I'm running on a windows host different server core VMs (hyper-v) and in each one docker service. The containers I try to run, using docker run nanoserver/iis-php command, are created but immediately disappear, exited with exit code 0, no error messages. Since it happens in different VMs, I believe it is something in the VMs host. Any idea?
according to https://hub.docker.com/r/nanoserver/iis-php
use docker run --name nanoiis -d -it -p 80:80 nanoserver/iis-php
so that the container is started in daemon mode, interactive mode and with tty
I do not know iis-php, but from the dockerfile of the image below, the last command is just to make webrequet, do not see any server process started.
https://github.com/nanoserver/IIS-PHP/blob/master/Dockerfile/Dockerfile
the containers [...] are created but immediately disappear, exited with exit code 0, no error messages.
So as I understand they don't disappear but simply exit immediately with an exit code of 0 which you still can see with docker ps -a?
The exit code 0 indicates "success". So it looks like the containers were created and started successfully and the processes started in them executed "successfully". But what this means depends an the actual command started in the containers.
But neither the Dockerfile of the nanoserver/iis-php image nor the Dockerfile of its base image nanoserver/iis specify a CMD. Also no command is specified in your docker run command.
docker logs gives me nothing just: Microsoft Windows [Version 10.0.14393] (c) 2016 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. C:\>
This looks like an interactive command prompt expecting user input. So what most probably is happening here is that the containers start a simple interactive shell since no other command to execute is explicitly specified. But since no stdin is attached to the container it can not read any input and will exit again.
You can test that the containers / your docker setup is working correctly with
docker run -ti nanoserver/iis-php
This should drop you into the interactive shell inside the container. You could then interactively execute commands in the container.
In order to have it run in the background you have to pass and command to execute to docker run
# this is just an example! The exact command you need
# depends on what you actually want to run inside the container
docker run -d nanoserver/iis-php php index.php
Related
In my CentOS server I use docker created a container,
I opened two sessions connected to the container by command:
docker attach container-name
but there is an issue, in each window I execute command the other window is display the same information.
so I cannot control the container when it is installing package.
is it possible to avoid this issue?
The docker attach command attaches to the currently running process as defined by CMD. You can attach as many times as you want, but they all connect to the same process.
If you want to access the container and have different sessions to it, use:
docker exec -it container-name bash
Or whatever shell is available. bash is common, but you may need to use sh or find out what's used, if any is there at all. Some containers are super stripped down.
The -it flag enables "interactive" mode, as otherwise it just runs that command and shows you the output.
Running docker run with a -d option is described as running the container in the background. This is what most tutorials do when they don't want to interact with the container. On another tutorial I saw the use of bash style & to send the process to the background instead of adding the -d option.
Running docker run -d hello_world only outputs the container ID. On the other hand docker run hello_world & still gives me the same output as if i had run docker run hello_world.
If I do the both experiments with docker run nginx I get the same behavior on both (at least as far as I can see), and both show up if I run docker ps.
Is the process the same in both cases(apart from the printing of the ID and output not being redirected with &)? If not, what is going on behind the scenes in each?
docker is designed as C-S architecture: docker client, docker daemon(In fact still could fined to container-d, shim, runc etc).
When you execute docker run, it will just use docker client to send things to docker daemon, and let daemon call runc etc to start a container.
So:
docker run -d: It will let runc run container in background, you can use docker logs $container_name to see all logs later, the background happend on server side.
docker run &: It will make the linux command run at background, which means the docker run will be in background, this background run on client side. So you still can see stdout etc in terminal. More, if you leave the terminal(even you bash was set as nohup), you will not see it in terminal, you still need docker logs to see them.
I'm fairly new to Docker. I have a long Dockerfile that I inherited from a previous developer, which has many errors and I'm trying to get it back to a working point. I commented out most of the file except for just the first line:
FROM ubuntu:14.04
I did the following:
docker build -t pm . to build the image - this works because I can see the image when I execute docker images
docker run <image-id> returns without error or any message. Now I'm expecting the container to be created from the image and started. But when I do a docker ps -a it shows the container exited:
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
b05f9727f516 f216cfb59484 "/bin/bash" About a
minute ago Exited (0) About a minute ago
lucid_shirley
Not sure why can't I get a running container and why does it keep stopping after the docker run command.
executing docker logs <container_id> displays nothing - it just returns without any output.
Your Docker image doesn’t actually do anything, container stop when finish its job. Since here no foreground process running it will start and then immediately stop.
To confirm your container have no issues, try to put below code into a docker-compose.yml(in same folder as the Dockerfile) and run docker-compose up, now you will see your container is running without exiting.
version: '3'
services:
my-service:
build: .
tty: true
Please have a look here Docker official tutorial it will guide you to how to work with docker.
try
docker run -it <image> /bin/bash
to run a shell inside the container.
That won't do much for you, but that'll show you what is happening: as soon as you exit the shell, it will exit the container too.
Your container basically doesn't do anything: it has an image of Ubuntu but doesn't have an ENTRYPOINT or a CMD command to run 'something'
Containers are ephemeral when ran: they run a single command and exit when the command finishes.
Docker container categorized following way.
Task Based : When container start it will start processing and it complete the process then exited.
Background container : It will wait for some request.
As you not provided your docker file so I assume that you have only one statement.
FROM ubuntu:14.04
your build statement create image with name pm.
Now you run
docker run pm
It will start container and stop as you did not provide any entry point.
Now try this
This is one command prompt or terminal.
docker run -it pm /bin/bash
Open another terminal or command prompt.
docker ps ( Now you will see there is one container).
If you want to see container that is continuously running then use following image.
(This is just a example)
docker run -d -p 8099:80 nginx
Above line run one container with Nginx image and when you open your browser http://localhost:8099 you can see the response.
Docker Containers are closely related to the process they are running. This process is specified by the "CMD" part on the Dockerfile. This process has the PID "1". If you kill it, your container is killed. If you haven't one, your container will stop instantly. In your case, you have to "override" your CMD. You can do it with a simple : "docker run -it ubuntu:18.04 bash". "-it" is mandatory since it allows the stdin to be attached to your container.
Have fun with docker.
Each instruction of Dockerfile is a layer within a container which perform some task. In your docker file It's just the loading the ubuntu which is completed when you run the docker within a fraction of seconds and exit since process finished. So if want to have your container running all the time then there should be a foreground process running in your docker.
For testing if you run
docker run <imageid> echo hi it will return the output means your container is fine.
Related to
docker container started in Detached mode stopped after process execution
https://serverfault.com/questions/661909/the-right-way-to-keep-docker-container-started-when-it-used-for-periodic-tasks
I do understand the difference between docker run and create + start, but don't understand how the actual containers created in these two ways differ.
Say I create and run a container with
docker run -dit debian:testing-slim
and then stop it. The created container can later be started with
docker start silly_docker_name
and it'll run in the background, because the entry command for the image is bash.
But when a container is first created
docker create --name silly_name debian:testing-slim
and then started with
docker start silly_name
then it'll exit immediately. Why isn't bash started, or how come it exits in this case?
The difference for a container process that is a shell (like bash in your debian example) is that a shell started without a terminal+interactive "mode" exits without doing anything.
You can test this by changing the command of a create'd container to something that doesn't require a terminal:
$ docker create --name thedate debian date
Now if I run thedate container, each time I run it it outputs the date (in the logs) and exits. docker logs thedate will show this; one entry for each run.
To be explicit, your docker run command has flags -dit: detached, interactive (connect STDIN), and tty are all enabled.
If you want a similar approach with create & start, then you need to allocate a tty for the created container:
$ docker create -it --name ashell debian
Now if I start it, I ask to attach/interactively to it and I get the same behavior as run:
$ docker start -ai ashell
root#6e44e2ae8817:/#
NOTE: [25 Jan 2018] Edited to add the -i flag on create as a commenter noted that as originally written this did not work, as the container metadata did not have stdin connected at the create stage
What is detached mode in the docker world? I read this article
Link, but it does not explain exactly what detached mode mean.
You can start a docker container in detached mode with a -d option. So the container starts up and run in background. That means, you start up the container and could use the console after startup for other commands.
The opposite of detached mode is foreground mode. That is the default mode, when -d option is not used. In this mode, the console you are using to execute docker run will be attached to standard input, output and error. That means your console is attached to the container's process.
In detached mode, you can follow the standard output of your docker container with docker logs -f <container_ID>.
Just try both options. I always use the detached mode to run my containers. I hope I could explain it a little bit clearer.
The detach option on the docker command line indicates that the docker client (docker) will make a request to the server (dockerd), and then the client will exit while that request continues on the server. Part of the confusion may be that docker looks like a single process, where in reality it is a client/server application where the client is just a thin frontend on a REST API to send every command to the server.
With a docker container run --detach, this means the container will be created, the server will respond with a container id if successful, and the container will continue to run on the server while you are free to run other commands. This is often used for a server (e.g. nginx) you want to start in the background while you continue to run other commands. Note that you can still configure a container with the --interactive and -tty options (often abbreviated -it) and later run a docker container attach to connect to an already running container. (Note, until you attach to the container running with -itd, any attempt by the container to read from stdin would hang, instead of seeing an end of input that often triggers an immediate exit if you just passed -d.)
If you run without the detach option, the client will immediately run an attach API call after the container is created so you can see the output and optionally provide input to the running process on the container. This is useful if your container is running something interactive (e.g. /bin/bash).
Several other commands allow the detach option, including docker-compose up -d which will start an entire project and leave it running on the server in the background. There's also many of the docker service commands which will either detach after submitting the change to the server to create or update a service's target state, or if you do not detach, the client will wait until the service's current state matches the target state and you can see the progress of the deployment. Note with docker service commands, you may have to pass --detach=false to remain attached, the behavior has changed over the past year depending on your version.
What is detached mode in the docker world?
Detached means that the container will run in the background, without being attached to any input or output stream.
docker provide --detach (or -d in short) option and started the program in the background.
This means that the program started but isn’t attached to your terminal.
Example docker run --detach --name web nginx:latest # Note the detach flag.
Why do we need --detach mode?
Server software is generally run in detached containers because it is rare that the software depends on an attached terminal.
Running detached containers is a perfect fit for programs that sit quietly in the background.
Note
Generally, This type of program is called a daemon, or a service. A daemon generally interacts with other programs (or humans over a network) or some other communication channel. When you launch a daemon or other program in a container that you want to run in the background, remember to use either the --detach flag or its short form, -d.
To understand what does mean that -d in docker world, let me explain more clearly with the simulation within it. Docker detached mode means that you can tell the docker that do process(container) until if I am going to write the command docker stop container-id or container-name otherwise I mean without detached mode docker run the process(container) either you press ctrl+c or close a terminal, in other words you have not any choice when docker run the process(container) if you run the process(container) without -d. But you have any choice that docker return id of the container when you type the command with -d because of running process(container) in the background.
docker run -d -t ubuntu:14.04
docker run - Create an instance from docker image as docker container.
(if image not available locally it pulls from docker hub)
ubuntu - Image name
14.04 - Tag
-d, --detach - Detach mode
-t, --tty - Allocate a pseudo-TTY