Files
podman/docs/podman-exec.1.md
Daniel J Walsh 99d180efcc Modify man pages so they compile correctly in mandb
This fixes an issue where if you did
man -k podman-run

podman-run (1)    - (unknown subject)

Now you will see

man -k podman-run
podman-run (1)       - Run a command in a new container

More importantly

man -k containers | grep podman
podman (1)           - Simple management tool for containers and images
podman-kill (1)      - Kills one or more containers with a signal
podman-pause (1)     - Pause one or more containers
podman-ps (1)        - Prints out information about containers
podman-rm (1)        - Remove one or more containers
podman-start (1)     - Start one or more containers
podman-stats (1)     - Display a live stream of 1 or more containers' resource usage statistics
podman-stop (1)      - Stop one or more containers
podman-unpause (1)   - Unpause one or more containers
podman-wait (1)      - Waits on one or more containers to stop and prints exit code

Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>

Closes: #676
Approved by: mheon
2018-04-26 13:46:14 +00:00

1.2 KiB

% podman(1) podman-exec - Execute a command in a running container % Brent Baude

podman-exec "1" "December 2017" "podman"

NAME

podman-exec - Execute a command in a running container

SYNOPSIS

podman exec CONTAINER [COMMAND] [ARG...] [--help|-h]

DESCRIPTION

podman exec executes a command in a running container.

OPTIONS

--env, e You may specify arbitrary environment variables that are available for the command to be executed.

--interactive, -i Not supported. All exec commands are interactive by default.

--latest, -l Instead of providing the container name or ID, use the last created container. If you use methods other than Podman to run containers such as CRI-O, the last started container could be from either of those methods.

--privileged Give the process extended Linux capabilities when running the command in container.

--tty, -t Allocate a pseudo-TTY.

--user, -u Sets the username or UID used and optionally the groupname or GID for the specified command. The following examples are all valid: --user [user | user:group | uid | uid:gid | user:gid | uid:group ]

EXAMPLES

SEE ALSO

podman(1), podman-run(1)

HISTORY

December 2017, Originally compiled by Brent Baudebbaude@redhat.com