Add a man page on how to achieve the same user experience as using kpod attach by using either the kpod logs or kpod exec commands. Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
1.6 KiB
% kpod(1) kpod-cp - Copy content between container's file system and the host % Dan Walsh
kpod-cp "1" "August 2017" "kpod"
NAME
kpod-cp - Copy files/folders between a container and the local filesystem.
Description
We chose not to implement the cp
feature in kpod
even though the upstream Docker
project has it. We have a much stronger capability. Using standard kpod-mount
and kpod-umount, we can take advantage of the entire linux tool chain, rather
then just cp.
If a user wants to copy contents out of a container or into a container, they can execute a few simple commands.
You can copy from the container's file system to the local machine or the reverse, from the local filesystem to the container.
If you want to copy the /etc/foobar directory out of a container and onto /tmp on the host, you could execute the following commands:
mnt=$(kpod mount CONTAINERID)
cp -R ${mnt}/etc/foobar /tmp
kpod umount CONTAINERID
If you want to untar a tar ball into a container, you can execute these commands:
mnt=$(kpod mount CONTAINERID)
tar xf content.tgz -C ${mnt}
kpod umount CONTAINERID
One last example, if you want to install a package into a container that does not have dnf installed, you could execute something like:
mnt=$(kpod mount CONTAINERID)
dnf install --installroot=${mnt} httpd
chroot ${mnt} rm -rf /var/log/dnf /var/cache/dnf
kpod umount CONTAINERID
This shows that using kpod mount
and kpod umount
you can use all of the
standard linux tools for moving files into and out of containers, not just
the cp command.
SEE ALSO
kpod(1), kpod-mount(1), kpod-umount(1)