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tutorials vrx_docker_manual_run
M1chaelM edited this page May 30, 2023
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The tutorial explains how to run a competitor image manually (i.e. without
using the run_trial.bash
script). This may help troubleshoot in cases where:
- the container is exiting too quickly to log into it;
- you want to avoid exiting when the trial times out;
- you want to test a change without running a whole trial.
- These instructions refer separately to both the competitor image and the container generated from the image.
- As a reminder, the image is an inert package containing executables, their dependencies, and anything needed to set up their environment.
- A container is a runtime instance of an image.
- List your images to find the ID of the image you want to run:
Copy the value in the
docker image ls
IMAGE ID
column - Use the run command to launch a container from your image:
docker run -it <IMAGE_ID>
- The
-it
options create an interactive terminal. This makes it easier to see output from your container or close it usingCTRL+C
. - Alternatively, you can use
<REPOSITORY_NAME>:TAG
instead of<IMAGE_ID>
.
- The
If the run command above causes your container to launch and remain running, you can open an interactive bash terminal into it as we did in the previous tutorial.
- First, get the container ID:
Copy the value in the
docker container ls
CONTAINER ID
column. - From a new terminal, run:
docker exec -it bash <CONTAINER_ID>
If your container is exiting too quickly to examine, you may want to override the startup command so it launches an interactive bash session instead.
- We can do this with the
--entrypoint
option:docker run -it --entrypoint="/bin/bash" <CONTAINER_ID>
- Once you are logged in, you can call your startup script manually to debug.
Back: Examine a Running Container | Up: VRX Docker Image Overview | Next: Run a Trial Manually |
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