bash file in docker isn't executing - bash

I want my bash file to run whenever I the run the docker image, so firstly I created the Dockerfile inside a new directory say demo and in that directory demo I created a new directory home and in that directory I’ve my bash file - testfile.sh.
Here is my docker file -
FROM ubuntu
MAINTAINER Aman Kh
COPY . /home
CMD /home/testfile.sh
On building it with command - sudo docker build -t amankh99/hello .
the following output was received -
Sending build context to Docker daemon 3.584kB
Step 1/4 : FROM ubuntu
—> 0458a4468cbc
Step 2/4 : MAINTAINER Aman Kh
—> Using cache
—> 98fbe31ed233
Step 3/4 : COPY . /home
—> Using cache
—> 7e52ff3439e2
Step 4/4 : CMD /home/testfile.sh
—> Using cache
—> 1d2660df6387
Successfully built 1d2660df6387
Successfully tagged amankh99/hello:latest
But when I run it with command
sudo docker run --name test -it amankh99/hello
it says
bin/sh: 1: /home/testfile.sh: not found
After having build successfully why it is unable to found the file.
I want to convert this container in image and want to push on docker hub, so that when I can run this with simple run command as we run the hello-world(sudo docker run hello-world) , I get my bash file executed, so what changes in dockerfile can I do to acheive this.

OP's Description
I created the Dockerfile inside a new directory say demo and in that directory demo I created a new directory home and in that directory I’ve my bash file - testfile.sh.
So according to your description
demo/
+--- Dockerfile
+--- home/
+--- testfile.sh
You need to COPY home directory into /home
FROM ubuntu
COPY home /home
CMD /home/testfile.sh
If you do this COPY . /home, your home/testfile.sh will be copy into /home/home/testfile.sh
If you want copy only your testfile.sh, then do this
COPY home/testfile.sh /home/

It either can find the file and it just does not know what to do with it because the interpreter of your script ( #!.... on the first line of your script) is not present in your docker image, or it cannot find the file because it was not copied.
You can verify this by passing /bin/bash as final argument to your docker run command, and run ls -l /home/testfile.sh and/or /home/testfile.sh on the prompt.

Related

Attempting to use a volume in my docker container (windows) and when I run docker run it does not appear to work

A simple bash script whereby a user can search through a folder and organise their files by type. For this I need to give my container access to my C drive and navigate to the right directory where the code is executed and where the folders are.
Since it s windows I know I need to use winpty and use \ rather than / when navigating.
winpty docker run -it -v basic-vol:/C:\Users\XYZ\dev\repos\filefind filefind:latest
I am not sure why this is not working. Here is my Dockerfile too:
FROM ubuntu
RUN chmod 700 .
WORKDIR /app
COPY . .
VOLUME [ "/c/Users/XYZ/dev/repos/"]
#when conatiner starts what is the executable
ENTRYPOINT ["/bin/bash", "file-find.sh"]
Would love your help here folks

Where should I put input file in docker environment?

I am a newbie in Docker. I introduced the Docker environment in WSL2 (Windows10Home). I do not wish to use the VSCode for simpler implementation. I would like to rather use the Ubuntu terminal. When I try to compile my LaTeX file (my_input.tex) with a Docker image (https://hub.docker.com/r/weichuntsai/texlive-small), but it complains that there is no such a tex file.
docker run --name mylatex -dt -v /home/myname:/home weichuntsai/texlive-small:1.1.0
When I send the following command in the terminal, he complains of no corresponding file.
txrun my_input.tex xelex, although I created this tex file in the home
(~, or home/myname) directory.
Sending ls returns tex.mf only without showing my_input.tex unfortunately.
Sending pwd returns root with some reasons. I have no idea why it returns root, not home/myname.
It may be due to my insufficient understanding of Docker, but I appreciate your kind advice on
that question.
N.B. I became to know that Docker images are located in /var/lib/docker.
To change this directory, one must stop the Docker daemon with
sudo service docker stop. Then one must edit /etc/docker/daemon.json.
{
"data-root": "/to/some/path"
}
Checking Dockerfile of your image shows that working directory is root https://hub.docker.com/r/weichuntsai/texlive-small/dockerfile
Just mount your home to container root:
docker run --name mylatex -dt -v /home/myname:/root weichuntsai/texlive-small:1.1.0
OR inside container change to home by cd /home
Checking Dockerfile of your image shows that working directory is root https://hub.docker.com/r/weichuntsai/texlive-small/dockerfile
Just mount your home to container root:
docker run --name mylatex -dt -v "/home/me":"/file" weichuntsai/texlive-small:1.1.0
OR inside container change to home by cd /home
and then you access your file like
docker exec -it mylatex bash
cd /file
ls

Result of .sh script RUN from Dockerfile is not saved to image

After RUN ["./run.sh"], a folder produced by run.sh is visible from inside the script but lost once Docker continues.
Expected behaviour:
I would like to have access to the public/ folder, which is generated by the run.sh script.
Dockerfile
...
RUN mkdir -p /opt/site
WORKDIR /opt/site
VOLUME /opt/site
COPY . .
RUN ["chmod", "+x", "./run.sh"]
RUN ["./run.sh"]
RUN pwd
RUN ls
RUN ls public
FROM nginx
COPY --from=build-stage /opt/site/public /usr/share/nginx/html
Script
#!/usr/bin/env bash
rm -rf public/ node_modules/ node_modules/.bin/ package-lock.json yarn.lock
npm install
ls
touch newfile.txt
npm run build
ls
ls from inside the run.sh script after build. The public folder is present.
...
Generated public/sw.js, which will precache 6 files, totaling 197705 bytes.
info Done building in 44.842 sec
*ls*
Dockerfile
config
gatsby-config.js
gatsby-node.js
newfile.txt
node_modules
package-lock.json
package.json
postcss.config.js
public
run.sh
src
static
tailwind.css
tailwind.js
ls from inside the Dockerfile. The public folder is missing and trying to interact with it leads to failure.
Removing intermediate container 1692fb171673
---> 474d83267ccb
Step 10/14 : RUN pwd
---> Running in 7c351b151904
/opt/site
Removing intermediate container 7c351b151904
---> bae37da8b513
Step 11/14 : RUN ls
---> Running in 384daf575cae
Dockerfile
config
gatsby-config.js
gatsby-node.js
package-lock.json
package.json
postcss.config.js
run.sh
src
static
tailwind.css
tailwind.js
Removing intermediate container 384daf575cae
---> 1f6743a4adc1
Step 12/14 : RUN ls public
---> Running in 7af84c5d72a0
ls: cannot access public: No such file or directory
The command '/bin/sh -c ls public' returned a non-zero code: 2
ERROR: Job failed: exit code 2
You've created a volume with the selected directory:
VOLUME /opt/site
When defined in an image, a volume will get created for every container created from that image. If you do not specify a source for the volume (which you cannot at build time), docker will create an anonymous volume. And with both a named and anonymous volume, docker will initialize the contents to that of the image at that location.
The result of a RUN command is the following:
create a temporary container
that temporary container runs your requested command and verifies the exit code before continuing
if successful, docker captures the result of a diff between the image and container. This is mainly the container specific read/write filesystem layer. However it does not include any external volumes.
This behaviour is documented by docker:
Changing the volume from within the Dockerfile: If any build steps change the data within the volume after it has been declared, those changes will be discarded.
My standard recommendation is to remove any volume definition from the Dockerfile. If you need a volume, define it at runtime with something like a docker compose file. This allows the image to be extended, and prevents anonymous volumes from cluttering the filesystem.

How to fix "sh: 0: Can't open start.sh" in docker file?

I have created a docker image which contains the following CMD:
CMD ["sh", "start.sh"]
When I run the docker image I use the following command inside a Makefile
docker run --rm -v ${PWD}:/selenium $(DOCKER_IMAGE)
which copies the files from the current (host-)directory to the docker's /selenium folder. The files include files for selenium tests, as well as the file start.sh. But after the container has started, I get immediately the error
"sh: 0: Can't open start.sh"
Maybe the host volume is mounted inside docker after the command has been run? Anything else that can explain this error, and how to fix it?
Maybe there is a way to run more than one command inside docker to see whats going on? Like
CMD ["ls", ";", "pwd", ";", "sh", "start.sh"]
Update
when I use the following command i the Dockerfile
CMD ["ls"]
I get the error
ls: cannot open directory '.': Permission denied
Extra information
Docker version 1.12.6
Entrypoint: WORKDIR /work
Your mounting your volume to the /selenium folder in your container. Therefor the start.sh file isn't going to be in your working directory its going to be in /selenium. You want to mount your volume to a selenium folder inside your working directory then make sure the command references this new path.
If you use docker-compose the YAML-file to run the container would look something like this:
version: '3'
services:
start:
image: ${DOCKER_IMAGE}
command: sh selenium/start.sh
volumes:
- .:/work/selenium
If you try and perform each step manually, using docker run with bash,
docker exec -it (container name) /bin/bash
It will be more easier and quicker to look at the errors, and you can change the permissions, view where the file is located, before running the .sh file and try again.
Check the permission using ls -l.
Give the permission 777 using sudo chmod 777 file_name.
Repeat for other files you might find.

How to mount a host directory in a Docker container

I am trying to mount a host directory into a Docker container so that any updates done on the host is reflected into the Docker containers.
Where am I doing something wrong. Here is what I did:
kishore$ cat Dockerfile
FROM ubuntu:trusty
RUN apt-get update
RUN apt-get -y install git curl vim
CMD ["/bin/bash"]
WORKDIR /test_container
VOLUME ["/test_container"]
kishore$ tree
.
├── Dockerfile
└── main_folder
├── tfile1.txt
├── tfile2.txt
├── tfile3.txt
└── tfile4.txt
1 directory, 5 files
kishore$ pwd
/Users/kishore/tdock
kishore$ docker build --tag=k3_s3:latest .
Uploading context 7.168 kB
Uploading context
Step 0 : FROM ubuntu:trusty
---> 99ec81b80c55
Step 1 : RUN apt-get update
---> Using cache
---> 1c7282005040
Step 2 : RUN apt-get -y install git curl vim
---> Using cache
---> aed48634e300
Step 3 : CMD ["/bin/bash"]
---> Running in d081b576878d
---> 65db8df48595
Step 4 : WORKDIR /test_container
---> Running in 5b8d2ccd719d
---> 250369b30e1f
Step 5 : VOLUME ["/test_container"]
---> Running in 72ca332d9809
---> 163deb2b1bc5
Successfully built 163deb2b1bc5
Removing intermediate container b8bfcb071441
Removing intermediate container d081b576878d
Removing intermediate container 5b8d2ccd719d
Removing intermediate container 72ca332d9809
kishore$ docker run -d -v /Users/kishore/main_folder:/test_container k3_s3:latest
c9f9a7e09c54ee1c2cc966f15c963b4af320b5203b8c46689033c1ab8872a0eakishore$ docker run -i -t k3_s3:latest /bin/bash
root#0f17e2313a46:/test_container# ls -al
total 8
drwx------ 2 root root 4096 Apr 29 05:15 .
drwxr-xr-x 66 root root 4096 Apr 29 05:15 ..
root#0f17e2313a46:/test_container# exit
exitkishore$ docker -v
Docker version 0.9.1, build 867b2a9
I don't know how to check boot2docker version
Questions, issues facing:
How do I need to link the main_folder to the test_container folder present inside the docker container?
I need to make this automatically. How do I to do that without really using the run -d -v command?
What happens if the boot2docker crashes? Where are the Docker files stored (apart from Dockerfile)?
There are a couple ways you can do this. The simplest way to do so is to use the dockerfile ADD command like so:
ADD . /path/inside/docker/container
However, any changes made to this directory on the host after building the dockerfile will not show up in the container. This is because when building a container, docker compresses the directory into a .tar and uploads that context into the container permanently.
The second way to do this is the way you attempted, which is to mount a volume. Due to trying to be as portable as possible you cannot map a host directory to a docker container directory within a dockerfile, because the host directory can change depending on which machine you are running on. To map a host directory to a docker container directory you need to use the -v flag when using docker run, e.g.,:
# Run a container using the `alpine` image, mount the `/tmp`
# directory from your host into the `/container/directory`
# directory in your container, and run the `ls` command to
# show the contents of that directory.
docker run \
-v /tmp:/container/directory \
alpine \
ls /container/directory
The user of this question was using Docker version 0.9.1, build 867b2a9, I will give you an answer for docker version >= 17.06.
What you want, keep local directory synchronized within container directory, is accomplished by mounting the volume with type bind. This will bind the source (your system) and the target (at the docker container) directories. It's almost the same as mounting a directory on linux.
According to Docker documentation, the appropriate command to mount is now mount instead of -v. Here's its documentation:
--mount: Consists of multiple key-value pairs, separated by commas. Each key/value pair takes the form of a <key>=<value> tuple. The --mount syntax is more verbose than -v or --volume, but the order of the keys is not significant, and the value of the flag is easier to understand.
The type of the mount, which can be bind, volume, or tmpfs. (We are going to use bind)
The source of the mount. For bind mounts, this is the path to the file or directory on the Docker daemon host. May be specified as source or src.
The destination takes as its value the path where the file or directory will be mounted in the container. May be specified as destination, dst, or target.
So, to mount the the current directory (source) with /test_container (target) we are going to use:
docker run -it --mount src="$(pwd)",target=/test_container,type=bind k3_s3
If these mount parameters have spaces you must put quotes around them. When I know they don't, I would use `pwd` instead:
docker run -it --mount src=`pwd`,target=/test_container,type=bind k3_s3
You will also have to deal with file permission, see this article.
you can use -v option from cli, this facility is not available via Dockerfile
docker run -t -i -v <host_dir>:<container_dir> ubuntu /bin/bash
where host_dir is the directory from host which you want to mount.
you don't need to worry about directory of container if it doesn't exist docker will create it.
If you do any changes in host_dir from host machine (under root privilege) it will be visible to container and vice versa.
2 successive mounts:
I guess many posts here might be using two boot2docker, the reason you don't see anything is that you are mounting a directory from boot2docker, not from your host.
You basically need 2 successive mounts:
the first one to mount a directory from your host to your system
the second to mount the new directory from boot2docker to your container like this:
1) Mount local system on boot2docker
sudo mount -t vboxsf hostfolder /boot2dockerfolder
2) Mount boot2docker file on linux container
docker run -v /boot2dockerfolder:/root/containerfolder -i -t imagename
Then when you ls inside the containerfolder you will see the content of your hostfolder.
Is it possible that you use docker on OS X via boot2docker or something similar.
I've made the same experience - the command is correct but nothing (sensible) is mounted in the container, anyway.
As it turns out - it's already explained in the docker documentation. When you type docker run -v /var/logs/on/host:/var/logs/in/container ... then /var/logs/on/host is actually mapped from the boot2docker VM-image, not your Mac.
You'll have to pipe the shared folder through your VM to your actual host (the Mac in my case).
For those who wants to mount a folder in current directory:
docker run -d --name some-container -v ${PWD}/folder:/var/folder ubuntu
I'm just experimenting with getting my SailsJS app running inside a Docker container to keep my physical machine clean.
I'm using the following command to mount my SailsJS/NodeJS application under /app:
cd my_source_code_folder
docker run -it -p 1337:1337 -v $(pwd):/app my_docker/image_with_nodejs_etc
[UPDATE] As of ~June 2017, Docker for Mac takes care of all the annoying parts of this where you have to mess with VirtualBox. It lets you map basically everything on your local host using the /private prefix. More info here. [/UPDATE]
All the current answers talk about Boot2docker. Since that's now deprecated in favor of docker-machine, this works for docker-machine:
First, ssh into the docker-machine vm and create the folder we'll be mapping to:
docker-machine ssh $MACHINE_NAME "sudo mkdir -p \"$VOL_DIR\""
Now share the folder to VirtualBox:
WORKDIR=$(basename "$VOL_DIR")
vboxmanage sharedfolder add "$MACHINE_NAME" --name "$WORKDIR" --hostpath "$VOL_DIR" --transient
Finally, ssh into the docker-machine again and mount the folder we just shared:
docker-machine ssh $MACHINE_NAME "sudo mount -t vboxsf -o uid=\"$U\",gid=\"$G\" \"$WORKDIR\" \"$VOL_DIR\""
Note: for UID and GID you can basically use whatever integers as long as they're not already taken.
This is tested as of docker-machine 0.4.1 and docker 1.8.3 on OS X El Capitan.
Using command-line :
docker run -it --name <WHATEVER> -p <LOCAL_PORT>:<CONTAINER_PORT> -v <LOCAL_PATH>:<CONTAINER_PATH> -d <IMAGE>:<TAG>
Using docker-compose.yaml :
version: '2'
services:
cms:
image: <IMAGE>:<TAG>
ports:
- <LOCAL_PORT>:<CONTAINER_PORT>
volumes:
- <LOCAL_PATH>:<CONTAINER_PATH>
Assume :
IMAGE: k3_s3
TAG: latest
LOCAL_PORT: 8080
CONTAINER_PORT: 8080
LOCAL_PATH: /volume-to-mount
CONTAINER_PATH: /mnt
Examples :
First create /volume-to-mount. (Skip if exist)
$ mkdir -p /volume-to-mount
docker-compose -f docker-compose.yaml up -d
version: '2'
services:
cms:
image: ghost-cms:latest
ports:
- 8080:8080
volumes:
- /volume-to-mount:/mnt
Verify your container :
docker exec -it CONTAINER_ID ls -la /mnt
docker run -v /host/directory:/container/directory -t IMAGE-NAME /bin/bash
docker run -v /root/shareData:/home/shareData -t kylemanna/openvpn /bin/bash
In my system I've corrected the answer from nhjk, it works flawless when you add the -t flag.
On Mac OS, to mount a folder /Users/<name>/projects/ on your mac at the root of your container:
docker run -it -v /Users/<name>/projects/:/projects <container_name> bash
ls /projects
If the host is windows 10 then instead of forward slash, use backward slash -
docker run -it -p 12001:80 -v c:\Users\C\Desktop\dockerStorage:/root/sketches
Make sure the host drive is shared (C in this case). In my case I got a prompt asking for share permission after running the command above.
For Windows 10 users, it is important to have the mount point inside the C:/Users/ directory. I tried for hours to get this to work. This post helped but it was not obvious at first as the solution for Windows 10 is a comment to an accepted answer. This is how I did it:
docker run -it -p 12001:80 -v //c/Users/C/Desktop/dockerStorage:/root/sketches \
<your-image-here> /bin/bash
Then to test it, you can do echo TEST > hostTest.txt inside your image. You should be able to see this new file in the local host folder at C:/Users/C/Desktop/dockerStorage/.
As of Docker 18-CE, you can use docker run -v /src/path:/container/path to do 2-way binding of a host folder.
There is a major catch here though if you're working with Windows 10/WSL and have Docker-CE for Windows as your host and then docker-ce client tools in WSL. WSL knows about the entire / filesystem while your Windows host only knows about your drives. Inside WSL, you can use /mnt/c/projectpath, but if you try to docker run -v ${PWD}:/projectpath, you will find in the host that /projectpath/ is empty because on the host /mnt means nothing.
If you work from /c/projectpath though and THEN do docker run -v ${PWD}:/projectpath and you WILL find that in the container, /projectpath will reflect /c/projectpath in realtime. There are no errors or any other ways to detect this issue other than seeing empty mounts inside your guest.
You must also be sure to "share the drive" in the Docker for Windows settings.
Jul 2015 update - boot2docker now supports direct mounting. You can use -v /var/logs/on/host:/var/logs/in/container directly from your Mac prompt, without double mounting
I've been having the same issue.
My command line looked like this:
docker run --rm -i --name $NAME -v `pwd`:/sources:z $NAME
The problem was with 'pwd'. So I changed that to $(pwd):
docker run --rm -i --name $NAME -v $(pwd):/sources:z $NAME
How do I link the main_folder to the test_container folder present inside the docker container?
Your command below is correct, unless your on a mac using boot2docker(depending on future updates) in which case you may find the folder empty. See mattes answer for a tutorial on correcting this.
docker run -d -v /Users/kishore/main_folder:/test_container k3_s3:latest
I need to make this run automatically, how to do that without really
using the run -d -v command.
You can't really get away from using these commands, they are intrinsic to the way docker works. You would be best off putting them into a shell script to save you writing them out repeatedly.
What happens if boot2docker crashes? Where are the docker files stored?
If you manage to use the -v arg and reference your host machine then the files will be safe on your host.
If you've used 'docker build -t myimage .' with a Dockerfile then your files will be baked into the image.
Your docker images, i believe, are stored in the boot2docker-vm. I found this out when my images disappeared when i delete the vm from VirtualBox. (Note, i don't know how Virtualbox works, so the images might be still hidden somewhere else, just not visible to docker).
Had the same problem. Found this in the docker documentation:
Note: The host directory is, by its nature, host-dependent. For this reason, you can’t mount a host directory from Dockerfile, the VOLUME instruction does not support passing a host-dir, because built images should be portable. A host directory wouldn’t be available on all potential hosts.
So, mounting a read/write host directory is only possible with the -v parameter in the docker run command, as the other answers point out correctly.
I found that any directory laying under system directive like /var, /usr, /etc could not be mount under the container.
The directive should be at user's space -v switch instructs docker daemon to mount local directory to the container, for example:
docker run -t -d -v /{local}/{path}:/{container}/{path} --name {container_name} {imagename}
Here's an example with a Windows path:
docker run -P -it --name organizr --mount src="/c/Users/MyUserName/AppData/Roaming/DockerConfigs/Organizr",dst=/config,type=bind organizrtools/organizr-v2:latest
As a side note, during all of this hair pulling, having to wrestle with figuring out, and retyping paths over and over and over again, I decided to whip up a small AutoHotkey script to convert a Windows path to a "Docker Windows" formatted path. This way all I have to do is copy any Windows path that I want to use as a mount point to the clipboard, press the "Apps Key" on the keyboard, and it'll format it into a path format that Docker appreciates.
For example:
Copy this to your clipboard:
C:\Users\My PC\AppData\Roaming\DockerConfigs\Organizr
press the Apps Key while the cursor is where you want it on the command-line, and it'll paste this there:
"/c/Users/My PC/AppData/Roaming/DockerConfigs/Organizr"
Saves a lot to time for me. Here it is for anyone else who may find it useful.
; --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
;
; Docker Utility: Convert a Windows Formatted Path to a Docker Formatter Path
; Useful for (example) when mounting Windows volumes via the command-line.
;
; By: J. Scott Elblein
; Version: 1.0
; Date: 2/5/2019
;
; Usage: Cut or Copy the Windows formatted path to the clipboard, press the AppsKey on your keyboard
; (usually right next to the Windows Key), it'll format it into a 'docker path' and enter it
; into the active window. Easy example usage would be to copy your intended volume path via
; Explorer, place the cursor after the "-v" in your Docker command, press the Apps Key and
; then it'll place the formatted path onto the line for you.
;
; TODO:: I may or may not add anything to this depending on needs. Some ideas are:
;
; - Add a tray menu with the ability to do some things, like just replace the unformatted path
; on the clipboard with the formatted one rather than enter it automatically.
; - Add 'smarter' handling so the it first confirms that the clipboard text is even a path in
; the first place. (would need to be able to handle Win + Mac + Linux)
; - Add command-line handling so the script doesn't need to always be in the tray, you could
; just pass the Windows path to the script, have it format it, then paste and close.
; Also, could have it just check for a path on the clipboard upon script startup, if found
; do it's job, then exit the script.
; - Add an 'all-in-one' action, to copy the selected Windows path, and then output the result.
; - Whatever else comes to mind.
;
; --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#NoEnv
SendMode Input
SetWorkingDir %A_ScriptDir%
AppsKey::
; Create a new var, store the current clipboard contents (should be a Windows path)
NewStr := Clipboard
; Rip out the first 2 chars (should be a drive letter and colon) & convert the letter to lowercase
; NOTE: I could probably replace the following 3 lines with a regexreplace, but atm I'm lazy and in a rush.
tmpVar := SubStr(NewStr, 1, 2)
StringLower, tmpVar, tmpVar
; Replace the uppercase drive letter and colon with the lowercase drive letter and colon
NewStr := StrReplace(NewStr, SubStr(NewStr, 1, 2), tmpVar)
; Replace backslashes with forward slashes
NewStr := StrReplace(NewStr, "\", "/")
; Replace all colons with nothing
NewStr := StrReplace(NewStr, ":", "")
; Remove the last char if it's a trailing forward slash
NewStr := RegExReplace(NewStr, "/$")
; Append a leading forward slash if not already there
if RegExMatch(NewStr, "^/") == 0
NewStr := "/" . NewStr
; If there are any spaces in the path ... wrap in double quotes
if RegExMatch(NewStr, " ") > 0
NewStr := """" . NewStr . """"
; Send the result to the active window
SendInput % NewStr
To get this working in Windows 10 I had to open the Docker Settings window from the system tray and go to the Shared Drives section.
I then checked the box next to C. Docker asked for my desktop credentials to gain authorisation to write to my Users folder.
Then I ran the docker container following examples above and also the example on that settings page, attaching to /data in the container.
docker run -v c:/Users/<user.name>/Desktop/dockerStorage:/data -other -options
boot2docker together with VirtualBox Guest Additions
How to mount /Users into boot2docker
https://medium.com/boot2docker-lightweight-linux-for-docker/boot2docker-together-with-virtualbox-guest-additions-da1e3ab2465c
tl;dr Build your own custom boot2docker.iso with VirtualBox Guest
Additions (see link) or download
http://static.dockerfiles.io/boot2docker-v1.0.1-virtualbox-guest-additions-v4.3.12.iso
and save it to ~/.boot2docker/boot2docker.iso.
Note that in Windows you'll have to provide the absolute path.
Host: Windows 10
Container: Tensorflow Notebook
Below worked for me.
docker run -t -i -v D:/projects/:/home/chankeypathak/work -p 8888:8888 jupyter/tensorflow-notebook /bin/bash
i had same issues , i was trying to mount C:\Users\ folder on docker
this is how i did it Docker Toolbox command line
$ docker run -it --name <containername> -v /c/Users:/myVolData <imagename>
You can also do this with Portainer web application for a different visual experience.
First pull the Portainer image:
docker pull portainer/portainer
Then create a volume for Portainer:
docker volume create portainer_data
Also create a Portainer container:
docker run -d -p 8000:8000 -p 9000:9000 --name=portainer --restart=always -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -v portainer_data:/data portainer/portainer
You will be able to access the web app with your browser at this URL: "http://localhost:9000". At the first login, you will be prompted to set your Portainer admin credentials.
In the web app, follow these menus and buttons: (Container > Add container > Fill settings > Deploy Container)
I had trouble to create a "mount" volume with Portainer and I realized I had to click "bind" when creating my container's volume. Below is an illustration of the volume binding settings that worked for my container creation with a mounted volume binded to the host.
P.S.: I'm using Docker 19.035 and Portainer 1.23.1
I had the same requirement to mount host directory from container and I used volume mount command. But during testing noticed that it's creating files inside container too but after some digging found that they are just symbolic links and actual file system used form host machine.
Quoting from the Official Website:
Make sure you don’t have any previous getting-started containers running.
Run the following command from the app directory.
x86-64 Mac or Linux device:
docker run -dp 3000:3000 \
-w /app -v "$(pwd):/app" \
node:12-alpine \
sh -c "yarn install && yarn run dev"
Windows (PowerShell):
docker run -dp 3000:3000 `
-w /app -v "$(pwd):/app" `
node:12-alpine `
sh -c "yarn install && yarn run dev"
Aple silicon Mac or another ARM64 device:
docker run -dp 3000:3000 \
-w /app -v "$(pwd):/app" \
node:12-alpine \
sh -c "apk add --no-cache python2 g++ make && yarn install && yarn run dev"
Explaining:
dp 3000:3000 - same as before. Run in detached (background) mode and create a port mapping
w /app - sets the “working directory” or the current directory that the command will run from
v "$(pwd):/app" - bind mount the current directory from the host into the /app directory in the container
node:12-alpine - the image to use.
Note that this is the base image for our app from the Dockerfile sh -c "yarn install && yarn run dev" - the command.
We’re starting a shell using sh (alpine doesn’t have bash) and running yarn install to install all dependencies and then running yarn run dev. If we look in the package.json, we’ll see that the dev script is starting nodemon.

Resources