In docker I want to do this:
git clone XYZ
cd XYZ
make XYZ
However because there is no cd command, I have to pass in the full path everytime (make XYZ /fullpath). Any good solutions for this?
In docker I want to do this:
git clone XYZ
cd XYZ
make XYZ
However because there is no cd command, I have to pass in the full path everytime (make XYZ /fullpath). Any good solutions for this?
To change into another directory use WORKDIR. All the RUN, CMD and ENTRYPOINT commands after WORKDIR will be executed from that directory.
RUN git clone XYZ
WORKDIR "/XYZ"
RUN make
apt-get
or other commands that work in the sh
shell (= Dockerfile default). If you need the bash
instead of the sh
shell, as it is normal for many bash commands that you also need in a Dockerfile, you need to call the bash
shell before using the command. See below answer. The WORKDIR will not work in that isolated bash
-RUN
, the bash will start with the /root, if you do not change the ".bashrc".
Commented
Mar 21, 2021 at 15:11
You can run a script, or a more complex RUN. Here is an adaptation of your example case:
RUN git clone XYZ && \
cd XYZ && \
make XYZ
Here is an example from a Dockerfile I've downloaded to look at previously:
RUN cd /opt && unzip treeio.zip && mv treeio-master treeio && \
rm -f treeio.zip && cd treeio && pip install -r requirements.pip
Because of the use of '&&', it will only get to the final 'pip install' command if all the previous commands have succeeded.
In fact, since every RUN creates a new commit & (currently) an AUFS layer, if you have too many commands in the Dockerfile, you will use up the limits, so merging the RUNs (when the file is stable) can be a very useful thing to do.
cd
only lasts for the current RUN
command. The next RUN
will start from the current WORKDIR
.
WORKDIR
works.
I was wondering if two times WORKDIR
will work or not, but it worked :)
FROM ubuntu:18.04
RUN apt-get update && \
apt-get install -y python3.6
WORKDIR /usr/src
COPY ./ ./
WORKDIR /usr/src/src
CMD ["python3", "app.py"]
You can use single RUN command for all of them
RUN git clone XYZ && \
cd XYZ && \
make XYZ
In case you want to change the working directory for the container when you run a docker image, you can use the -w
(short for --workdir
) option:
docker run -it -w /some/valid/directory/inside/docker {image-name}
Ref:
docker run
options: https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/run/#options
Mind that if you must run in bash
shell, you need not just the RUN make
, but you need to call the bash
shell before, since in Docker, you are in the sh
shell by default.
Taken from /bin/sh: 1: gvm: not found, which would say more or less:
Your shell is /bin/sh, but source expects /bin/bash, perhaps because it puts its initialization in
~/.bashrc
.
In other words, this problem can occur in any setting where the "sh" shell is used instead of the "bash", causing "/bin/sh: 1: MY_COMMAND: not found"
.
In the Dockerfile case, use the recommended
RUN /bin/bash -c 'source /opt/ros/melodic/setup.bash'
or with the "[]
" (which I would rather not use):
RUN ["/bin/bash", "-c", "source /opt/ros/melodic/setup.bash"]
Every new RUN of a bash is isolated, "starting at 0". For example, mind that setting WORKDIR /MY_PROJECT
before the bash commands in the Dockerfile does not affect the bash commands since the starting folder would have to be set in the ".bashrc" again. It needs cd /MY_PROJECT
even if you have set WORKDIR.
Side-note: do not forget the first "/" before "opt/../...". Else, it will throw the error:
/bin/bash: opt/ros/melodic/setup.bash: No such file or directory
Works:
=> [stage-2 18/21] RUN ["/bin/bash", "-c", "source /opt/ros/melodic/setup.bash"] 0.5s
=> [stage-2 19/21] [...]
See “/bin/sh: 1: MY_COMMAND: not found” at SuperUser for some more details on how this looks with many lines, or how you would fill the ".bashrc" instead. But that goes a bit beyond the actual question here.
PS: You might also put the commands you want to execute in a single bash script and run that bash script in the Dockerfile (though I would rather put the bash commands in the Dockerfile as well, just my opinion):
#!/bin/bash
set -e
source /opt/ros/melodic/setup.bash