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I am trying to copy a set of files from docker host to container. On a AUFS system directly going into /var/lib/docker/aufs/... works. However I am another system with Fedora that has devicemapper as the storage driver. On this system if I do this:

[root@myhost tmp]# docker inspect -f '{{.Id}}' 393ef4b9f485
393ef4b9f485dafc78037f59bdbeda16d63b8338487248ed25b68cf544f29e24
[root@myhost tmp]# cd /var/lib/docker/devicemapper/mnt/393ef4b9f485dafc78037f59bdbeda16d63b8338487248ed25b68cf544f29e24
[root@myhost 393ef4b9f485dafc78037f59bdbeda16d63b8338487248ed25b68cf544f29e24]# ls -l
total 0
[root@myhost 393ef4b9f485dafc78037f59bdbeda16d63b8338487248ed25b68cf544f29e24]#

I get nothing. I have tried all suggestions from Copying files from host to Docker container

Using tar seems to be great, instead of directly going to the underlying FS. But I cannot assume that tar would be present in all containers.

If it is relevant, I have even tried to create a file in the container, but it and then did a find . -name in /var/lib/docker/devicemapper/mnt to no avail.

Any hints?

EDIT 1: Based on one of the answers, adding these constraints. The intent is to copy files into a container without a. not modify the containers build (Dockerfile), b. To not install any ssh or ftp daemons. and c. not even change the way the container was started.

EDIT 2: Adding the docker info :

# docker info
Containers: 1
Images: 21
Storage Driver: devicemapper
 Pool Name: docker-253:0-397467-pool
 Pool Blocksize: 65.54 kB
 Backing Filesystem: extfs
 Data file:
 Metadata file:
 Data Space Used: 4.261 GB
 Data Space Total: 107.4 GB
 Data Space Available: 103.1 GB
 Metadata Space Used: 3.596 MB
 Metadata Space Total: 2.147 GB
 Metadata Space Available: 2.144 GB
 Udev Sync Supported: true
 Library Version: 1.02.90 (2014-09-01)
Execution Driver: native-0.2
Kernel Version: 3.17.4-301.fc21.x86_64
Operating System: Fedora 21 (Twenty One)
CPUs: 4
Total Memory: 3.86 GiB
Name: fedora-docker

Docker Version is 1.6.0 and container image is based on RHEL.

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  • 1
    Why do you need to do this? There's not an official supported solution, so any answer is always going to be a hack - but if you tell us why you need this, perhaps we can come up with something. Apr 29, 2015 at 10:06
  • Agreed that there is no official support for this, actually Docker 1.7 is supposed to get this change, github.com/docker/docker/pull/10198, however for my use case I need to do some checks inside an already running container and for that I need to push in some scripts and files and get their output. Without "disturbing"/rebuilding the container.
    – Yogesh_D
    Apr 29, 2015 at 10:09
  • If you can assume the script will run, I think you can probably assume at least cat is present, and probably tar. If you can't add this script to your images, you could mount it as a volume at run-time. Apr 29, 2015 at 10:11
  • By script, do you mean binary? Otherwise how do you know the shell you need is present? Apr 29, 2015 at 10:17
  • good point on the shell, well the files I need are some binaries and a few supporting config files and a execution script. So far on some containers I have not had an issues with shell's but I have run into tar not being present. well I can do use cat as described in the linked question but that would mean doing a docker exec for each file that I need to put in.
    – Yogesh_D
    Apr 29, 2015 at 10:54

2 Answers 2

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UPDATE: Now docker cp command line command works both ways. See the docker cp documentation

Usage

docker cp [OPTIONS] CONTAINER:SRC_PATH DEST_PATH|-

docker cp [OPTIONS] SRC_PATH|- CONTAINER:DEST_PATH

=======Original Answer ==============

Found the most easiest way that works across storage drivers:

cd /proc/`docker inspect --format "{{.State.Pid}}" <containerid>`/root

Have tested this on Fedora with Devicemapper as the storage driver and on Ubuntu with AUFS as the storage driver. Works for me in both the cases.

2
  • Worked on Ubuntu 14.04 and docker 1.6.2 like a charm (and I'll enigmatically add: just in time).
    – hauron
    Apr 20, 2016 at 18:17
  • And .State.Pid will return 0 if the container stopped
    – a55
    Feb 9 at 7:44
0

This answer provides you a different view of copying.

1> Use this way provided you know the IP of the container. If your aim is just to take the files form the host system and put it in the container you can do it using different ways. File transfer protocol is a easier way. you can setup an SSH server(sshd) on your docker container and use scp or any other file transfer tools to do it.

2> Sharing files via volumes using this command docker run -ti -v /host-path-of-directory-having-files/:/target-path-in-container/:rw image-name bash. You can refer this link https://docs.docker.com/userguide/dockervolumes/

3
  • Please see the edits to the question, I cannot change the way the container is started, or install new software in the container.
    – Yogesh_D
    Apr 29, 2015 at 10:58
  • which image ru using in docker?? which docker base image OS, host OS ru using ?? Apr 30, 2015 at 5:52
  • Docker image is based on RHEL, Host OS Fedora release 21, Docker Version 1.6.0, and Docker Info states that the storage driver is devicemapper. See the complete docker info an edit to the question.
    – Yogesh_D
    Apr 30, 2015 at 11:07

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