| # cp |
| |
| <!---MARKER_GEN_START--> |
| Copy files/folders between a container and the local filesystem |
| |
| Use '-' as the source to read a tar archive from stdin |
| and extract it to a directory destination in a container. |
| Use '-' as the destination to stream a tar archive of a |
| container source to stdout. |
| |
| ### Aliases |
| |
| `docker container cp`, `docker cp` |
| |
| ### Options |
| |
| | Name | Type | Default | Description | |
| |:----------------------|:-------|:--------|:-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| |
| | `-a`, `--archive` | `bool` | | Archive mode (copy all uid/gid information) | |
| | `-L`, `--follow-link` | `bool` | | Always follow symbol link in SRC_PATH | |
| | `-q`, `--quiet` | `bool` | | Suppress progress output during copy. Progress output is automatically suppressed if no terminal is attached | |
| |
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| |
| ## Description |
| |
| The `docker cp` utility copies the contents of `SRC_PATH` to the `DEST_PATH`. |
| You can copy from the container's file system to the local machine or the |
| reverse, from the local filesystem to the container. If `-` is specified for |
| either the `SRC_PATH` or `DEST_PATH`, you can also stream a tar archive from |
| `STDIN` or to `STDOUT`. The `CONTAINER` can be a running or stopped container. |
| The `SRC_PATH` or `DEST_PATH` can be a file or directory. |
| |
| The `docker cp` command assumes container paths are relative to the container's |
| `/` (root) directory. This means supplying the initial forward slash is optional; |
| The command sees `compassionate_darwin:/tmp/foo/myfile.txt` and |
| `compassionate_darwin:tmp/foo/myfile.txt` as identical. Local machine paths can |
| be an absolute or relative value. The command interprets a local machine's |
| relative paths as relative to the current working directory where `docker cp` is |
| run. |
| |
| The `cp` command behaves like the Unix `cp -a` command in that directories are |
| copied recursively with permissions preserved if possible. Ownership is set to |
| the user and primary group at the destination. For example, files copied to a |
| container are created with `UID:GID` of the root user. Files copied to the local |
| machine are created with the `UID:GID` of the user which invoked the `docker cp` |
| command. However, if you specify the `-a` option, `docker cp` sets the ownership |
| to the user and primary group at the source. |
| If you specify the `-L` option, `docker cp` follows any symbolic link |
| in the `SRC_PATH`. `docker cp` doesn't create parent directories for |
| `DEST_PATH` if they don't exist. |
| |
| Assuming a path separator of `/`, a first argument of `SRC_PATH` and second |
| argument of `DEST_PATH`, the behavior is as follows: |
| |
| - `SRC_PATH` specifies a file |
| - `DEST_PATH` does not exist |
| - the file is saved to a file created at `DEST_PATH` |
| - `DEST_PATH` does not exist and ends with `/` |
| - Error condition: the destination directory must exist. |
| - `DEST_PATH` exists and is a file |
| - the destination is overwritten with the source file's contents |
| - `DEST_PATH` exists and is a directory |
| - the file is copied into this directory using the basename from |
| `SRC_PATH` |
| - `SRC_PATH` specifies a directory |
| - `DEST_PATH` does not exist |
| - `DEST_PATH` is created as a directory and the *contents* of the source |
| directory are copied into this directory |
| - `DEST_PATH` exists and is a file |
| - Error condition: cannot copy a directory to a file |
| - `DEST_PATH` exists and is a directory |
| - `SRC_PATH` does not end with `/.` (that is: _slash_ followed by _dot_) |
| - the source directory is copied into this directory |
| - `SRC_PATH` does end with `/.` (that is: _slash_ followed by _dot_) |
| - the *content* of the source directory is copied into this |
| directory |
| |
| The command requires `SRC_PATH` and `DEST_PATH` to exist according to the above |
| rules. If `SRC_PATH` is local and is a symbolic link, the symbolic link, not |
| the target, is copied by default. To copy the link target and not the link, specify |
| the `-L` option. |
| |
| A colon (`:`) is used as a delimiter between `CONTAINER` and its path. You can |
| also use `:` when specifying paths to a `SRC_PATH` or `DEST_PATH` on a local |
| machine, for example `file:name.txt`. If you use a `:` in a local machine path, |
| you must be explicit with a relative or absolute path, for example: |
| |
| `/path/to/file:name.txt` or `./file:name.txt` |
| |
| ## Examples |
| |
| Copy a local file into container |
| |
| ```console |
| $ docker cp ./some_file CONTAINER:/work |
| ``` |
| |
| Copy files from container to local path |
| |
| ```console |
| $ docker cp CONTAINER:/var/logs/ /tmp/app_logs |
| ``` |
| |
| Copy a file from container to stdout. Note `cp` command produces a tar stream |
| |
| ```console |
| $ docker cp CONTAINER:/var/logs/app.log - | tar x -O | grep "ERROR" |
| ``` |
| |
| ### Corner cases |
| |
| It isn't possible to copy certain system files such as resources under |
| `/proc`, `/sys`, `/dev`, [tmpfs](container_run.md#tmpfs), and mounts created by |
| the user in the container. However, you can still copy such files by manually |
| running `tar` in `docker exec`. Both of the following examples do the same thing |
| in different ways (consider `SRC_PATH` and `DEST_PATH` are directories): |
| |
| ```console |
| $ docker exec CONTAINER tar Ccf $(dirname SRC_PATH) - $(basename SRC_PATH) | tar Cxf DEST_PATH - |
| ``` |
| |
| ```console |
| $ tar Ccf $(dirname SRC_PATH) - $(basename SRC_PATH) | docker exec -i CONTAINER tar Cxf DEST_PATH - |
| ``` |
| |
| Using `-` as the `SRC_PATH` streams the contents of `STDIN` as a tar archive. |
| The command extracts the content of the tar to the `DEST_PATH` in container's |
| filesystem. In this case, `DEST_PATH` must specify a directory. Using `-` as |
| the `DEST_PATH` streams the contents of the resource as a tar archive to `STDOUT`. |