Docker mount namespace - docker

When i mount $docker run -v /tmp:/tmp -ti ubuntu /bin/bash for the running container that uses the filesystem of the host . When i close the above container from exit command and i link the above container id with the new $docker run --volumes-from="closed container id" -ti ubuntu /bin/bash this as well uses
/tmp files in the newly running container.how is this possible that even after closed the container it is still could be referred in other container.please explain me in a better way what is happening in docker.

how is this possible that even after closed the container it is still could be referred in other container.please explain me in a better way what is happening in docker.
This is an expected behavior, because the you have mapped volume -v /tmp:/tmp on the first instance, which means you have mapped /tmp on your host OS to /tmp inside the container. Now any changes you make within the container remains on the host OS which is accessible by the second or third instance unless the <container id> is removed.
The container exists unless its removed with docker rm <container id>. You can get the <container id> from docker ps -a, which returns the list of all the containers which are running and have been exited AND not been removed.

Check Container Solution's Understanding Volumes in Docker

Related

How to start an existing image as container so it runs in the background [duplicate]

Running the docker registry with below command always throws an error:
dev:tmp me$ docker run \
-d --name registry-v1 \
-e SETTINGS_FLAVOR=local \
-e STORAGE_PATH=/registry \
-e SEARCH_BACKEND=sqlalchemy \
-e LOGLEVEL=DEBUG \
-p 5000:5000 \
registry:0.9.1
Error response from daemon: Conflict. The name "registry-v1" is already in use by container f9e5798a82e0. You have to delete (or rename) that container to be able to reuse that name.
How can I prevent this error ?
I got confused by this also. There are two commands relevant here:
docker run # Run a command in a **new** container
docker start # Start one or more stopped containers
That means you have already started a container in the past with the parameter
docker run --name registry-v1 ...
You need to delete that first before you can re-create a container with the same name with
docker rm registry-v1
When that container is sill running you need to stop it first before you can delete it with
docker stop registry-v1
Or simply choose a different name for the new container.
To get a list of existing containers and their names simply invoke
docker ps -a
Here what i did, it works fine.
step 1:(it lists docker container with its name)
docker ps -a
step 2:
docker rm name_of_the_docker_container
When you are building a new image you often want to run a new container each time and with the same name. I found the easiest way was to start the container with the --rm option:
--rm Automatically remove the container when it exits
e.g.
docker run --name my-micro-service --rm <image>
Sadly it's used almost randomly in the examples from the docs
Edit: Read Lepe's comment below.
Just to explain what others are saying (it took me some time to understand) is that, simply put, when you see this error, it means you already have a container and what you have to do is run it. While intuitively docker run is supposed to run it, it doesn't. The command docker run is used to only START a container for the very first time. To run an existing container what you need is docker start $container-name. So much for asking developers to create meaningful/intuitive commands.
You have 2 options to fix this...
Remove previous container using that name, with the command docker rm $(docker ps -aq --filter name=myContainerName)
OR
Rename current container to a different name i.e change this portion --name registry-v1 to something like --name myAnotherContainerName
You are getting this error because that container name ( i.e registry-v1) was used by another container in the past...even though that container may have exited i.e (currently not in use).
Cause
A container with the same name is still existing.
Solution
To reuse the same container name, delete the existing container by:
docker rm <container name>
Explanation
Containers can exist in following states, during which the container name can't be used for another container:
created
restarting
running
paused
exited
dead
You can see containers in running state by using :
docker ps
To show containers in all states and find out if a container name is taken, use:
docker ps -a
Here is how I solved this on ubuntu 18:
$ sudo docker ps -a
copy the container ID
For each container do:
$ sudo docker stop container_ID
$ sudo docker rm container_ID
removing all the exited containers
docker rm $(docker ps -a -f status=exited -q)
The Problem: you trying to create new container while in background container with same name is running and this situation causes conflicts.
The error would be like:
Cannot create continer for service X :Conflict. The name X is already in use by container abc123xyz. You have to remove ot delete (or rename) that container to be able to reuse that name.
Solution rename the service name in docker-compose.yml or delete the running container and rebuild it again (this solution related to Unix/Linux/macOS systems):
get all running containers sudo docker ps -a
get the specific container id
stop and remove the duplicated container / force remove it
sudo docker stop <container_id>
sudo docker rm <container_id>
or
sudo docker rm --force <container_id>
You can remove it with command sudo docker rm YOUR_CONTAINER_ID, then run a new container with sudo docker run ...;
or restart an existing container with sudo docker start YOUR_CONTAINER_ID
I was running into this issue that when I run docker rm (which usually works) I would get:
Error: No such image
The easiest solution to this is removing all stopped containers by running:
docker container prune
I have solved the issue by doing following steps and I hope it helps.
Type docker ps -a to list all the containers in your system.
Check the NAMES part where you have initialized your docker container.
Then type docker rm --force name_of_container
Install the docker container as you wish.
I had problem using NIFI and I have removed and reinstalled using docker. Good luck.
TL:DR;
List all containers:
docker ps -a
Remove the concerned container by id:
docker container rm <container_id>
I'm just learning docker and this got me as well. I stopped the container with that name already and therefore I thought I could run a new container with that name.
Not the case. Just because the container is stopped, doesn't mean it can't be started again, and it keeps all the same parameters that it was created with (including the name).
when I ran docker ps -a that's when I saw all the dummy test containers I created while I was playing around.
No problem, since I don't want those any more I just did docker rm containername at which point my new container was allowed to run with the old name.
Ah, and now that I finish writing this answer, I see Slawosz's comment on Walt Howard's answer above suggesting the use of docker ps -a
The OP's problem is the error. Deleting state isn't the only solution - or even a good one. The problem is docker run isn't re-entrant, and docker start is impotent w/o run. So we have to combine them.
For example to run Postgres w/o destroying previous state, try this:
docker start postgres || docker run -d -p 5432:5432 --name postgres -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=password postgres:13-alpine
Ok, so I didn't understand either, then I left my pc, went to do other things, and upon my return, it clicked :D
You download a docker image file. docker pull *image-name* will just pull the image from docker hub without running it.
Now, you use docker run, and give it a name (e.g. newWebServer).
docker run -d -p 8080:8080 -v volume --name newWebServer image-name/version
You perhaps only need docker run --name *name* *image*, but the other stuff will become useful quickly.
-d (detached) - means the container will exit when the root process used to run the container exits.
-p (port) - specify the container port and the host port. Kind of the internal and external port. The internal one being the port the container uses, and the external one is the port you use outside of it and probably the one you need to put in your web browser if that's how you access your app.
--name (what you want to call this instance of the container) - you could have several instances of the same container all with different names, which is useful when you're trying to test something.
image-name/version is the actual image you want to create the container from. You can see a list of all the images on your system with docker images -a. You may have more than one version, so make sure you choose the correct one/tag.
-v (volume) - perhaps not needed initially, but soon you'll want to persist data after your container exits.
OK. So now, docker run just created a container from your image. If it isn't running, you can now start it with it's name:
docker start newWebServer
You can check all your containers (they may or may not be running) with
docker ps -a
You can stop and start them (or pause them) with their name or the container id (or just the first few characters of it) from the CONTAINER ID column e.g:
docker stop newWebServer
docker start c3028a89462c
And list all your images, with
docker images -a
In a nutshell, download an image; docker run creates a container from it; start it with docker start (name or container id); stop it with docker stop (name or container id).
I had this issue because I had two or more containers with the same container_name in the docker-compose.yml file.
Simple Solution: Goto your docker folder in the system and delete .raw file or docker archive with large size.
For me, the issue was that I used an image name more than once in the dockerfile.
This happened to me on the docker tutorial! The port I tried to use was taken, but docker still created.. an image? A process to run docker? I'll find out soon. Anyways, to choose a different port, I had to remove the older image, and then docker run again.
Sometimes a tutorial can be too terse. What you want is concise, not terse, or even succinct.

How can I see detached docker containers?

I started using docker only recently. It is my understanding that in order to mount the local folder into a docker volume inside the container C1 on the image image_name can be done by running the following code:
var=$(pwd)
docker run -d --name=C1 -v $var:/host image_name
However, because I am detaching the container, I am not able to see it among the containers created doing docker ps or docker container ls.
However, if I run docker volume list and then docker volume rm VOLUMEID I get the error volume is in use - [CONTAINER_C1_ID].
Any idea how can I see where C1 is?
Where am I doing wrong?

how to share folder between host os and docker container

I have created a volume of a docker image. The docker image is:
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
gcr.io/tensorflow/tensorflow latest-gpu 7f09e75cdc12 4 months ago 1.289 GB
And the container volume is:
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS
e99c80d2d53e gcr.io/tensorflow/tensorflow:latest-gpu "/run_jupyter.sh" 21 hours ago Up 11 minutes 6006/tcp, 0.0.0.0:8888->8888/tcp deep
I need to share a folder between the host Ubuntu 16.04 OS and the docker container.
I ran this command for doing this:
docker run -v /home/cortana/deep-learning/:/home gcr.io/tensorflow/tensorflow:latest-gpu
This didnt lead to the folder being loaded into the container deep. I dont know what to do after this and am really new to the container stuff in docker. Please explain your answer a bit too.
EDIT:
I deleted the container and then ran these commands:
docker run -v /home/cortana/deep-learning/:/home gcr.io/tensorflow/tensorflow:latest-gpu
nvidia-docker run -p 8888:8888 --name deep gcr.io/tensorflow/tensorflow:latest-gpu
nvidia-docker exec -it deep bash
There is no folder called deep-learning in the /home/ folder in the container. What have I done wrong here?
There's no API I'm aware of to change the mounted volumes on a running container. You destroy the existing container (docker stop and docker rm) and create a new one with the proper configuration (docker run). If you find yourself trying to maintain a single container, upgrading apps inside the container or with data inside, odds are good that you're trying to recreate a VM rather than isolating a process, which is an anti-pattern.
From your edit, you didn't create the /home/deep-learning folder, you created the /home folder. You also appear to be creating a second container named deep without any volume mounts and exec'ing into that one. To make a container with the /home/deep-learning volume mount and the name deep, run it like:
docker run -v /home/cortana/deep-learning:/home/deep-learning \
-p 8888:8888 --name deep gcr.io/tensorflow/tensorflow:latest-gpu

Docker - Name is already in use by container

Running the docker registry with below command always throws an error:
dev:tmp me$ docker run \
-d --name registry-v1 \
-e SETTINGS_FLAVOR=local \
-e STORAGE_PATH=/registry \
-e SEARCH_BACKEND=sqlalchemy \
-e LOGLEVEL=DEBUG \
-p 5000:5000 \
registry:0.9.1
Error response from daemon: Conflict. The name "registry-v1" is already in use by container f9e5798a82e0. You have to delete (or rename) that container to be able to reuse that name.
How can I prevent this error ?
I got confused by this also. There are two commands relevant here:
docker run # Run a command in a **new** container
docker start # Start one or more stopped containers
That means you have already started a container in the past with the parameter
docker run --name registry-v1 ...
You need to delete that first before you can re-create a container with the same name with
docker rm registry-v1
When that container is sill running you need to stop it first before you can delete it with
docker stop registry-v1
Or simply choose a different name for the new container.
To get a list of existing containers and their names simply invoke
docker ps -a
Here what i did, it works fine.
step 1:(it lists docker container with its name)
docker ps -a
step 2:
docker rm name_of_the_docker_container
When you are building a new image you often want to run a new container each time and with the same name. I found the easiest way was to start the container with the --rm option:
--rm Automatically remove the container when it exits
e.g.
docker run --name my-micro-service --rm <image>
Sadly it's used almost randomly in the examples from the docs
Edit: Read Lepe's comment below.
Just to explain what others are saying (it took me some time to understand) is that, simply put, when you see this error, it means you already have a container and what you have to do is run it. While intuitively docker run is supposed to run it, it doesn't. The command docker run is used to only START a container for the very first time. To run an existing container what you need is docker start $container-name. So much for asking developers to create meaningful/intuitive commands.
You have 2 options to fix this...
Remove previous container using that name, with the command docker rm $(docker ps -aq --filter name=myContainerName)
OR
Rename current container to a different name i.e change this portion --name registry-v1 to something like --name myAnotherContainerName
You are getting this error because that container name ( i.e registry-v1) was used by another container in the past...even though that container may have exited i.e (currently not in use).
Cause
A container with the same name is still existing.
Solution
To reuse the same container name, delete the existing container by:
docker rm <container name>
Explanation
Containers can exist in following states, during which the container name can't be used for another container:
created
restarting
running
paused
exited
dead
You can see containers in running state by using :
docker ps
To show containers in all states and find out if a container name is taken, use:
docker ps -a
Here is how I solved this on ubuntu 18:
$ sudo docker ps -a
copy the container ID
For each container do:
$ sudo docker stop container_ID
$ sudo docker rm container_ID
removing all the exited containers
docker rm $(docker ps -a -f status=exited -q)
The Problem: you trying to create new container while in background container with same name is running and this situation causes conflicts.
The error would be like:
Cannot create continer for service X :Conflict. The name X is already in use by container abc123xyz. You have to remove ot delete (or rename) that container to be able to reuse that name.
Solution rename the service name in docker-compose.yml or delete the running container and rebuild it again (this solution related to Unix/Linux/macOS systems):
get all running containers sudo docker ps -a
get the specific container id
stop and remove the duplicated container / force remove it
sudo docker stop <container_id>
sudo docker rm <container_id>
or
sudo docker rm --force <container_id>
You can remove it with command sudo docker rm YOUR_CONTAINER_ID, then run a new container with sudo docker run ...;
or restart an existing container with sudo docker start YOUR_CONTAINER_ID
I was running into this issue that when I run docker rm (which usually works) I would get:
Error: No such image
The easiest solution to this is removing all stopped containers by running:
docker container prune
I have solved the issue by doing following steps and I hope it helps.
Type docker ps -a to list all the containers in your system.
Check the NAMES part where you have initialized your docker container.
Then type docker rm --force name_of_container
Install the docker container as you wish.
I had problem using NIFI and I have removed and reinstalled using docker. Good luck.
TL:DR;
List all containers:
docker ps -a
Remove the concerned container by id:
docker container rm <container_id>
The OP's problem is the error. Deleting state isn't the only solution - or even a good one. The problem is docker run isn't re-entrant, and docker start is impotent w/o run. So we have to combine them.
For example to run Postgres w/o destroying previous state, try this:
docker start postgres || docker run -d -p 5432:5432 --name postgres -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=password postgres:13-alpine
I'm just learning docker and this got me as well. I stopped the container with that name already and therefore I thought I could run a new container with that name.
Not the case. Just because the container is stopped, doesn't mean it can't be started again, and it keeps all the same parameters that it was created with (including the name).
when I ran docker ps -a that's when I saw all the dummy test containers I created while I was playing around.
No problem, since I don't want those any more I just did docker rm containername at which point my new container was allowed to run with the old name.
Ah, and now that I finish writing this answer, I see Slawosz's comment on Walt Howard's answer above suggesting the use of docker ps -a
Ok, so I didn't understand either, then I left my pc, went to do other things, and upon my return, it clicked :D
You download a docker image file. docker pull *image-name* will just pull the image from docker hub without running it.
Now, you use docker run, and give it a name (e.g. newWebServer).
docker run -d -p 8080:8080 -v volume --name newWebServer image-name/version
You perhaps only need docker run --name *name* *image*, but the other stuff will become useful quickly.
-d (detached) - means the container will exit when the root process used to run the container exits.
-p (port) - specify the container port and the host port. Kind of the internal and external port. The internal one being the port the container uses, and the external one is the port you use outside of it and probably the one you need to put in your web browser if that's how you access your app.
--name (what you want to call this instance of the container) - you could have several instances of the same container all with different names, which is useful when you're trying to test something.
image-name/version is the actual image you want to create the container from. You can see a list of all the images on your system with docker images -a. You may have more than one version, so make sure you choose the correct one/tag.
-v (volume) - perhaps not needed initially, but soon you'll want to persist data after your container exits.
OK. So now, docker run just created a container from your image. If it isn't running, you can now start it with it's name:
docker start newWebServer
You can check all your containers (they may or may not be running) with
docker ps -a
You can stop and start them (or pause them) with their name or the container id (or just the first few characters of it) from the CONTAINER ID column e.g:
docker stop newWebServer
docker start c3028a89462c
And list all your images, with
docker images -a
In a nutshell, download an image; docker run creates a container from it; start it with docker start (name or container id); stop it with docker stop (name or container id).
I had this issue because I had two or more containers with the same container_name in the docker-compose.yml file.
Simple Solution: Goto your docker folder in the system and delete .raw file or docker archive with large size.
For me, the issue was that I used an image name more than once in the dockerfile.
This happened to me on the docker tutorial! The port I tried to use was taken, but docker still created.. an image? A process to run docker? I'll find out soon. Anyways, to choose a different port, I had to remove the older image, and then docker run again.
Sometimes a tutorial can be too terse. What you want is concise, not terse, or even succinct.

Port data out of docker container

I use this method below to port data out of one container.
docker run --volumes-from <data container> ubuntu tar -cO <volume path> | gzip -c > volume.tgz
But there is one problem with it is every time it performs a backup, there will be a zombie container left. What is the good way to get that id and remove the zombie container afterward.
Thanks
Apparently, you just want to be able to export volume data. To do that, you just need to start your initial container with a volume pointing to a directory on the host with the -v option. You can tar on the host without creating a container for it. Your current tactic seems a bit over-engineered ;)
The easy way to remove the container after executing the command, is to use the option --rm, from here
However, if you feel that the container you are creating will have data that you will need to
1. update in real time
2. access after the container has been created
then you may also mount a host directory as a container volume and access the contents of that directory from the host.
If you start a container using the -volume option, you can also call reference the directory created on this host
$ docker run -v /volume_directory ubuntu
$ container=$(docker ps -n=1 -q)
$ docker inspect -f '{{.Volumes}}' $container

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