I have a few running docker containers created by executing docker-compose up
.
Is there any way to get the exact file path of the corresponding docker-c
The answer to this question seems o have changed with new versions of docker-compose.
There is a label "com.docker.compose.project.working_dir": "/var/opt/docker",
that points to the directory where I started docker-compose. I have not checked if that is pwd
or the actual location of the docker-compose.yml file.
this got me interesting information about docker-compose:
samuel@vmhost1:~$ docker inspect fc440a1afbaa | grep com.docker.compose "com.docker.compose.config-hash": "89069285a4783b79b421ea84f2b652becbdee148fbad095a6d9d85aab67ececc", "com.docker.compose.container-number": "1", "com.docker.compose.oneoff": "False", "com.docker.compose.project": "docker", "com.docker.compose.project.config_files": "docker-compose.yml", "com.docker.compose.project.working_dir": "/var/opt/docker", "com.docker.compose.service": "jenkins", "com.docker.compose.version": "1.25.0" samuel@vmhost1:~$
I'm running docker-compose.yml configuration version 3.6
As far as I can see, docker inspect CONTAINER_NAME does not provide this information, nor does docker-compose provide a method to get compose-related information from a running container.
From an already running container that you do not control, the information is not there. You can infer the location using bind mount directories if the container creates any host mounts to relative directories. Otherwise, it's possible to deploy containers without compose, and it's possible to use compose without a compose file on the filesystem (piped via stdin), and compose does not store these details on running containers for you.
What I'd like to do in a script:
- list certain running containers on a docker host
- get the corresponding docker-compose.yml file locations
- use docker-compose to restart all containers of the corresponding docker-compose projects at once
If you just want to run a restart on all containers in the same project, you don't need the first two steps, or even docker-compose
. Instead, you can run:
docker ps --filter "label=com.docker.compose.project=${your_compose_project}" -q \
| xargs docker restart
Which uses a label docker-compose adds to each project it deploys.
If you want to proactively store the compose file location for later use, you can inject that as a label in your compose file:
version: '2'
services:
test:
image: busybox
command: tail -f /dev/null
labels:
COMPOSE_PATH: ${PWD} # many Linux shells define the PWD variable
If your shell does not set a ${PWD}
environment variable, you can start compose with:
PWD=$(pwd) docker-compose up -d
Then you can later inspect containers for this label's value with:
docker inspect --format '{{.Config.Labels.COMPOSE_PATH}}' ${your_container_id}
And you can chain a filter and inspect command together to find the path for a specific project:
docker ps --filter "label=com.docker.compose.project=${your_compose_project}" -q \
| xargs docker inspect --format '{{.Config.Labels.COMPOSE_PATH}}'
you know, your question turns to be a useful answer to the same issue I have.
I used docker inspect <containerID>
and then it gave me the location that I should look into. specifically in these lines:
HostConfig": {
"Binds": [
....
...
],
It is not currently possible.
As an alternative might find the following helpful:
docker ps -a | grep <certain_container>
locate docker-compose.yml
and find the one that you wantdocker-compose restart
(do docker-compose
to see option)