We have a build pipeline that first does a docker build using a dockerfile. That dockerfile has a number of COPY commands. We also have a later step that does a docker run, with 'cp' command, as follows:
docker run --volume /hostDirA:/containerDirB --workdir /folderB dockerRepo:somebuildnum cp -R /hostDirC/. /containerDirB
First, before the main point, it is my understanding that the cp command is copying from one folder to another, both folders on the container. Is that a correct understanding?
Second, why would a cp be done in this way in the docker run when COPY is already being done in the docker build via the dockerfile? Are there valid reasons why we wouldn't move this cp to be inside the dockerfile?
COPYis appropriate when you're creating a new layer.cpis appropriate when you're copying content out of the container onto a volume. To be clear,docker run cpdoes not create a new layer. Thus, it is not a substitute for aCOPYdirective.containerDirBhas a symlink in its path that should make it land on a volume, that too would make this make more sense.cphaving occurred, how and when is it invoked, does it actually work as intended? -- which is not something suited to our format.cpsource folder is something from the image (not a host directory), and its destination folder is the second--volumedirectory, then this seems like it's trying to copy data out of an image build on to the host.