133

docker-compose run has a flag --rm that auto removes the container after run. I am wondering if theres an equivalent config with docker-compose.yml for a specific service, as one of which services i got in yml is a one off build process which should just output the compile file and disappear itself.

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  • 15
    still not possible in 2018-11 :( don't waste time searching like me (at least not in the next few months ;)) Nov 23, 2018 at 9:10
  • 4
    I'm using docker-compose up -d && docker-compose rm -f for a similar scenario.
    – rebornx
    Feb 26, 2019 at 11:10
  • @MauriceMüller Don't you know if there're any updates?
    – St.Antario
    Sep 29, 2020 at 17:54

5 Answers 5

80

I haven't found any option to help you define this behavior in the docker-compose.yml file and I think the explanation is the that it will break how some of the docker-compose ... commands are supposed to work.

More on this up/down , start/stop thing:

docker-compose up builds, (re)creates, starts, and attaches to containers for a service.

Since your images are built and the containers of your service have started, you can then use docker-compose stop and docker-compose start to start/stop your service. This is different from docker-compose down which:

Stops containers and removes containers, networks, volumes, and images created by up.

Problem with what you are trying to do:

If you docker-compose up and one of your containers finishes its task and gets (auto)removed, then you can't docker-compose stop and docker-compose start again. The removed container will not be there to start it again.


You might want to take a look at:

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    Ya thats confirmed my research accepted as answer. It be nice if theres an option since one of the container just there to do one off webpack production build. Guess need to write bash for it
    – Fan Cheung
    Nov 10, 2017 at 14:53
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    Check if docker-compose rm fits your needs... https://docs.docker.com/compose/reference/rm/
    – tgogos
    Nov 10, 2017 at 14:54
55

Simply run docker-compose up && docker-compose rm -fsv 🙂

👉 https://docs.docker.com/compose/reference/rm

Removes stopped service containers

--force , -f      Don't ask to confirm removal
--stop , -s       Stop the containers, if required, before removing
--volumes , -v    Remove any anonymous volumes attached to containers
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  • 48
    This helps but I still wish docker-compose up had a --rm flag like docker run has.
    – clemlatz
    Sep 4, 2020 at 12:50
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    @Iwazaru docker-compose up -V? Dec 7, 2021 at 15:42
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    With this approacth you can't remove a container if you stop the it using SIGTERM (CTRL+C)
    – James Bond
    Jun 2, 2022 at 10:00
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    I don't get it, when is "docker-compose up" supposed to exit with 0 code to run the "rm" part? I'll probably stick to NPM "concurrently" coupled with 2 Docker commands for my simple use case (running a MongoDB and a RedisDb during app development)
    – Eric Burel
    Sep 8, 2022 at 12:21
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    This only removes the container if the process ends successfully. Jan 5 at 23:18
14

It's been quite some time since this question was posted, but I thought it would be informative to share something that worked for my case, in 2022 :) But keep in mind that this solution still does not remove old containers, as the original author intended to achieve.

docker-compose up --force-recreate -V

In my case, I have a small Redis cluster where I want the data to be completely erased after I stop the servers. Only using --force-recreate didn't do the trick, because the anonymous volume is still reused. That's where -V comes in.

7

My solution to this was to create a little bash script that automatically removes containers afterwards.

If you're on macOS, you can put this script in usr/local/bin. Assuming it's named dco, you can then run chmod +x usr/local/bin/dco to make it executable. On Windows, I have no idea how to get this working, but on Linux it should be similar.

#! /bin/bash

# check for -d, --detached
DETACHED=false
for (( i=1; i <= "$#"; i++ )); do
  ARG="${!i}"
  case "$ARG" in
    -d|--detach)
      DETACHED=true
      break
      ;;
  esac
done

if [[ $1 == "run" ]] && [[ $DETACHED == false ]]; then
    docker-compose run --rm "${@:2}"
elif [[ $1 == "up" ]] && [[ $DETACHED == false ]]; then
    docker-compose up "${@:2}"; docker-compose down
else
    docker-compose "${@:1}"
fi

Edit: Updated the script so that detached mode will work normally, added break to the loop suggested by artu-hnrq

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  • Nice solution! Yet your for stills looping after turn DETACHED on. A little improvement could be done by using break
    – artu-hnrq
    Jul 1, 2021 at 6:28
1

I'm not sure I understand, docker-compose run --user is an option, and the docker-compose.yml supports the user key (http://docs.docker.com/compose/yml/#working95dir-entrypoint-user-hostname-domainname-mem95limit-privileged-restart-stdin95open-tty-cpu95shares).

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  • docker-compose -rm up is not supported as far as I researched. Wonder if there's rm key available in docker-compose.yml. I looked through the document can't see to find it.
    – Fan Cheung
    Nov 10, 2017 at 1:54

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