3.2 KiB
title | description | keywords |
---|---|---|
exec | The exec command description and usage | command, container, run, execute |
exec
Usage: docker exec [OPTIONS] CONTAINER COMMAND [ARG...]
Run a command in a running container
Options:
-d, --detach Detached mode: run command in the background
--detach-keys Override the key sequence for detaching a container
-e, --env=[] Set environment variables
--help Print usage
-i, --interactive Keep STDIN open even if not attached
--privileged Give extended privileges to the command
-t, --tty Allocate a pseudo-TTY
-u, --user Username or UID (format: <name|uid>[:<group|gid>])
Description
The docker exec
command runs a new command in a running container.
The command started using docker exec
only runs while the container's primary
process (PID 1
) is running, and it is not restarted if the container is
restarted.
COMMAND will run in the default directory of the container. If the underlying image has a custom directory specified with the WORKDIR directive in its Dockerfile, this will be used instead.
COMMAND should be an executable, a chained or a quoted command
will not work. Example: docker exec -ti my_container "echo a && echo b"
will
not work, but docker exec -ti my_container sh -c "echo a && echo b"
will.
Examples
Run docker exec
on a running container
First, start a container.
$ docker run --name ubuntu_bash --rm -i -t ubuntu bash
This will create a container named ubuntu_bash
and start a Bash session.
Next, execute a command on the container.
$ docker exec -d ubuntu_bash touch /tmp/execWorks
This will create a new file /tmp/execWorks
inside the running container
ubuntu_bash
, in the background.
Next, execute an interactive bash
shell on the container.
$ docker exec -it ubuntu_bash bash
This will create a new Bash session in the container ubuntu_bash
.
Next, set an environment variable in the current bash session.
$ docker exec -it -e VAR=1 ubuntu_bash bash
This will create a new Bash session in the container ubuntu_bash
with environment
variable $VAR
set to "1". Note that this environment variable will only be valid
on the current Bash session.
Try to run docker exec
on a paused container
If the container is paused, then the docker exec
command will fail with an error:
$ docker pause test
test
$ docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
1ae3b36715d2 ubuntu:latest "bash" 17 seconds ago Up 16 seconds (Paused) test
$ docker exec test ls
FATA[0000] Error response from daemon: Container test is paused, unpause the container before exec
$ echo $?
1