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I'm confused about when should I use CMD vs RUN. For example, to execute bash/shell commands (i.e. ls -la) I would always use CMD or is there a situation where I would use RUN? Trying to understand the best practices about these two similar Dockerfile directives.

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10 Answers 10

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RUN is an image build step, the state of the container after a RUN command will be committed to the container image. A Dockerfile can have many RUN steps that layer on top of one another to build the image.

CMD is the command the container executes by default when you launch the built image. A Dockerfile will only use the final CMD defined. The CMD can be overridden when starting a container with docker run $image $other_command.

ENTRYPOINT is also closely related to CMD and can modify the way a CMD is interpreted when a container is started from an image.

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    you do all the RUNneeded to setup your environment, and your (only) CMD launches the process running in your container, example, for nginx, extract from github.com/nginxinc/docker-nginx/blob/… you see the line CMD ["nginx", "-g", "daemon off;"] May 26, 2016 at 14:00
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    "A Dockerfile can only have one CMD" - not technically true, but effectively all but one will be ignored. See the answer of GingerBeer. Apr 19, 2020 at 10:42
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    Yes @paulcheung the final command in the dockerfile is written to the image and is the command the container executes by default when you launch the built image.
    – Matt
    May 31, 2020 at 23:35
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    "A Dockerfile will only use the final CMD defined." -- I just wasted the past hour because I did not realize this. Why on earth wouldn't they at least give you a warning if they are going to ignore these? Apr 28, 2021 at 4:57
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    @Maxx Yes they are different. I'm not sure how to state the effects differently though. Maybe think of it in terms of images you use from a container registry. RUN commands execute at build time (usually remote) before the image is uploaded. The CMD is the process your local container runtime executes after you have retrieved the image.
    – Matt
    May 18, 2022 at 6:39
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RUN - command triggers while we build the docker image.

CMD - command triggers while we launch the created docker image.

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    And the difference is? What we need to know, as the OP asked, is how to know when to use one and not the other. These factoids leave that an open question. Practical effects are what engineers need to know.
    – Maxx
    Feb 5 at 15:28
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I found the Docker RUN vs CMD vs ENTRYPOINT article very helpful to understand the difference between them:

RUN - RUN instruction allows you to install your application and packages required for it. It executes any commands on top of the current image and creates a new layer by committing the results. Often you will find multiple RUN instructions in a Dockerfile.

CMD - CMD instruction allows you to set a default command, which will be executed only when you run container without specifying a command. If Docker container runs with a command, the default command will be ignored. If Dockerfile has more than one CMD instruction, all but last
CMD instructions are ignored.

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  • I'm confused here: I thought dependencies will be actually installed only after container is up. In the docker build stage, we haven't started the container, then how docker is able to pull down the dependencies into the result container?
    – torez233
    Feb 10, 2023 at 2:33
  • Thank you for being the only person who tried to answer the OP question. I don't understand why so many people feel the need to create noise when what we need is valuable information.
    – Maxx
    Feb 5 at 15:29
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The existing answers cover most of what anyone looking at this question would need. So I'll just cover some niche areas for CMD and RUN.

CMD: Duplicates are Allowed but Wasteful

GingerBeer makes an important point: you won't get any errors if you put in more than one CMD - but it's wasteful to do so. I'd like to elaborate with an example:

FROM busybox
CMD echo "Executing CMD"
CMD echo "Executing CMD 2"

If you build this into an image and run a container in this image, then as GingerBeer states, only the last CMD will be heeded. So the output of that container will be:

Executing CMD 2

The way I think of it is that "CMD" is setting a single global variable for the entire image that is being built, so successive "CMD" statements simply overwrite any previous writes to that global variable, and in the final image that's built the last one to write wins. Since a Dockerfile executes in order from top to bottom, we know that the bottom-most CMD is the one gets this final "write" (metaphorically speaking).

RUN: Commands May not Execute if Images are Cached

A subtle point to notice about RUN is that it's treated as a pure function even if there are side-effects, and is thus cached. What this means is that if RUN had some side effects that don't change the resultant image, and that image has already been cached, the RUN won't be executed again and so the side effects won't happen on subsequent builds. For example, take this Dockerfile:

FROM busybox
RUN echo "Just echo while you work"

First time you run it, you'll get output such as this, with different alphanumeric IDs:

docker build -t example/run-echo .
Sending build context to Docker daemon  9.216kB
Step 1/2 : FROM busybox
 ---> be5888e67be6
Step 2/2 : RUN echo "Just echo while you work"
 ---> Running in ed37d558c505
Just echo while you work
Removing intermediate container ed37d558c505
 ---> 6f46f7a393d8
Successfully built 6f46f7a393d8
Successfully tagged example/run-echo:latest

Notice that the echo statement was executed in the above. Second time you run it, it uses the cache, and you won't see any echo in the output of the build:

docker build -t example/run-echo .
Sending build context to Docker daemon  9.216kB
Step 1/2 : FROM busybox
 ---> be5888e67be6
Step 2/2 : RUN echo "Just echo while you work"
 ---> Using cache
 ---> 6f46f7a393d8
Successfully built 6f46f7a393d8
Successfully tagged example/run-echo:latest
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    I've bumped into the caching landmine you talked about; created much headscratching before I realized how things were broken. I had to use docker-compose build --no-cache to get around the issue. Great answer bud; upvote!
    – F1Linux
    Apr 3, 2022 at 19:27
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RUN - Install Python , your container now has python burnt into its image
CMD - python hello.py , run your favourite script

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  • CMD - Install Python, my container now doest not hast python burnt into its image?
    – Carlos
    Oct 23, 2018 at 3:40
  • RUN will create an image layer of python , CMD will simply execute the command not create the image Oct 25, 2018 at 13:25
  • CMD does not execute anything at build time, but specifies the intended command for the image. -Doc
    – mhash17
    Feb 28, 2023 at 1:30
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Note: Don’t confuse RUN with CMD. RUN actually runs a command and commits the result; CMD does not execute anything at build time, but specifies the intended command for the image.

from docker file reference

https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd

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  • So much confusion could be avoided if this were the accepted answer. This is the only thing an engineer really needs to know.
    – Maxx
    Feb 5 at 15:32
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RUN Command: RUN command will basically, execute the default command, when we are building the image. It also will commit the image changes for next step.

There can be more than 1 RUN command, to aid in process of building a new image.

CMD Command: CMD commands will just set the default command for the new container. This will not be executed at build time.

If a docker file has more than 1 CMD commands then all of them are ignored except the last one. As this command will not execute anything but just set the default command.

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RUN: Can be many, and it is used in build process, e.g. install multiple libraries

CMD: Can only have 1, which is your execute start point (e.g. ["npm", "start"], ["node", "app.js"])

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There has been enough answers on RUN and CMD. I just want to add a few words on ENTRYPOINT. CMD arguments can be overwritten by command line arguments, while ENTRYPOINT arguments are always used.

This article is a good source of information.

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    That link is awesome!
    – Ash K
    Dec 30, 2021 at 4:22
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You should use RUN because it is better for running files on the computer, plus it is easier to use.

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