I'm trying my first steps into Docker, so I tried making a Dockerfile that creates a simple index.html and a directory images (See code below)
Then I run docker-compose build to create the image, and docker-compose-up to run the server. But I get no file index.html or folder images.
This is my Dockerfile:
FROM php:apache
MAINTAINER brent@dropsolid.com
WORKDIR /var/www/html
RUN touch index.html \
&& mkdir images
And this is my docker-compose.yml
version: '2'
services:
web:
build: .docker/web
ports:
- "80:80"
volumes:
- ./docroot:/var/www/html
I would expect that this would create a docroot folder with an image directory and an index.html, but I only get the docroot.
The image does contain those files
The Dockerfile contains instructions on how to build an image. The image you built from that Dockerfile does contain
index.html
andimages/
.But, you over-rode them in the container
At runtime, you created a container from the image you built. In that container, you mounted the external directory
./docroot
as/var/www/html
.A mount will hide whatever was at that path before, so this mount will hide the prior contents of
/var/www/html
, replacing them with whatever is in./docroot
.Putting stuff in your mount
In the comments you asked
The way you have done things, you mounted over your original files, so they are no longer accessible once the container is created.
There are a couple of ways you can handle this.
Change their path in the image
If you put these files in a different path in your image, then they will not be overwritten by the mount.
Now, at runtime you will still have this mount at
/var/www/html
, which will contain the contents from the external directory. Which may or may not be an empty directory. You can tell the container on startup to run a script and copy things there, if that's what you want.(This is assuming you do not have a defined entrypoint - if you do, you'll maybe just need to adjust your existing script instead.)
entrypoint.sh:
This will run the
cp
command, and then hand control over to whatever theCMD
for this image is.Handling it externally
You also have the option of simply pre-populating the files you want into
./docroot
externally. Then they will just be there when the container starts and adds the directory mount.