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- What is docker run -it flag? - Stack Overflow
73 docker run -it ubuntu:xenial bin bash starts the container in the interactive mode (hence -it flag) that allows you to interact with bin bash of the container That means now you will have bash session inside the container, so you can ls, mkdir, or do any bash command inside the container The key here is the word "interactive"
- How do I pass environment variables to Docker containers?
Using docker-compose, you can inherit environment variables in docker-compose yml and subsequently any Dockerfile (s) called by docker-compose to build images This is useful when the Dockerfile RUN command should execute commands specific to the environment
- How do I get a console-like connection into a Docker containers shell . . .
Here are some related resources: openssh-server doesn't start in Docker container How to get bash or ssh into a running container in background mode? Can you run GUI applications in a Linux Docker container? Other useful approaches for graphical access found with search: Docker X11 If you run SSHD in your Docker containers, you're doing it wrong!
- How do I run a docker instance from a DockerFile?
Download Dockerfile and Build a Docker Image Download the Dockerfile to a directory on your machine, and from that same directory, run the following docker build command Make sure to replace image_name with what you would like to name your image Docker image naming restrictions can be found here
- How to list containers in Docker - Stack Overflow
In Docker 1 13, we regrouped every command to sit under the logical object it’s interacting with For example list and start of containers are now subcommands of docker container and history is a subcommand of docker image
- How to fix Docker: Permission denied - Stack Overflow
I installed Docker on my Ubuntu machine When I run sudo docker run hello-world it works But if I write the command without sudo docker run hello-world it displays the following: docker: Got
- Run a Docker image as a container - Stack Overflow
After building a Docker image from a dockerfile, I see the image was built successfully, but what do I do with it? Shouldn't i be able to run it as a container?
- docker - Dockerfile if else condition with external arguments - Stack . . .
Accepted answer does not cover "if else condition" part of the question Would be better to rename it to "Dockerfile with external arguments" if condition check didn't mean to be a requirement
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