451

I run a container in the background using

 docker run -d --name hadoop h_Service

it exits quickly. But if I run in the foreground, it works fine. I checked logs using

docker logs hadoop

there was no error. Any ideas?

DOCKERFILE

 FROM java_ubuntu_new
 RUN wget http://archive.cloudera.com/cdh4/one-click-install/precise/amd64/cdh4-repository_1.0_all.deb
 RUN dpkg -i cdh4-repository_1.0_all.deb
 RUN curl -s http://archive.cloudera.com/cdh4/ubuntu/precise/amd64/cdh/archive.key | apt-key add -
 RUN  apt-get update
 RUN apt-get install -y hadoop-0.20-conf-pseudo
 RUN dpkg -L hadoop-0.20-conf-pseudo
 USER hdfs
 RUN hdfs namenode -format
 USER root
 RUN apt-get install -y sudo
 ADD . /usr/local/
 RUN chmod 777 /usr/local/start-all.sh
 CMD ["/usr/local/start-all.sh"]

start-all.sh

 #!/usr/bin/env bash
 /etc/init.d/hadoop-hdfs-namenode start
 /etc/init.d/hadoop-hdfs-datanode start
 /etc/init.d/hadoop-hdfs-secondarynamenode start
 /etc/init.d/hadoop-0.20-mapreduce-tasktracker start
 sudo -u hdfs hadoop fs -chmod 777 /
 /etc/init.d/hadoop-0.20-mapreduce-jobtracker start
 /bin/bash
2
  • 4
    The golden rule is that you should prevent your dockerized servers from daemonizing. Most server packages have options to force them in the foreground since daemonizing is the normal case. Sep 22, 2015 at 10:29
  • 8
    Whatever you are hoping to accomplish, chmod 777 is insecure and wrong. You should revert to sane permissions (probably 755 in this case).
    – tripleee
    Dec 3, 2019 at 5:57

20 Answers 20

391

This did the trick for me:

docker run -dit ubuntu

After it, I checked for the processes running using:

docker ps -a

For attaching again the container

docker attach CONTAINER_NAME

TIP: For exiting without stopping the container type: ^P^Q

12
  • 37
    @Tommy, from docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/run -d, --detach Detached mode: run command in the background, -i, --interactive Keep STDIN open even if not attached, -t, --tty Allocate a pseudo-TTY -dit is just shorthand
    – user238638
    Mar 22, 2016 at 18:07
  • 7
    @am17torres right, sorry let me clarify my confusing question; d is detached and i is interactive, so the combination of d and i is confusing to me. I thought d was to launch it as a background (non-interactive) process.
    – Tommy
    Mar 22, 2016 at 19:59
  • 3
    @Tommy When these options combined, container will enter interactive mode in background.
    – YON
    Apr 12, 2016 at 1:39
  • 3
    @Tommy, @am17torres -di is the minimum required, the -t option is redundant when used with -d if I understand correctly
    – Renaud
    May 30, 2016 at 13:16
  • 2
    Actually you won't be able to see your prompt if you reattach without -t enabled... but since I usually exec a new bash every time I don't notice. I've had problems detaching from a mac but perhaps I'm doing this wrong..
    – Renaud
    May 30, 2016 at 13:19
210

A docker container exits when its main process finishes.

In this case it will exit when your start-all.sh script ends. I don't know enough about hadoop to tell you how to do it in this case, but you need to either leave something running in the foreground or use a process manager such as runit or supervisord to run the processes.

I think you must be mistaken about it working if you don't specify -d; it should have exactly the same effect. I suspect you launched it with a slightly different command or using -it which will change things.

A simple solution may be to add something like:

while true; do sleep 1000; done

to the end of the script. I don't like this however, as the script should really be monitoring the processes it kicked off.

(I should say I stole that code from https://github.com/sequenceiq/hadoop-docker/blob/master/bootstrap.sh)

0
96

I would like to extend or dare I say, improve answer mentioned by camposer

When you run

docker run -dit ubuntu

you are basically running the container in background in interactive mode.

When you attach and exit the container by CTRL+D (most common way to do it), you stop the container because you just killed the main process which you started your container with the above command.

Making advantage of an already running container, I would just fork another process of bash and get a pseudo TTY by running:

docker exec -it <container ID> /bin/bash
0
81

Why docker container exits immediately?

If you want to force the image to hang around (in order to debug something or examine state of the file system) you can override the entry point to change it to a shell:

docker run -it --entrypoint=/bin/bash myimagename
3
  • It only stay up for 3 seconds when I use --entrypoint can I keep more than that? May 14, 2021 at 8:42
  • This should keep it running until the bash process exits. Does your image not have /bin/bash for some reason perhaps?
    – RJFalconer
    May 17, 2021 at 14:09
  • Yes once my bash process is over, it's exit. I think it's the way it's designed. docker exec -it MyAvalanche /bin/avalanche May 17, 2021 at 14:34
50

whenever I want a container to stay up after finish the script execution I add

&& tail -f /dev/null

at the end of command. So it should be:

/usr/local/start-all.sh && tail -f /dev/null
1
  • 3
    This could solve, but I wonder whether this command will cause memory leak or other problem? How is it compared with running while true; do sleep 1; done;? Jul 3, 2020 at 10:03
34

If you need to just have a container running without exiting, just run

docker run -dit --name MY_CONTAINER MY_IMAGE:latest

and then

docker exec -it MY_CONTAINER /bin/bash

and you will be in the bash shell of the container, and it should not exit.

The following worked only with roslaunch in a ROS simulation, this "--wait" is not a default parameter for docker-compose!

Mind: This is hard to read, and it seems to be only about a self-written parameter. Just skip it.

Or if the exit happens during docker-compose, use

command: bash -c "MY_COMMAND --wait"

as already stated by two other answers here (though not that clearly referring to docker-compose, that is why I still mention the "wait" trick again).

In the ROS simulation, it would be, for example:

command: bash -c "roslaunch gazebo_ros empty_world.launch --wait"

Using --wait was the core to get a so-called ROS network on docker-compose to work, see example code at ROS in docker-compose leads to "bash: line 0: cd: MYPROJECT: No such file or directory". More on roslaunch is at Docker on WSL2: Dockerfile: how to test whether ROS gazebo can connect to already working X server (using its X11 display on Windows)?.

Thus, this --wait must have been an argument for a command like roslaunch gazebo_ros empty_world.launch. But when checking the linked tutorial Tutorial: Using roslaunch to start Gazebo, world files and URDF models, there is no such parameter in the code, just:

roslaunch gazebo_ros empty_world.launch paused:=true use_sim_time:=false gui:=true throttled:=false recording:=false debug:=true verbose:=true gui_required:=true

That is why I guess that it must have been a self-written extension of the given parameters of the project.

I tried this --wait later again in other settings, and it did not work. In the ROS launch script, where it worked, it likely just shadowed the workaround of another answer in this Q/A (&& tail ...).

5
  • Could you elaborate on what you mean by 'MY_COMMAND' here? Do you mean one should write one's own bash script with a --wait option? What would such a script look like?
    – Delon
    Mar 19, 2022 at 9:23
  • @Delon For example, if you run a python file: command: bash -c "python main.py --wait". You can put anything you would want to run in the terminal of the container there. No script needed, just possible as well as anything else you could run in the bash. Mar 22, 2022 at 17:30
  • Maybe a useful command: docker run -d -p 8888:8888 -it --name indexing_8 -v /mount/xyz:/mount/xyz -v /pylucene-docker:/code coady/pylucene:8
    – PinkBanter
    Nov 29, 2022 at 9:57
  • I don't this works anymore it's 2023 Mar 8, 2023 at 3:31
  • @user1034912 Do you mean the --wait trick? I checked it now where I got it from. It is most likely a self-written extension of parameters for a ROS simulation. Mar 8, 2023 at 22:18
28

Add this to the end of Dockerfile:

CMD tail -f /dev/null

Sample Docker file:

FROM ubuntu:16.04

# other commands

CMD tail -f /dev/null

Reference

3
  • 1
    CMD tail -f /dev/null runs it through sh -c "...". Can we use the exec form instead? I.e. CMD ["tail", "-f", "/dev/null"]
    – Meglio
    Mar 16, 2020 at 13:28
  • It's worked for me
    – ChauGiang
    Feb 16, 2022 at 5:37
  • This is a great platform-agnostic option that doesn't require executing the container using different options. Mar 29, 2023 at 22:13
23

A nice approach would be to start up your processes and services running them in the background and use the wait [n ...] command at the end of your script. In bash, the wait command forces the current process to:

Wait for each specified process and return its termination status. If n is not given, all currently active child processes are waited for, and the return status is zero.

I got this idea from Sébastien Pujadas' start script for his elk build.

Taking from the original question, your start-all.sh would look something like this...

 #!/usr/bin/env bash
 /etc/init.d/hadoop-hdfs-namenode start &
 /etc/init.d/hadoop-hdfs-datanode start &
 /etc/init.d/hadoop-hdfs-secondarynamenode start &
 /etc/init.d/hadoop-0.20-mapreduce-tasktracker start &
 sudo -u hdfs hadoop fs -chmod 777 /
 /etc/init.d/hadoop-0.20-mapreduce-jobtracker start &
 wait
3
  • This did the trick also in docker-compose with the same issue, using --wait. Apr 25, 2021 at 10:34
  • The wait command is different from a possible--wait option which is not a standard option for most commands.
    – tripleee
    Aug 20, 2021 at 6:31
  • Can you clarify which command has the --wait option? I am using docker-compose but neither my image, not the compose file has any command or entrypoint. We prefer starting the container without any entrypoint, and then separately bringup our services (not automatically as part of container up). But apparently with compose, command or entrypoint is mandatory. Trying to understand what this --wait is.
    – anuragz
    Dec 31, 2021 at 3:24
20

You need to run it with -d flag to leave it running as daemon in the background.

docker run -d -it ubuntu bash

3
  • 1
    docker run -d -it ubuntu that works for me. Jun 3, 2021 at 2:34
  • Man, you saved my day! I was able to run Microsoft's mcr.microsoft.com/windows/servercore:ltsc2019 image on Windows. Oct 20, 2021 at 18:30
  • 1
    The -it options are basically ignored if you run with -d.
    – tripleee
    Dec 30, 2021 at 13:25
6

My pracitce is in the Dockerfile start a shell which will not exit immediately CMD [ "sh", "-c", "service ssh start; bash"], then run docker run -dit image_name. This way the (ssh) service and container is up running.

3

Adding

exec "$@"

at the end of my shell script was my fix!

1
  • 2
    That just means it'll run your cmd, if your cmd is just 'bash' then it still won't work
    – Shardj
    Jan 14, 2020 at 17:17
2

I added read shell statement at the end. This keeps the main process of the container - startup shell script - running.

2

Coming from duplicates, I don't see any answer here which addresses the very common antipattern of running your main workload as a background job, and then wondering why Docker exits.

In simple terms, if you have

my-main-thing &

then either take out the & to run the job in the foreground, or add

wait

at the end of the script to make it wait for all background jobs.

It will then still exit if the main workload exits, so maybe run this in a while true loop to force it to restart forever:

while true; do
    my-main-thing &
    other things which need to happen while the main workload runs in the background
    maybe if you have such things
    wait
done

(Notice also how to write while true. It's common to see silly things like while [ true ] or while [ 1 ] which coincidentally happen to work, but don't mean what the author probably imagined they ought to mean.)

4
  • Adding --wait is mentioned by @BrianOlsen 2017. Still a good answer. Aug 19, 2021 at 22:31
  • If you have a command which supports an option with that name, it will certainly be useful; but it does not extend to scenarios where you don't have that option. It's not clear to me if the answer was supposed to suggest just wait without the dashes but if so, this should hopefully at least work as a clarification.
    – tripleee
    Dec 30, 2021 at 13:29
  • 1
    You are right, you got my upvote anyway. Your answer is not a duplicate, it shows the direct way of using wait. Your answer makes it clearer why waiting solves the exiting problem: stay awake for all background jobs. Dec 30, 2021 at 19:19
  • 1
    Thanks for getting back to me with a clarification, much appreciated.
    – tripleee
    Dec 30, 2021 at 19:50
2

If you're using docker compose, you can put tty: true in your compose.yml as an argument under a given service:

services: 
  ubuntu_test:
    container_name: dev
    build:
      context: .
    
    tty: true
    

See this answer for more details: Docker Compose keep container running

0

There are many possible ways to cause a docker to exit immediately. For me, it was the problem with my Dockerfile. There was a bug in that file. I had ENTRYPOINT ["dotnet", "M4Movie_Api.dll] instead of ENTRYPOINT ["dotnet", "M4Movie_Api.dll"]. As you can see I had missed one quotation(") at the end.

To analyze the problem I started my container and quickly attached my container so that I could see what was the exact problem.

C:\SVenu\M4Movie\Api\Api>docker start 4ea373efa21b


C:\SVenu\M4Movie\Api\Api>docker attach 4ea373efa21b

Where 4ea373efa21b is my container id. This drives me to the actual issue.

enter image description here

After finding the issue, I had to build, restore, publish my container again.

0

If you check Dockerfile from containers, for example fballiano/magento2-apache-php

you'll see that at the end of his file he adds the following command: while true; do sleep 1; done

Now, what I recommend, is that you do this

docker container ls --all | grep 127

Then, you will see if your docker image had an error, if it exits with 0, then it probably needs one of these commands that will sleep forever.

0

Docker container terminates immediately when it did not have any foreground process that helps to connect to user terminal. For example, there is no web server up running in that container.

There are couple of ways to create a foreground process. One such method is to redirect to /dev/null which prevents container from immediate exit. After that you can use exec command with -it parameter to attach it to your terminal.

docker run -d ubuntu tail -f /dev/null
docker exec -it 0ab99d8ab11c /bin/bash
0

$ docker run -di image

It works.

0

docker logs information is not usually helpful to me. Sometimes app's log is same as docker logs output, sometimes is not.

docker inspect not helpful in most case either, unless it is a very obvious error.

If your Entrypoint or last command failed, just find the log generated by that command. Persist the container log through a volume on your host and check the log.

Alternatively, if you prefer a somehow interactive environment. Let you container enter sleep mode. Entrypoint sleep(whatever long you like), then log into the container with docker exec -it container_id sh and run your Entrypoint command manually, see what is going on.

-8

Since the image is a linux, one thing to check is to make sure any shell scripts used in the container have unix line endings. If they have a ^M at the end then they are windows line endings. One way to fix them is with dos2unix on /usr/local/start-all.sh to convert them from windows to unix. Running the docker in interactive mode can help figure out other problems. You could have a file name typo or something. see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newline

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