1

I have script: docker run -it -p 4000:4000 bitgosdk/express:latest --disablessl -e test how to put this command to dockerfile with arguments?

FROM bitgosdk/express:latest
EXPOSE 4000
???
1
  • so the command is just --disablessl -e test ? What is the output of ps -ef inside your running container?
    – mchawre
    Jan 4, 2021 at 5:54

3 Answers 3

2

Gone through your Dockerfile contents.

The command running inside container is:

/ # ps -ef | more
PID   USER     TIME  COMMAND
    1 root      0:00 /sbin/tini -- /usr/local/bin/node /var/bitgo-express/bin/bitgo-express --disablessl -e test

The command is so because the entrypoint set in the Dockerfile is ENTRYPOINT ["/sbin/tini", "--", "/usr/local/bin/node", "/var/bitgo-express/bin/bitgo-express"] and the arguments --disablessl -e test are the one provided while running docker run command.

The --disablessl -e test arguments can be set inside your Dockerfile using CMD:

CMD ["--disablessl", "-e","test"]

New Dockerfile:

FROM bitgosdk/express:latest
EXPOSE 4000
CMD ["--disablessl", "-e","test"]

Refer this to know the difference between entrypoint and cmd.

1

You don't. This is what docker-compose is used for.

i.e. create a docker-compose.yml with contents like this:

version: "3.8"

services:
  test:
    image: bitgodsdk/express:latest
    command: --disablessl -e test
    ports:
    - "4000:4000"

and then execute the following in a terminal to access the interactive terminal for the service named test.

docker-compose run test

2
  • 1
    I generally consider Compose command: an override, and I'd consider setting a default Dockerfile CMD preferable.
    – David Maze
    Jan 4, 2021 at 11:58
  • 1
    True. But if that is the only thing requring a Dockerfile, then better to keep it as a compose-file override and skip the hassle of working with a custom image. Jan 4, 2021 at 12:24
0

Even if @mchawre's answer seems to directly answer OP's question "syntactically speaking" (as a Dockerfile was asked), a docker-compose.yml is definitely the way to go to make a docker run command, as custom as it might be, reproducible in a declarative way (YAML file).

Just to complement @ChrisBecke's answer, note that the writing of this YAML file can be automated. See e.g., the FOSS (under MIT license) https://github.com/magicmark/composerize

FTR, the snippet below was automatically generated from the following docker run command, using the accompanying webapp https://composerize.com/:

docker run -it -p 4000:4000 bitgosdk/express:latest

version: '3.3'
services:
    express:
        ports:
            - '4000:4000'
        image: 'bitgosdk/express:latest'

I omitted the CMD arguments --disablessl -e test on-purpose, as composerize does not seem to support these extra arguments. This may sound like a bug (and FTR a related issue is opened), but meanwhile it might just be viewed as a feature, in line of @DavidMaze's comment

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.