Define a Command and Arguments for a Container
This page shows how to define commands and arguments when you run a container in a Pod.
Before you begin
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using minikube or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:
To check the version, enterkubectl version
.
Define a command and arguments when you create a Pod
When you create a Pod, you can define a command and arguments for the
containers that run in the Pod. To define a command, include the command
field in the configuration file. To define arguments for the command, include
the args
field in the configuration file. The command and arguments that
you define cannot be changed after the Pod is created.
The command and arguments that you define in the configuration file override the default command and arguments provided by the container image. If you define args, but do not define a command, the default command is used with your new arguments.
command
field corresponds to entrypoint
in some container
runtimes. Refer to the Notes below.
In this exercise, you create a Pod that runs one container. The configuration file for the Pod defines a command and two arguments:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: command-demo
labels:
purpose: demonstrate-command
spec:
containers:
- name: command-demo-container
image: debian
command: ["printenv"]
args: ["HOSTNAME", "KUBERNETES_PORT"]
restartPolicy: OnFailure
-
Create a Pod based on the YAML configuration file:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/pods/commands.yaml
-
List the running Pods:
kubectl get pods
The output shows that the container that ran in the command-demo Pod has completed.
-
To see the output of the command that ran in the container, view the logs from the Pod:
kubectl logs command-demo
The output shows the values of the HOSTNAME and KUBERNETES_PORT environment variables:
command-demo tcp://10.3.240.1:443
Use environment variables to define arguments
In the preceding example, you defined the arguments directly by providing strings. As an alternative to providing strings directly, you can define arguments by using environment variables:
env:
- name: MESSAGE
value: "hello world"
command: ["/bin/echo"]
args: ["$(MESSAGE)"]
This means you can define an argument for a Pod using any of the techniques available for defining environment variables, including ConfigMaps and Secrets.
"$(VAR)"
. This is
required for the variable to be expanded in the command
or args
field.
Run a command in a shell
In some cases, you need your command to run in a shell. For example, your command might consist of several commands piped together, or it might be a shell script. To run your command in a shell, wrap it like this:
command: ["/bin/sh"]
args: ["-c", "while true; do echo hello; sleep 10;done"]
Notes
This table summarizes the field names used by Docker and Kubernetes.
Description | Docker field name | Kubernetes field name |
---|---|---|
The command run by the container | Entrypoint | command |
The arguments passed to the command | Cmd | args |
When you override the default Entrypoint and Cmd, these rules apply:
-
If you do not supply
command
orargs
for a Container, the defaults defined in the Docker image are used. -
If you supply a
command
but noargs
for a Container, only the suppliedcommand
is used. The default EntryPoint and the default Cmd defined in the Docker image are ignored. -
If you supply only
args
for a Container, the default Entrypoint defined in the Docker image is run with theargs
that you supplied. -
If you supply a
command
andargs
, the default Entrypoint and the default Cmd defined in the Docker image are ignored. Yourcommand
is run with yourargs
.
Here are some examples:
Image Entrypoint | Image Cmd | Container command | Container args | Command run |
---|---|---|---|---|
[/ep-1] |
[foo bar] |
<not set> | <not set> | [ep-1 foo bar] |
[/ep-1] |
[foo bar] |
[/ep-2] |
<not set> | [ep-2] |
[/ep-1] |
[foo bar] |
<not set> | [zoo boo] |
[ep-1 zoo boo] |
[/ep-1] |
[foo bar] |
[/ep-2] |
[zoo boo] |
[ep-2 zoo boo] |
What's next
- Learn more about configuring pods and containers.
- Learn more about running commands in a container.
- See Container.