 666 ## Specify an init process 667 668 You can use the `--init` flag to indicate that an init process should be used as 669 the PID 1 in the container. Specifying an init process ensures the usual 670 responsibilities of an init system, such as reaping zombie processes, are 671 performed inside the created container. 672 673 The default init process used is the first `docker-init` executable found in the 674 system path of the Docker daemon process. This `docker-init` binary, included in 675 the default installation, is backed by [tini](https://github.com/krallin/tini). 676 677 ## Specify custom cgroups 678 679 Using the `--cgroup-parent` flag, you can pass a specific cgroup to run a 680 container in. This allows you to create and manage cgroups on their own. You can 681 define custom resources for those cgroups and put containers under a common 682 parent group. 683 684 ## Runtime constraints on resources 685 686 The operator can also adjust the performance parameters of the 687 container: 688 689 | Option | Description | 690 | -------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 691 | `-m`, `--memory=""` | Memory limit (format: `<number>[<unit>]`). Number is a positive integer. Unit can be one of `b`, `k`, `m`, or `g`. Minimum is 4M. | 692 | `--memory-swap=""` | Total memory limit (memory + swap, format: `<number>[<unit>]`). Number is a positive integer. Unit can be one of `b`, `k`, `m`, or `g`. | 693 | `--memory-reservation=""` | Memory soft limit (format: `<number>[<unit>]`). Number is a positive integer. Unit can be one of `b`, `k`, `m`, or `g`. | 694 | `--kernel-memory=""` | Kernel memory limit (format: `<number>[<unit>]`). Number is a positive integer. Unit can be one of `b`, `k`, `m`, or `g`. Minimum is 4M. | 695 | `-c`, `--cpu-shares=0` | CPU shares (relative weight) | 696 | `--cpus=0.000` | Number of CPUs. Number is a fractional number. 0.000 means no limit. | 697 | `--cpu-period=0` | Limit the CPU CFS (Completely Fair Scheduler) period | 698 | `--cpuset-cpus=""` | CPUs in which to allow execution (0-3, 0,1) | 699 | `--cpuset-mems=""` | Memory nodes (MEMs) in which to allow execution (0-3, 0,1). Only effective on NUMA systems. | 700 | `--cpu-quota=0` | Limit the CPU CFS (Completely Fair Scheduler) quota | 701 | `--cpu-rt-period=0` | Limit the CPU real-time period. In microseconds. Requires parent cgroups be set and cannot be higher than parent. Also check rtprio ulimits. | 702 | `--cpu-rt-runtime=0` | Limit the CPU real-time runtime. In microseconds. Requires parent cgroups be set and cannot be higher than parent. Also check rtprio ulimits. | 703 | `--blkio-weight=0` | Block IO weight (relative weight) accepts a weight value between 10 and 1000. | 704 | `--blkio-weight-device=""` | Block IO weight (relative device weight, format: `DEVICE_NAME:WEIGHT`) | 705 | `--device-read-bps=""` | Limit read rate from a device (format: `<device-path>:<number>[<unit>]`). Number is a positive integer. Unit can be one of `kb`, `mb`, or `gb`. | 706 | `--device-write-bps=""` | Limit write rate to a device (format: `<device-path>:<number>[<unit>]`). Number is a positive integer. Unit can be one of `kb`, `mb`, or `gb`. | 707 | `--device-read-iops="" ` | Limit read rate (IO per second) from a device (format: `<device-path>:<number>`). Number is a positive integer. | 708 | `--device-write-iops="" ` | Limit write rate (IO per second) to a device (format: `<device-path>:<number>`). Number is a positive integer. | 709 | `--oom-kill-disable=false` | Whether to disable OOM Killer for the container or not. | 710 | `--oom-score-adj=0` | Tune container's OOM preferences (-1000 to 1000) | 711 | `--memory-swappiness=""` | Tune a container's memory swappiness behavior. Accepts an integer between 0 and 100. | 712 | `--shm-size=""` | Size of `/dev/shm`. The format is `<number><unit>`. `number` must be greater than `0`. Unit is optional and can be `b` (bytes), `k` (kilobytes), `m` (megabytes), or `g` (gigabytes). If you omit the unit, the system uses bytes. If you omit the size entirely, the system uses `64m`. | 713 714 ### User memory constraints 715 716 We have four ways to set user memory usage: 717 718 <table> 719 <thead> 720 <tr> 721 <th>Option</th> 722 <th>Result</th> 723 </tr> 724 </thead> 725 <tbody> 726 <tr> 727 <td class="no-wrap"> 728 <strong>memory=inf, memory-swap=inf</strong> (default) 729 </td> 730 <td> 731 There is no memory limit for the container. The container can use 732 as much memory as needed. 733 </td> 734 </tr> 735 <tr> 736 <td class="no-wrap"><strong>memory=L<inf, memory-swap=inf</strong></td> 737 <td> 738 (specify memory and set memory-swap as <code>-1</code>) The container is 739 not allowed to use more than L bytes of memory, but can use as much swap 740 as is needed (if the host supports swap memory). 741 </td> 742 </tr> 743 <tr> 744 <td class="no-wrap"><strong>memory=L<inf, memory-swap=2*L</strong></td> 745 <td> 746 (specify memory without memory-swap) The container is not allowed to 747 use more than L bytes of memory, swap <i>plus</i> memory usage is double 748 of that. 749 </td> 750 </tr> 751 <tr> 752 <td class="no-wrap"> 753 <strong>memory=L<inf, memory-swap=S<inf, L<=S</strong> 754 </td> 755 <td> 756 (specify both memory and memory-swap) The container is not allowed to 757 use more than L bytes of memory, swap <i>plus</i> memory usage is limited 758 by S. 759 </td> 760 </tr> 761 </tbody> 762 </table> 763 764 Examples: 765 766 $ docker run -it ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 767 768 We set nothing about memory, this means the processes in the container can use 769 as much memory and swap memory as they need. 770 771 $ docker run -it -m 300M --memory-swap -1 ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 772 773 We set memory limit and disabled swap memory limit, this means the processes in 774 the container can use 300M memory and as much swap memory as they need (if the 775 host supports swap memory). 776 777 $ docker run -it -m 300M ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 778 779 We set memory limit only, this means the processes in the container can use 780 300M memory and 300M swap memory, by default, the total virtual memory size 781 (--memory-swap) will be set as double of memory, in this case, memory + swap 782 would be 2*300M, so processes can use 300M swap memory as well. 783 784 $ docker run -it -m 300M --memory-swap 1G ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 785 786 We set both memory and swap memory, so the processes in the container can use 787 300M memory and 700M swap memory. 788 789 Memory reservation is a kind of memory soft limit that allows for greater 790 sharing of memory. Under normal circumstances, containers can use as much of 791 the memory as needed and are constrained only by the hard limits set with the 792 `-m`/`--memory` option. When memory reservation is set, Docker detects memory 793 contention or low memory and forces containers to restrict their consumption to 794 a reservation limit. 795 796 Always set the memory reservation value below the hard limit, otherwise the hard 797 limit takes precedence. A reservation of 0 is the same as setting no 798 reservation. By default (without reservation set), memory reservation is the 799 same as the hard memory limit. 800 801 Memory reservation is a soft-limit feature and does not guarantee the limit 802 won't be exceeded. Instead, the feature attempts to ensure that, when memory is 803 heavily contended for, memory is allocated based on the reservation hints/setup. 804 805 The following example limits the memory (`-m`) to 500M and sets the memory 806 reservation to 200M. 807 808 ```bash 809 $ docker run -it -m 500M --memory-reservation 200M ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 810 ``` 811 812 Under this configuration, when the container consumes memory more than 200M and 813 less than 500M, the next system memory reclaim attempts to shrink container 814 memory below 200M. 815 816 The following example set memory reservation to 1G without a hard memory limit. 817 818 ```bash 819 $ docker run -it --memory-reservation 1G ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 820 ``` 821 822 The container can use as much memory as it needs. The memory reservation setting 823 ensures the container doesn't consume too much memory for long time, because 824 every memory reclaim shrinks the container's consumption to the reservation. 825 826 By default, kernel kills processes in a container if an out-of-memory (OOM) 827 error occurs. To change this behaviour, use the `--oom-kill-disable` option. 828 Only disable the OOM killer on containers where you have also set the 829 `-m/--memory` option. If the `-m` flag is not set, this can result in the host 830 running out of memory and require killing the host's system processes to free 831 memory. 832 833 The following example limits the memory to 100M and disables the OOM killer for 834 this container: 835 836 $ docker run -it -m 100M --oom-kill-disable ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 837 838 The following example, illustrates a dangerous way to use the flag: 839 840 $ docker run -it --oom-kill-disable ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 841 842 The container has unlimited memory which can cause the host to run out memory 843 and require killing system processes to free memory. The `--oom-score-adj` 844 parameter can be changed to select the priority of which containers will 845 be killed when the system is out of memory, with negative scores making them 846 less likely to be killed, and positive scores more likely. 847 848 ### Kernel memory constraints 849 850 Kernel memory is fundamentally different than user memory as kernel memory can't 851 be swapped out. The inability to swap makes it possible for the container to 852 block system services by consuming too much kernel memory. Kernel memory includes: 853 854 - stack pages 855 - slab pages 856 - sockets memory pressure 857 - tcp memory pressure 858 859 You can setup kernel memory limit to constrain these kinds of memory. For example, 860 every process consumes some stack pages. By limiting kernel memory, you can 861 prevent new processes from being created when the kernel memory usage is too high. 862 863 Kernel memory is never completely independent of user memory. Instead, you limit 864 kernel memory in the context of the user memory limit. Assume "U" is the user memory 865 limit and "K" the kernel limit. There are three possible ways to set limits: 866 867 <table> 868 <thead> 869 <tr> 870 <th>Option</th> 871 <th>Result</th> 872 </tr> 873 </thead> 874 <tbody> 875 <tr> 876 <td class="no-wrap"><strong>U != 0, K = inf</strong> (default)</td> 877 <td> 878 This is the standard memory limitation mechanism already present before using 879 kernel memory. Kernel memory is completely ignored. 880 </td> 881 </tr> 882 <tr> 883 <td class="no-wrap"><strong>U != 0, K < U</strong></td> 884 <td> 885 Kernel memory is a subset of the user memory. This setup is useful in 886 deployments where the total amount of memory per-cgroup is overcommitted. 887 Overcommitting kernel memory limits is definitely not recommended, since the 888 box can still run out of non-reclaimable memory. 889 In this case, you can configure K so that the sum of all groups is 890 never greater than the total memory. Then, freely set U at the expense of 891 the system's service quality. 892 </td> 893 </tr> 894 <tr> 895 <td class="no-wrap"><strong>U != 0, K > U</strong></td> 896 <td> 897 Since kernel memory charges are also fed to the user counter and reclamation 898 is triggered for the container for both kinds of memory. This configuration 899 gives the admin a unified view of memory. It is also useful for people 900 who just want to track kernel memory usage. 901 </td> 902 </tr> 903 </tbody> 904 </table> 905 906 Examples: 907 908 $ docker run -it -m 500M --kernel-memory 50M ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 909 910 We set memory and kernel memory, so the processes in the container can use 911 500M memory in total, in this 500M memory, it can be 50M kernel memory tops. 912 913 $ docker run -it --kernel-memory 50M ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 914 915 We set kernel memory without **-m**, so the processes in the container can 916 use as much memory as they want, but they can only use 50M kernel memory. 917 918 ### Swappiness constraint 919 920 By default, a container's kernel can swap out a percentage of anonymous pages. 921 To set this percentage for a container, specify a `--memory-swappiness` value 922 between 0 and 100. A value of 0 turns off anonymous page swapping. A value of 923 100 sets all anonymous pages as swappable. By default, if you are not using 924 `--memory-swappiness`, memory swappiness value will be inherited from the parent. 925 926 For example, you can set: 927 928 $ docker run -it --memory-swappiness=0 ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 929 930 Setting the `--memory-swappiness` option is helpful when you want to retain the 931 container's working set and to avoid swapping performance penalties. 932 933 ### CPU share constraint 934 935 By default, all containers get the same proportion of CPU cycles. This proportion 936 can be modified by changing the container's CPU share weighting relative 937 to the weighting of all other running containers. 938 939 To modify the proportion from the default of 1024, use the `-c` or `--cpu-shares` 940 flag to set the weighting to 2 or higher. If 0 is set, the system will ignore the 941 value and use the default of 1024. 942 943 The proportion will only apply when CPU-intensive processes are running. 944 When tasks in one container are idle, other containers can use the 945 left-over CPU time. The actual amount of CPU time will vary depending on 946 the number of containers running on the system. 947 948 For example, consider three containers, one has a cpu-share of 1024 and 949 two others have a cpu-share setting of 512. When processes in all three 950 containers attempt to use 100% of CPU, the first container would receive 951 50% of the total CPU time. If you add a fourth container with a cpu-share 952 of 1024, the first container only gets 33% of the CPU. The remaining containers 953 receive 16.5%, 16.5% and 33% of the CPU. 954 955 On a multi-core system, the shares of CPU time are distributed over all CPU 956 cores. Even if a container is limited to less than 100% of CPU time, it can 957 use 100% of each individual CPU core. 958 959 For example, consider a system with more than three cores. If you start one 960 container `{C0}` with `-c=512` running one process, and another container 961 `{C1}` with `-c=1024` running two processes, this can result in the following 962 division of CPU shares: 963 964 PID container CPU CPU share 965 100 {C0} 0 100% of CPU0 966 101 {C1} 1 100% of CPU1 967 102 {C1} 2 100% of CPU2 968 969 ### CPU period constraint 970 971 The default CPU CFS (Completely Fair Scheduler) period is 100ms. We can use 972 `--cpu-period` to set the period of CPUs to limit the container's CPU usage. 973 And usually `--cpu-period` should work with `--cpu-quota`. 974 975 Examples: 976 977 $ docker run -it --cpu-period=50000 --cpu-quota=25000 ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 978 979 If there is 1 CPU, this means the container can get 50% CPU worth of run-time every 50ms. 980 981 In addition to use `--cpu-period` and `--cpu-quota` for setting CPU period constraints, 982 it is possible to specify `--cpus` with a float number to achieve the same purpose. 983 For example, if there is 1 CPU, then `--cpus=0.5` will achieve the same result as 984 setting `--cpu-period=50000` and `--cpu-quota=25000` (50% CPU). 985 986 The default value for `--cpus` is `0.000`, which means there is no limit. 987 988 For more information, see the [CFS documentation on bandwidth limiting](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/scheduler/sched-bwc.txt). 989 990 ### Cpuset constraint 991 992 We can set cpus in which to allow execution for containers. 993 994 Examples: 995 996 $ docker run -it --cpuset-cpus="1,3" ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 997 998 This means processes in container can be executed on cpu 1 and cpu 3. 999 1000 $ docker run -it --cpuset-cpus="0-2" ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 1001 1002 This means processes in container can be executed on cpu 0, cpu 1 and cpu 2. 1003 1004 We can set mems in which to allow execution for containers. Only effective 1005 on NUMA systems. 1006 1007 Examples: 1008 1009 $ docker run -it --cpuset-mems="1,3" ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 1010 1011 This example restricts the processes in the container to only use memory from 1012 memory nodes 1 and 3. 1013 1014 $ docker run -it --cpuset-mems="0-2" ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 1015 1016 This example restricts the processes in the container to only use memory from 1017 memory nodes 0, 1 and 2. 1018 1019 ### CPU quota constraint 1020 1021 The `--cpu-quota` flag limits the container's CPU usage. The default 0 value 1022 allows the container to take 100% of a CPU resource (1 CPU). The CFS (Completely Fair 1023 Scheduler) handles resource allocation for executing processes and is default 1024 Linux Scheduler used by the kernel. Set this value to 50000 to limit the container 1025 to 50% of a CPU resource. For multiple CPUs, adjust the `--cpu-quota` as necessary. 1026 For more information, see the [CFS documentation on bandwidth limiting](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/scheduler/sched-bwc.txt). 1027 1028 ### Block IO bandwidth (Blkio) constraint 1029 1030 By default, all containers get the same proportion of block IO bandwidth 1031 (blkio). This proportion is 500. To modify this proportion, change the 1032 container's blkio weight relative to the weighting of all other running 1033 containers using the `--blkio-weight` flag. 1034 1035 > **Note:** The blkio weight setting is only available for direct IO. Buffered IO 1036 > is not currently supported. 1037 1038 The `--blkio-weight` flag can set the weighting to a value between 10 to 1000. 1039 For example, the commands below create two containers with different blkio 1040 weight: 1041 1042 $ docker run -it --name c1 --blkio-weight 300 ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 1043 $ docker run -it --name c2 --blkio-weight 600 ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash 1044 1045 If you do block IO in the two containers at the same time, by, for example: 1046 1047 $ time dd if=/mnt/zerofile of=test.out bs=1M count=1024 oflag=direct 1048 1049 You'll find that the proportion of time is the same as the proportion of blkio 1050 weights of the two containers. 1051 1052 The `--blkio-weight-device="DEVICE_NAME:WEIGHT"` flag sets a specific device weight. 1053 The `DEVICE_NAME:WEIGHT` is a string containing a colon-separated device name and weight. 1054 For example, to set `/dev/sda` device weight to `200`: 1055 1056 $ docker run -it \ 1057 --blkio-weight-device "/dev/sda:200" \ 1058 ubuntu 1059 1060 If you specify both the `--blkio-weight` and `--blkio-weight-device`, Docker 1061 uses the `--blkio-weight` as the default weight and uses `--blkio-weight-device` 1062 to override this default with a new value on a specific device. 1063 The following example uses a default weight of `300` and overrides this default 1064 on `/dev/sda` setting that weight to `200`: 1065 1066 $ docker run -it \ 1067 --blkio-weight 300 \ 1068 --blkio-weight-device "/dev/sda:200" \ 1069 ubuntu 1070 1071 The `--device-read-bps` flag limits the read rate (bytes per second) from a device. 1072 For example, this command creates a container and limits the read rate to `1mb` 1073 per second from `/dev/sda`: 1074 1075 $ docker run -it --device-read-bps /dev/sda:1mb ubuntu 1076 1077 The `--device-write-bps` flag limits the write rate (bytes per second)to a device. 1078 For example, this command creates a container and limits the write rate to `1mb` 1079 per second for `/dev/sda`: 1080 1081 $ docker run -it --device-write-bps /dev/sda:1mb ubuntu 1082 1083 Both flags take limits in the `<device-path>:<limit>[unit]` format. Both read 1084 and write rates must be a positive integer. You can specify the rate in `kb` 1085 (kilobytes), `mb` (megabytes), or `gb` (gigabytes). 1086 1087 The `--device-read-iops` flag limits read rate (IO per second) from a device. 1088 For example, this command creates a container and limits the read rate to 1089 `1000` IO per second from `/dev/sda`: 1090 1091 $ docker run -ti --device-read-iops /dev/sda:1000 ubuntu 1092 1093 The `--device-write-iops` flag limits write rate (IO per second) to a device. 1094 For example, this command creates a container and limits the write rate to 1095 `1000` IO per second to `/dev/sda`: 1096 1097 $ docker run -ti --device-write-iops /dev/sda:1000 ubuntu 1098 1099 Both flags take limits in the `<device-path>:<limit>` format. Both read and 1100 write rates must be a positive integer. 1101 1102 ## Additional groups 1103 --group-add: Add additional groups to run as 1104 1105 By default, the docker container process runs with the supplementary groups looked 1106 up for the specified user. If one wants to add more to that list of groups, then 1107 one can use this flag: 1108 1109 $ docker run --rm --group-add audio --group-add nogroup --group-add 777 busybox id 1110 uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=10(wheel),29(audio),99(nogroup),777 1111 1112 ## Runtime privilege and Linux capabilities 1113 1114 --cap-add: Add Linux capabilities 1115 --cap-drop: Drop Linux capabilities 1116 --privileged=false: Give extended privileges to this container 1117 --device=[]: Allows you to run devices inside the container without the --privileged flag. 1118 1119 By default, Docker containers are "unprivileged" and cannot, for 1120 example, run a Docker daemon inside a Docker container. This is because 1121 by default a container is not allowed to access any devices, but a 1122 "privileged" container is given access to all devices (see 1123 the documentation on [cgroups devices](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/cgroup-v1/devices.txt)). 1124 1125 When the operator executes `docker run --privileged`, Docker will enable 1126 access to all devices on the host as well as set some configuration 1127 in AppArmor or SELinux to allow the container nearly all the same access to the 1128 host as processes running outside containers on the host. Additional 1129 information about running with `--privileged` is available on the 1130 [Docker Blog](http://blog.docker.com/2013/09/docker-can-now-run-within-docker/). 1131 1132 If you want to limit access to a specific device or devices you can use 1133 the `--device` flag. It allows you to specify one or more devices that 1134 will be accessible within the container. 1135 1136 $ docker run --device=/dev/snd:/dev/snd ... 1137 1138 By default, the container will be able to `read`, `write`, and `mknod` these devices. 1139 This can be overridden using a third `:rwm` set of options to each `--device` flag: 1140 1141 $ docker run --device=/dev/sda:/dev/xvdc --rm -it ubuntu fdisk /dev/xvdc 1142 1143 Command (m for help): q 1144 $ docker run --device=/dev/sda:/dev/xvdc:r --rm -it ubuntu fdisk /dev/xvdc 1145 You will not be able to write the partition table. 1146 1147 Command (m for help): q 1148 1149 $ docker run --device=/dev/sda:/dev/xvdc:w --rm -it ubuntu fdisk /dev/xvdc 1150 crash.... 1151 1152 $ docker run --device=/dev/sda:/dev/xvdc:m --rm -it ubuntu fdisk /dev/xvdc 1153 fdisk: unable to open /dev/xvdc: Operation not permitted 1154 1155 In addition to `--privileged`, the operator can have fine grain control over the 1156 capabilities using `--cap-add` and `--cap-drop`. By default, Docker has a default 1157 list of capabilities that are kept. The following table lists the Linux capability 1158 options which are allowed by default and can be dropped. 1159 1160 | Capability Key | Capability Description | 1161 | ---------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 1162 | SETPCAP | Modify process capabilities. | 1163 | MKNOD | Create special files using mknod(2). | 1164 | AUDIT_WRITE | Write records to kernel auditing log. | 1165 | CHOWN | Make arbitrary changes to file UIDs and GIDs (see chown(2)). | 1166 | NET_RAW | Use RAW and PACKET sockets. | 1167 | DAC_OVERRIDE | Bypass file read, write, and execute permission checks. | 1168 | FOWNER | Bypass permission checks on operations that normally require the file system UID of the process to match the UID of the file. | 1169 | FSETID | Don't clear set-user-ID and set-group-ID permission bits when a file is modified. | 1170 | KILL | Bypass permission checks for sending signals. | 1171 | SETGID | Make arbitrary manipulations of process GIDs and supplementary GID list. | 1172 | SETUID | Make arbitrary manipulations of process UIDs. | 1173 | NET_BIND_SERVICE | Bind a socket to internet domain privileged ports (port numbers less than 1024). | 1174 | SYS_CHROOT | Use chroot(2), change root directory. | 1175 | SETFCAP | Set file capabilities. | 1176 1177 The next table shows the capabilities which are not granted by default and may be added. 1178 1179 | Capability Key | Capability Description | 1180 | ---------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 1181 | SYS_MODULE | Load and unload kernel modules. | 1182 | SYS_RAWIO | Perform I/O port operations (iopl(2) and ioperm(2)). | 1183 | SYS_PACCT | Use acct(2), switch process accounting on or off. | 1184 | SYS_ADMIN | Perform a range of system administration operations. | 1185 | SYS_NICE | Raise process nice value (nice(2), setpriority(2)) and change the nice value for arbitrary processes. | 1186 | SYS_RESOURCE | Override resource Limits. | 1187 | SYS_TIME | Set system clock (settimeofday(2), stime(2), adjtimex(2)); set real-time (hardware) clock. | 1188 | SYS_TTY_CONFIG | Use vhangup(2); employ various privileged ioctl(2) operations on virtual terminals. | 1189 | AUDIT_CONTROL | Enable and disable kernel auditing; change auditing filter rules; retrieve auditing status and filtering rules. | 1190 | MAC_OVERRIDE | Allow MAC configuration or state changes. Implemented for the Smack LSM. | 1191 | MAC_ADMIN | Override Mandatory Access Control (MAC). Implemented for the Smack Linux Security Module (LSM). | 1192 | NET_ADMIN | Perform various network-related operations. | 1193 | SYSLOG | Perform privileged syslog(2) operations. | 1194 | DAC_READ_SEARCH | Bypass file read permission checks and directory read and execute permission checks. | 1195 | LINUX_IMMUTABLE | Set the FS_APPEND_FL and FS_IMMUTABLE_FL i-node flags. | 1196 | NET_BROADCAST | Make socket broadcasts, and listen to multicasts. | 1197 | IPC_LOCK | Lock memory (mlock(2), mlockall(2), mmap(2), shmctl(2)). | 1198 | IPC_OWNER | Bypass permission checks for operations on System V IPC objects. | 1199 | SYS_PTRACE | Trace arbitrary processes using ptrace(2). | 1200 | SYS_BOOT | Use reboot(2) and kexec_load(2), reboot and load a new kernel for later execution. | 1201 | LEASE | Establish leases on arbitrary files (see fcntl(2)). | 1202 | WAKE_ALARM | Trigger something that will wake up the system. | 1203 | BLOCK_SUSPEND | Employ features that can block system suspend. | 1204 1205 Further reference information is available on the [capabilities(7) - Linux man page](http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/capabilities.7.html) 1206 1207 Both flags support the value `ALL`, so if the 1208 operator wants to have all capabilities but `MKNOD` they could use: 1209 1210 $ docker run --cap-add=ALL --cap-drop=MKNOD ... 1211 1212 For interacting with the network stack, instead of using `--privileged` they 1213 should use `--cap-add=NET_ADMIN` to modify the network interfaces. 1214 1215 $ docker run -it --rm ubuntu:14.04 ip link add dummy0 type dummy 1216 RTNETLINK answers: Operation not permitted 1217 $ docker run -it --rm --cap-add=NET_ADMIN ubuntu:14.04 ip link add dummy0 type dummy 1218 1219 To mount a FUSE based filesystem, you need to combine both `--cap-add` and 1220 `--device`: 1221 1222 $ docker run --rm -it --cap-add SYS_ADMIN sshfs sshfs sven@10.10.10.20:/home/sven /mnt 1223 fuse: failed to open /dev/fuse: Operation not permitted 1224 $ docker run --rm -it --device /dev/fuse sshfs sshfs sven@10.10.10.20:/home/sven /mnt 1225 fusermount: mount failed: Operation not permitted 1226 $ docker run --rm -it --cap-add SYS_ADMIN --device /dev/fuse sshfs 1227 # sshfs sven@10.10.10.20:/home/sven /mnt 1228 The authenticity of host '10.10.10.20 (10.10.10.20)' can't be established. 1229 ECDSA key fingerprint is 25:34:85:75:25:b0:17:46:05:19:04:93:b5:dd:5f:c6. 1230 Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes 1231 sven@10.10.10.20's password: 1232 root@30aa0cfaf1b5:/# ls -la /mnt/src/docker 1233 total 1516 1234 drwxrwxr-x 1 1000 1000 4096 Dec 4 06:08 . 1235 drwxrwxr-x 1 1000 1000 4096 Dec 4 11:46 .. 1236 -rw-rw-r-- 1 1000 1000 16 Oct 8 00:09 .dockerignore 1237 -rwxrwxr-x 1 1000 1000 464 Oct 8 00:09 .drone.yml 1238 drwxrwxr-x 1 1000 1000 4096 Dec 4 06:11 .git 1239 -rw-rw-r-- 1 1000 1000 461 Dec 4 06:08 .gitignore 1240 .... 1241 1242 The default seccomp profile will adjust to the selected capabilities, in order to allow 1243 use of facilities allowed by the capabilities, so you should not have to adjust this, 1244 since Docker 1.12. In Docker 1.10 and 1.11 this did not happen and it may be necessary 1245 to use a custom seccomp profile or use `--security-opt seccomp=unconfined` when adding 1246 capabilities. 1247 1248 ## Logging drivers (--log-driver) 1249 1250 The container can have a different logging driver than the Docker daemon. Use 1251 the `--log-driver=VALUE` with the `docker run` command to configure the 1252 container's logging driver. The following options are supported: 1253 1254 | Driver | Description | 1255 | ----------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 1256 | `none` | Disables any logging for the container. `docker logs` won't be available with this driver. | 1257 | `json-file` | Default logging driver for Docker. Writes JSON messages to file. No logging options are supported for this driver. | 1258 | `syslog` | Syslog logging driver for Docker. Writes log messages to syslog. | 1259 | `journald` | Journald logging driver for Docker. Writes log messages to `journald`. | 1260 | `gelf` | Graylog Extended Log Format (GELF) logging driver for Docker. Writes log messages to a GELF endpoint likeGraylog or Logstash. | 1261 | `fluentd` | Fluentd logging driver for Docker. Writes log messages to `fluentd` (forward input). | 1262 | `awslogs` | Amazon CloudWatch Logs logging driver for Docker. Writes log messages to Amazon CloudWatch Logs | 1263 | `splunk` | Splunk logging driver for Docker. Writes log messages to `splunk` using Event Http Collector. | 1264 1265 The `docker logs` command is available only for the `json-file` and `journald` 1266 logging drivers. For detailed information on working with logging drivers, see 1267 [Configure a logging driver](https://docs.docker.com/engine/admin/logging/overview/). 1268 1269 1270 ## Overriding Dockerfile image defaults 1271 1272 When a developer builds an image from a [*Dockerfile*](builder.md) 1273 or when she commits it, the developer can set a number of default parameters 1274 that take effect when the image starts up as a container. 1275 1276 Four of the Dockerfile commands cannot be overridden at runtime: `FROM`, 1277 `MAINTAINER`, `RUN`, and `ADD`. Everything else has a corresponding override 1278 in `docker run`. We'll go through what the developer might have set in each 1279 Dockerfile instruction and how the operator can override that setting. 1280 1281 - [CMD (Default Command or Options)](#cmd-default-command-or-options) 1282 - [ENTRYPOINT (Default Command to Execute at Runtime)]( 1283 #entrypoint-default-command-to-execute-at-runtime) 1284 - [EXPOSE (Incoming Ports)](#expose-incoming-ports) 1285 - [ENV (Environment Variables)](#env-environment-variables) 1286 - [HEALTHCHECK](#healthcheck) 1287 - [VOLUME (Shared Filesystems)](#volume-shared-filesystems) 1288 - [USER](#user) 1289 - [WORKDIR](#workdir) 1290 1291 ### CMD (default command or options) 1292 1293 Recall the optional `COMMAND` in the Docker 1294 commandline: 1295 1296 $ docker run [OPTIONS] IMAGE[:TAG|@DIGEST] [COMMAND] [ARG...] 1297 1298 This command is optional because the person who created the `IMAGE` may 1299 have already provided a default `COMMAND` using the Dockerfile `CMD` 1300 instruction. As the operator (the person running a container from the 1301 image), you can override that `CMD` instruction just by specifying a new 1302 `COMMAND`. 1303 1304 If the image also specifies an `ENTRYPOINT` then the `CMD` or `COMMAND` 1305 get appended as arguments to the `ENTRYPOINT`. 1306 1307 ### ENTRYPOINT (default command to execute at runtime) 1308 1309 --entrypoint="": Overwrite the default entrypoint set by the image 1310 1311 The `ENTRYPOINT` of an image is similar to a `COMMAND` because it 1312 specifies what executable to run when the container starts, but it is 1313 (purposely) more difficult to override. The `ENTRYPOINT` gives a 1314 container its default nature or behavior, so that when you set an 1315 `ENTRYPOINT` you can run the container *as if it were that binary*, 1316 complete with default options, and you can pass in more options via the 1317 `COMMAND`. But, sometimes an operator may want to run something else 1318 inside the container, so you can override the default `ENTRYPOINT` at 1319 runtime by using a string to specify the new `ENTRYPOINT`. Here is an 1320 example of how to run a shell in a container that has been set up to 1321 automatically run something else (like `/usr/bin/redis-server`): 1322 1323 $ docker run -it --entrypoint /bin/bash example/redis 1324 1325 or two examples of how to pass more parameters to that ENTRYPOINT: 1326 1327 $ docker run -it --entrypoint /bin/bash example/redis -c ls -l 1328 $ docker run -it --entrypoint /usr/bin/redis-cli example/redis --help 1329 1330 You can reset a containers entrypoint by passing an empty string, for example: 1331 1332 $ docker run -it --entrypoint="" mysql bash 1333 1334 > **Note**: Passing `--entrypoint` will clear out any default command set on the 1335 > image (i.e. any `CMD` instruction in the Dockerfile used to build it). 1336 1337 ### EXPOSE (incoming ports) 1338 1339 The following `run` command options work with container networking: 1340 1341 --expose=[]: Expose a port or a range of ports inside the container. 1342 These are additional to those exposed by the `EXPOSE` instruction 1343 -P : Publish all exposed ports to the host interfaces 1344 -p=[] : Publish a container᾿s port or a range of ports to the host 1345 format: ip:hostPort:containerPort | ip::containerPort | hostPort:containerPort | containerPort 1346 Both hostPort and containerPort can be specified as a 1347 range of ports. When specifying ranges for both, the 1348 number of container ports in the range must match the 1349 number of host ports in the range, for example: 1350 -p 1234-1236:1234-1236/tcp 1351 1352 When specifying a range for hostPort only, the 1353 containerPort must not be a range. In this case the 1354 container port is published somewhere within the 1355 specified hostPort range. (e.g., `-p 1234-1236:1234/tcp`) 1356 1357 (use 'docker port' to see the actual mapping) 1358 1359 --link="" : Add link to another container (<name or id>:alias or <name or id>) 1360 1361 With the exception of the `EXPOSE` directive, an image developer hasn't 1362 got much control over networking. The `EXPOSE` instruction defines the 1363 initial incoming ports that provide services. These ports are available 1364 to processes inside the container. An operator can use the `--expose` 1365 option to add to the exposed ports. 1366 1367 To expose a container's internal port, an operator can start the 1368 container with the `-P` or `-p` flag. The exposed port is accessible on 1369 the host and the ports are available to any client that can reach the 1370 host. 1371 1372 The `-P` option publishes all the ports to the host interfaces. Docker 1373 binds each exposed port to a random port on the host. The range of 1374 ports are within an *ephemeral port range* defined by 1375 `/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range`. Use the `-p` flag to 1376 explicitly map a single port or range of ports. 1377 1378 The port number inside the container (where the service listens) does 1379 not need to match the port number exposed on the outside of the 1380 container (where clients connect). For example, inside the container an 1381 HTTP service is listening on port 80 (and so the image developer 1382 specifies `EXPOSE 80` in the Dockerfile). At runtime, the port might be 1383 bound to 42800 on the host. To find the mapping between the host ports 1384 and the exposed ports, use `docker port`. 1385 1386 If the operator uses `--link` when starting a new client container in the 1387 default bridge network, then the client container can access the exposed 1388 port via a private networking interface. 1389 If `--link` is used when starting a container in a user-defined network as 1390 described in [*Docker network overview*](https://docs.docker.com/engine/userguide/networking/), 1391 it will provide a named alias for the container being linked to. 1392 1393 ### ENV (environment variables) 1394 1395 When a new container is created, Docker will set the following environment 1396 variables automatically: 1397 1398 | Variable | Value | 1399 | -------- | ----- | 1400 | `HOME` | Set based on the value of `USER` | 1401 | `HOSTNAME` | The hostname associated with the container | 1402 | `PATH` | Includes popular directories, such as `:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin` | 1403 | `TERM` | `xterm` if the container is allocated a pseudo-TTY | 1404 1405 Additionally, the operator can **set any environment variable** in the 1406 container by using one or more `-e` flags, even overriding those mentioned 1407 above, or already defined by the developer with a Dockerfile `ENV`: 1408 1409 $ docker run -e "deep=purple" --rm ubuntu /bin/bash -c export 1410 declare -x HOME="/" 1411 declare -x HOSTNAME="85bc26a0e200" 1412 declare -x OLDPWD 1413 declare -x PATH="/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin" 1414 declare -x PWD="/" 1415 declare -x SHLVL="1" 1416 declare -x deep="purple" 1417 1418 Similarly the operator can set the **hostname** with `-h`. 1419 1420 ### HEALTHCHECK 1421 1422 ``` 1423 --health-cmd Command to run to check health 1424 --health-interval Time between running the check 1425 --health-retries Consecutive failures needed to report unhealthy 1426 --health-timeout Maximum time to allow one check to run 1427 --no-healthcheck Disable any container-specified HEALTHCHECK 1428 ``` 1429 1430 Example: 1431 1432 {% raw %} 1433 $ docker run --name=test -d \ 1434 --health-cmd='stat /etc/passwd || exit 1' \ 1435 --health-interval=2s \ 1436 busybox sleep 1d 1437 $ sleep 2; docker inspect --format='{{.State.Health.Status}}' test 1438 healthy 1439 $ docker exec test rm /etc/passwd 1440 $ sleep 2; docker inspect --format='{{json .State.Health}}' test 1441 { 1442 "Status": "unhealthy", 1443 "FailingStreak": 3, 1444 "Log": [ 1445 { 1446 "Start": "2016-05-25T17:22:04.635478668Z", 1447 "End": "2016-05-25T17:22:04.7272552Z", 1448 "ExitCode": 0, 1449 "Output": " File: /etc/passwd\n Size: 334 \tBlocks: 8 IO Block: 4096 regular file\nDevice: 32h/50d\tInode: 12 Links: 1\nAccess: (0664/-rw-rw-r--) Uid: ( 0/ root) Gid: ( 0/ root)\nAccess: 2015-12-05 22:05:32.000000000\nModify: 2015..." 1450 }, 1451 { 1452 "Start": "2016-05-25T17:22:06.732900633Z", 1453 "End": "2016-05-25T17:22:06.822168935Z", 1454 "ExitCode": 0, 1455 "Output": " File: /etc/passwd\n Size: 334 \tBlocks: 8 IO Block: 4096 regular file\nDevice: 32h/50d\tInode: 12 Links: 1\nAccess: (0664/-rw-rw-r--) Uid: ( 0/ root) Gid: ( 0/ root)\nAccess: 2015-12-05 22:05:32.000000000\nModify: 2015..." 1456 }, 1457 { 1458 "Start": "2016-05-25T17:22:08.823956535Z", 1459 "End": "2016-05-25T17:22:08.897359124Z", 1460 "ExitCode": 1, 1461 "Output": "stat: can't stat '/etc/passwd': No such file or directory\n" 1462 }, 1463 { 1464 "Start": "2016-05-25T17:22:10.898802931Z", 1465 "End": "2016-05-25T17:22:10.969631866Z", 1466 "ExitCode": 1, 1467 "Output": "stat: can't stat '/etc/passwd': No such file or directory\n" 1468 }, 1469 { 1470 "Start": "2016-05-25T17:22:12.971033523Z", 1471 "End": "2016-05-25T17:22:13.082015516Z", 1472 "ExitCode": 1, 1473 "Output": "stat: can't stat '/etc/passwd': No such file or directory\n" 1474 } 1475 ] 1476 } 1477 {% endraw %} 1478 1479 The health status is also displayed in the `docker ps` output. 1480 1481 ### TMPFS (mount tmpfs filesystems) 1482 1483 ```bash 1484 --tmpfs=[]: Create a tmpfs mount with: container-dir[:<options>], 1485 where the options are identical to the Linux 1486 'mount -t tmpfs -o' command. 1487 ``` 1488 1489 The example below mounts an empty tmpfs into the container with the `rw`, 1490 `noexec`, `nosuid`, and `size=65536k` options. 1491 1492 $ docker run -d --tmpfs /run:rw,noexec,nosuid,size=65536k my_image 1493 1494 ### VOLUME (shared filesystems) 1495 1496 -v, --volume=[host-src:]container-dest[:<options>]: Bind mount a volume. 1497 The comma-delimited `options` are [rw|ro], [z|Z], 1498 [[r]shared|[r]slave|[r]private], and [nocopy]. 1499 The 'host-src' is an absolute path or a name value. 1500 1501 If neither 'rw' or 'ro' is specified then the volume is mounted in 1502 read-write mode. 1503 1504 The `nocopy` modes is used to disable automatic copying requested volume 1505 path in the container to the volume storage location. 1506 For named volumes, `copy` is the default mode. Copy modes are not supported 1507 for bind-mounted volumes. 1508 1509 --volumes-from="": Mount all volumes from the given container(s) 1510 1511 > **Note**: 1512 > When using systemd to manage the Docker daemon's start and stop, in the systemd 1513 > unit file there is an option to control mount propagation for the Docker daemon 1514 > itself, called `MountFlags`. The value of this setting may cause Docker to not 1515 > see mount propagation changes made on the mount point. For example, if this value 1516 > is `slave`, you may not be able to use the `shared` or `rshared` propagation on 1517 > a volume. 1518 1519 The volumes commands are complex enough to have their own documentation 1520 in section [*Manage data in 1521 containers*](https://docs.docker.com/engine/tutorials/dockervolumes/). A developer can define 1522 one or more `VOLUME`'s associated with an image, but only the operator 1523 can give access from one container to another (or from a container to a 1524 volume mounted on the host). 1525 1526 The `container-dest` must always be an absolute path such as `/src/docs`. 1527 The `host-src` can either be an absolute path or a `name` value. If you 1528 supply an absolute path for the `host-dir`, Docker bind-mounts to the path 1529 you specify. If you supply a `name`, Docker creates a named volume by that `name`. 1530 1531 A `name` value must start with an alphanumeric character, 1532 followed by `a-z0-9`, `_` (underscore), `.` (period) or `-` (hyphen). 1533 An absolute path starts with a `/` (forward slash). 1534 1535 For example, you can specify either `/foo` or `foo` for a `host-src` value. 1536 If you supply the `/foo` value, Docker creates a bind-mount. If you supply 1537 the `foo` specification, Docker creates a named volume. 1538 1539 ### USER 1540 1541 `root` (id = 0) is the default user within a container. The image developer can 1542 create additional users. Those users are accessible by name. When passing a numeric 1543 ID, the user does not have to exist in the container. 1544 1545 The developer can set a default user to run the first process with the 1546 Dockerfile `USER` instruction. When starting a container, the operator can override 1547 the `USER` instruction by passing the `-u` option. 1548 1549 -u="", --user="": Sets the username or UID used and optionally the groupname or GID for the specified command. 1550 1551 The followings examples are all valid: 1552 --user=[ user | user:group | uid | uid:gid | user:gid | uid:group ] 1553 1554 > **Note:** if you pass a numeric uid, it must be in the range of 0-2147483647. 1555 1556 ### WORKDIR 1557 1558 The default working directory for running binaries within a container is the 1559 root directory (`/`), but the developer can set a different default with the 1560 Dockerfile `WORKDIR` command. The operator can override this with: 1561 1562 -w="": Working directory inside the container