I just started using Docker, and I like it very much, but I have a clunky workflow that I'd like to streamline. When I'm iterating on my Dockerfile script I will often test things out after a build by launching a bash session, running some commands, finding out that such and such package didn't get installed correctly, then going back and tweaking my Dockerfile.
Let's say I have built my image and tagged it as buildfoo, I'd run it like this:
$> docker run -t -i buildfoo
... enter some bash commands.. then ^D to exit
Then I will have a container running that I have to clean up. Usually I just nuke everything like this:
docker rm --force `docker ps -qa`
This works OK for me.. However, I'd rather not have to manually remove the container.
Any tips gratefully accepted !
Some Additional Minor Details:
Running minimal centos 7 image and using bash as my shell.