How to pass arguments to Shell Script through docker run

There are a few things interacting here:

  1. docker run your_image arg1 arg2 will replace the value of CMD with arg1 arg2. That's a full replacement of the CMD, not appending more values to it. This is why you often see docker run some_image /bin/bash to run a bash shell in the container.

  2. When you have both an ENTRYPOINT and a CMD value defined, docker starts the container by concatenating the two and running that concatenated command. So if you define your entrypoint to be file.sh, you can now run the container with additional args that will be passed as args to file.sh.

  3. Entrypoints and Commands in docker have two syntaxes, a string syntax that will launch a shell, and a json syntax that will perform an exec. The shell is useful to handle things like IO redirection, chaining multiple commands together (with things like &&), variable substitution, etc. However, that shell gets in the way with signal handling (if you've ever seen a 10 second delay to stop a container, this is often the cause) and with concatenating an entrypoint and command together. If you define your entrypoint as a string, it would run /bin/sh -c "file.sh", which alone is fine. But if you have a command defined as a string too, you'll see something like /bin/sh -c "file.sh" /bin/sh -c "arg1 arg2" as the command being launched inside your container, not so good. See the table here for more on how these two options interact

  4. The shell -c option only takes a single argument. Everything after that would get passed as $1, $2, etc, to that single argument, but not into an embedded shell script unless you explicitly passed the args. I.e. /bin/sh -c "file.sh $1 $2" "arg1" "arg2" would work, but /bin/sh -c "file.sh" "arg1" "arg2" would not since file.sh would be called with no args.

Putting that all together, the common design is:

FROM ubuntu:14.04
COPY ./file.sh /
RUN chmod 755 /file.sh
# Note the json syntax on this next line is strict, double quotes, and any syntax
# error will result in a shell being used to run the line.
ENTRYPOINT ["file.sh"]

And you then run that with:

docker run your_image arg1 arg2

There's a fair bit more detail on this at:

  • https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/#cmd-default-command-or-options
  • https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#exec-form-entrypoint-example

Use the same file.sh

#!/bin/bash
echo $1

Build the image using the existing Dockerfile:

docker build -t test .

Run the image with arguments abc or xyz or something else.

docker run -ti --rm test /file.sh abc

docker run -ti --rm test /file.sh xyz

With Docker, the proper way to pass this sort of information is through environment variables.

So with the same Dockerfile, change the script to

#!/bin/bash
echo $FOO

After building, use the following docker command:

docker run -e FOO="hello world!" test

with this script in file.sh

#!/bin/bash
echo Your container args are: "$@"

and this Dockerfile

FROM ubuntu:14.04
COPY ./file.sh /
ENTRYPOINT ["/file.sh"]

you should be able to:

% docker build -t test .
% docker run test hello world
Your container args are: hello world