I want to do a ps command in a docker container derived from Debian official Docker hub repository:
$ docker run -ti debian:wheezy /bin/bash
root@51afd6b09af8:/# ps
bash: ps: command not found
ps
is not installed in the base wheezy
image. Try this from within the container:
apt-get update && apt-get install procps
or add the following line to the Dockerfile
:
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y procps && rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
apt-get install -y procps
instead.
Commented
Aug 25, 2017 at 17:25
ps
in wheezy image: https://github.com/moby/moby/issues/447#issuecomment-36647268
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y procps
within a running container will not lead to nothing else than an error. The original post, which was also the accepted answer, was fine as it was.
use docker top
docker top <container ID>
procps
on the container. Thanks.
Commented
Feb 21, 2022 at 5:19
ps
is to check if something is running inside the container or not. So the guy usually would go docker run smth /bin/bah
and then ps
. If nothing is running docker exits. With smth like --rm
the evidence of process gone and this command does not work for obvious reasons for stopped containers. It can be a workaround if smth's working otherwise not an option for investigation.
docker top <container ID>
shows the PID of the reflected process in the host computer, not the PID of the internal processes inside the container, as you can see executing cd /proc/; ls -ld [1-9]*
Commented
Feb 26 at 16:01
In case you can't install the procps package (don't have proper permissions) you can use /proc directory.
The first few directories (named as numbers) are PIDs of your processes. Inside directories, you can find additional information useful to decipher which process is connected to each PID. For example, you can use the cat command to view "cmdline" file to check which process is connected to PID.
$ ls /proc
1 10 11 ...
$ ls -1 /proc/22
attr
autogroup
auxv
cgroup
clear_refs
cmdline
...
$ cat /proc/22/cmdline
/bin/sh
Edited - spaces are lost in the cmdline so we can pipe the cat output to the tr
command, for example:
$ cat /proc/1/cmdline | tr '\0' ' '
/sbin/init splash
If you're running a CentOS container, you can install ps using this command:
yum install -y procps
Running this command on Dockerfile:
RUN yum install -y procps
Firstly, run the command below:
apt-get update && apt-get install procps
and then run:
ps -ef
For RockyLinux 9, you need to use this command
$> yum install procps-ng