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Getting Started With Docker

Installing Docker

Befoe beginning, please follow the installation instructions provided for your OS by Docker.

Conceptual Overview of Docker

While not necessary to complete these exercises, you might find it interesting or helpful to read up on the largely conceptual Docker Overview.

Running Commands in a Container

Containers are run from images on a host machine using the following syntax:

docker run [OPTIONS] IMAGE [COMMAND] [ARG...]

You can see what images exist on the host machine with docker images. If the image you are wanting to run from does not exist locally, Docker will attempt to pull it down from DockerHub.

You can see what containers are running on the host machine with docker ps. You can see all containers on a host machine, running and stopped, with docker ps -a.

  • Look at what images, if any, are currently stored on the host machine you are using
  • Run a container using the alpine image, issuing the command echo hello world
  • Look again at what images are currently stored on the host machine
  • Observe if there are any running or any stopped containers on the host machine
  • Run a container using the alpine image that uses pwd to print the default directory inside the container
  • Run a container using the alpine image that uses ls to observe the contents of the default directory inside the container
  • Run a container using the alpine image that uses cat to observe the contents of the /etc/hosts file inside the container

When you want to issue commands that require piping or redirection, you should use the sh -c "<commands>" syntax rather than issuing commands directory.

  • Run a container using the alpine image that uses grep to print the lines of /etc/hosts containing 127

Provisioning a TTY to Interact Inside a Container

Using the options -i and -t, you can provision an interactive TTY. Used in conjunction with a command that results in a command line, such as sh (which you can expect to be available on most all containers) or bash, or python or node or redis-cli or mongo, you can interact with the command line inside of a container.

  • Run a container using the alpine image that provisions an interactive TTY and invokes the sh command

Container Cleanup

You might notice (using docker ps -a) that containers are starting to pile up. You can remove containers with docker rm [CONTAINER-NAME-OR-ID]. To remove stopped containers in mass consider the one-liner docker rm $(docker ps -aq)

  • Clean up your stopped containers, first one at a time and then in mass

Committing Modified Containers to Build a New Image

While containers are run from images, new images are built by taking snapshots of a given container. When you make modifications inside of a container, you can commit those changes to a new image using the syntax docker commit [CONTAINER-NAME-OR-ID] [NEW-IMAGE-TAG]. Also, when running a container, you can use the --name [NAME] option to give the container a name of your choosing, rather than Docker's randomly generated one.

  • Run a container from the alpine image that uses touch to create a new file within it. Give the container the name modified
  • Commit the modified container to a new image called my-new-image. Confirm the image is now present on your host machine
  • Run a container from the my-new-image image that issues a command confirming the file you touched exists

Running a Persistent Command Inside a Container

Docker containers will stop as soon as the command that was issued within them completes. So far all the commands we have issued have been one off commands. By issuing a persistent command, the container will continue to run. Often when running containers with persistent commands, you'll want to use the -d flag to run it in the background.

You can look at the logs for a running or stopped container with docker logs [CONTAINER]. To follow the logs of a container add the -f flag.

  • Run a command from the alpine image, in the background, with the name pinger, that uses ping google.com as its command
  • Confirm that the container is running
  • Look at the logs for the pinger container
  • Follow the logs for the pinger container

Issuing Commands in a Running Container

Especially with running containers, you might wish to execute a command within it while it is running. This is done with docker exec [OPTIONS] CONTAINER COMMAND [ARGS]

  • Issue a one off command inside your running pinger container, such as uname

Stopping and Removing a Running Container

Before you can remove a running container you must stop it with docker stop CONTAINER. Alternatively you can pass the -f flag into docker rm.

  • Stop and remove the pinger container

Building a New Image With a Dockerfile

Typically, we build new images by leaving instructions for building them within a special file called Dockerfile, which always contains instructions for an image to build this new image FROM, and then often, a default CMD for a container run from this new image to use. Once we have a Dockerfile, we build a new image with docker build -t IMAGE-TAG PATH-TO-DOCKERFILE

You will use the following contents for a Dockerfile.

FROM alpine
CMD ["ping", "google.com"]
  • Using this Dockerfile, build a new image with the tag pinger.
  • Run a container named my-pinger using the newly built pinger image. You do not need to issue a command since the Dockerfile for pinger gave a default
  • Confirm your container is running. Look at its logs and then clean it up.
  • Remove the newly built pinger image using docker rmi IMAGE

Building an Image With Application Code

Typically you'll want to build a new image that contains application code. Write the following python script, which you will be building into an image:

hello.py

print("hello")

In order to run python code inside a container, we should build our images with an image that already has python installed.

  • Interact with a python interpreter inside a container with python installed by issuing docker run -it jfloff/alpine-python:3.4 python

In order to house our application code inside an image we will modify the Dockerfile with instructions for placing our application code within the image we are building.

Dockerfile

FROM python:3.5
RUN mkdir app
ADD hello.py /app
WORKDIR /app
CMD ["python", "hello.py"]

docker build -t hello-py . docker run hello-py [change the file, rebuild and run]

Mounting a Volume Into a Container

docker run -v $PWD:/app h ello-py [change the file and run]

Using Docker Compose to Build and Image and Run a Container

docker-compose.yml

version: "2"

services:
  greeter:
    build: .
``

docker-compose up

docker-compose.yml

version: "2"

services: greeter: build: . volumes: - ./:/app


## Communicating Between Containers Using Docker Compose

docker-compose.yml

version: "2"

services: ping: image: pinger pong: image: pinger


docker-compose up -d
docker ps
docker-compose logs -f

docker exec -it <ping> sh
ping pong

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