4.9 KiB
exec
Execute a command in a running container
Aliases
docker container exec
, docker exec
Options
Name | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
-d , --detach |
Detached mode: run command in the background | ||
--detach-keys |
string |
Override the key sequence for detaching a container | |
-e , --env |
list |
Set environment variables | |
--env-file |
list |
Read in a file of environment variables | |
-i , --interactive |
Keep STDIN open even if not attached | ||
--privileged |
Give extended privileges to the command | ||
-t , --tty |
Allocate a pseudo-TTY | ||
-u , --user |
string |
Username or UID (format: <name|uid>[:<group|gid>] ) |
|
-w , --workdir |
string |
Working directory inside the container |
Description
The docker exec
command runs a new command in a running container.
The command you specify with docker exec
only runs while the container's
primary process (PID 1
) is running, and it isn't restarted if the container
is restarted.
The command runs in the default working directory of the container.
The command must be an executable. A chained or a quoted command doesn't work.
- This works:
docker exec -it my_container sh -c "echo a && echo b"
- This doesn't work:
docker exec -it my_container "echo a && echo b"
Examples
Run docker exec
on a running container
First, start a container.
$ docker run --name mycontainer -d -i -t alpine /bin/sh
This creates and starts a container named mycontainer
from an alpine
image
with an sh
shell as its main process. The -d
option (shorthand for --detach
)
sets the container to run in the background, in detached mode, with a pseudo-TTY
attached (-t
). The -i
option is set to keep STDIN
attached (-i
), which
prevents the sh
process from exiting immediately.
Next, execute a command on the container.
$ docker exec -d mycontainer touch /tmp/execWorks
This creates a new file /tmp/execWorks
inside the running container
mycontainer
, in the background.
Next, execute an interactive sh
shell on the container.
$ docker exec -it mycontainer sh
This starts a new shell session in the container mycontainer
.
Set environment variables for the exec process (--env, -e)
Next, set environment variables in the current bash session.
The docker exec
command inherits the environment variables that are set at the
time the container is created. Use the --env
(or the -e
shorthand) to
override global environment variables, or to set additional environment
variables for the process started by docker exec
.
The following example creates a new shell session in the container mycontainer
,
with environment variables $VAR_A
set to 1
, and $VAR_B
set to 2
.
These environment variables are only valid for the sh
process started by that
docker exec
command, and aren't available to other processes running inside
the container.
$ docker exec -e VAR_A=1 -e VAR_B=2 mycontainer env
PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin
HOSTNAME=f64a4851eb71
VAR_A=1
VAR_B=2
HOME=/root
Escalate container privileges (--privileged)
Set the working directory for the exec process (--workdir, -w)
By default docker exec
command runs in the same working directory set when
the container was created.
$ docker exec -it mycontainer pwd
/
You can specify an alternative working directory for the command to execute
using the --workdir
option (or the -w
shorthand):
$ docker exec -it -w /root mycontainer pwd
/root
Try to run docker exec
on a paused container
If the container is paused, then the docker exec
command fails with an error:
$ docker pause mycontainer
mycontainer
$ docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
482efdf39fac alpine "/bin/sh" 17 seconds ago Up 16 seconds (Paused) mycontainer
$ docker exec mycontainer sh
Error response from daemon: Container mycontainer is paused, unpause the container before exec
$ echo $?
1