1podman-cp(1)                General Commands Manual               podman-cp(1)
2
3
4

NAME

6       podman-cp  -  Copy  files/folders  between  a  container  and the local
7       filesystem
8
9

SYNOPSIS

11       podman cp [options] [container:]src_path [container:]dest_path
12
13
14       podman    container    cp    [options]    [container:]src_path    [con‐
15       tainer:]dest_path
16
17

DESCRIPTION

19       podman  cp  allows  copying  the contents of src_path to the dest_path.
20       Files can be copied from a container to  the  local  machine  and  vice
21       versa  or  between  two  containers.   If - is specified for either the
22       SRC_PATH or DEST_PATH, one can also stream a tar archive from STDIN  or
23       to STDOUT.
24
25
26       The  containers  can  be  either running or stopped and the src_path or
27       dest_path can be a file or directory.
28
29
30       *IMPORTANT: The podman cp command assumes container paths are  relative
31       to  the  container's root directory (/), which means supplying the ini‐
32       tial forward slash is optional and  therefore  sees  compassionate_dar‐
33       win:/tmp/foo/myfile.txt  and compassionate_darwin:tmp/foo/myfile.txt as
34       identical.*
35
36
37       Local machine paths can be an absolute or relative value.  The  command
38       interprets  a local machine's relative paths as relative to the current
39       working directory where podman cp is run.
40
41
42       Assuming a path separator of /, a first argument of src_path and second
43       argument of dest_path, the behavior is as follows:
44
45
46       src_path specifies a file:
47         - dest_path does not exist
48           -  the file is saved to a file created at dest_path (note that par‐
49       ent directory must exist).
50         - dest_path exists and is a file
51           - the destination is overwritten with the source file's contents.
52         - dest_path exists and is a directory
53           - the file is copied into this directory using the base  name  from
54       src_path.
55
56
57       src_path specifies a directory:
58         - dest_path does not exist
59           -  dest_path  is  created  as  a  directory and the contents of the
60       source directory are copied into this directory.
61         - dest_path exists and is a file
62           - Error condition: cannot copy a directory to a file.
63         - dest_path exists and is a directory
64           - src_path ends with /
65             - the source directory is copied into this directory.
66           - src_path ends with /. (i.e., slash followed by dot)
67             - the content of the source directory is copied into this  direc‐
68       tory.
69
70
71       The  command  requires src_path and dest_path to exist according to the
72       above rules.
73
74
75       If src_path is local and is a symbolic link, the  symbolic  target,  is
76       copied by default.
77
78
79       A  colon ( : ) is used as a delimiter between a container and its path,
80       it can also be used when specifying paths to a src_path or dest_path on
81       a local machine, for example, file:name.txt.
82
83
84       *IMPORTANT: while using a colon ( : ) in a local machine path, one must
85       be  explicit  with  a  relative  or   absolute   path,   for   example:
86       /path/to/file:name.txt or ./file:name.txt*
87
88
89       Using - as the src_path streams the contents of STDIN as a tar archive.
90       The command extracts the content of the tar to  the  DEST_PATH  in  the
91       container. In this case, dest_path must specify a directory. Using - as
92       the dest_path streams the contents of the resource (can be a directory)
93       as a tar archive to STDOUT.
94
95
96       Note  that podman cp ignores permission errors when copying from a run‐
97       ning rootless container.  The TTY devices inside a  rootless  container
98       are  owned  by the host's root user and hence cannot be read inside the
99       container's user namespace.
100
101
102       Further note that  podman  cp  does  not  support  globbing  (e.g.,  cp
103       dir/*.txt).   To copy multiple files from the host to the container use
104       xargs(1) or find(1) (or similar tools for chaining  commands)  in  con‐
105       junction  with podman cp.  To copy multiple files from the container to
106       the host, use podman mount CONTAINER and operate on the returned  mount
107       point instead (see ALTERNATIVES below).
108
109

OPTIONS

111   --archive, -a
112       Archive  mode  (copy all UID/GID information).  When set to true, files
113       copied to a container have changed ownership to the primary UID/GID  of
114       the  container.   When  set  to  false,  maintain  UID/GID from archive
115       sources instead of changing them to the primary UID/GID of the destina‐
116       tion container.  The default is true.
117
118
119   --overwrite
120       Allow  directories  to  be  overwritten  with  non-directories and vice
121       versa.  By default, podman cp errors out when attempting to  overwrite,
122       for instance, a regular file with a directory.
123
124

ALTERNATIVES

126       Podman  has  much  stronger capabilities than just podman cp to achieve
127       copying files between the host and containers.
128
129
130       Using standard podman-mount(1) and podman-unmount(1) takes advantage of
131       the entire linux tool chain, rather than just cp.
132
133
134       copying  contents  out  of  a  container  or  into  a container, can be
135       achieved with a few simple commands. For example:
136
137
138       To copy the /etc/foobar directory out of a container and onto  /tmp  on
139       the host, the following commands can be executed:
140
141
142              mnt=$(podman mount CONTAINERID)
143              cp -R ${mnt}/etc/foobar /tmp
144              podman umount CONTAINERID
145
146
147
148       To  untar  a  tar ball into a container, following commands can be exe‐
149       cuted:
150
151
152              mnt=$(podman mount CONTAINERID)
153              tar xf content.tgz -C ${mnt}
154              podman umount CONTAINERID
155
156
157
158       To install a package into a container that does not have dnf installed,
159       following commands can be executed:
160
161
162              mnt=$(podman mount CONTAINERID)
163              dnf install --installroot=${mnt} httpd
164              chroot ${mnt} rm -rf /var/log/dnf /var/cache/dnf
165              podman umount CONTAINERID
166
167
168
169       By  using podman mount and podman unmount, one can use all of the stan‐
170       dard linux tools for moving files into and out of containers, not  just
171       the cp command.
172
173

EXAMPLES

175              • Copy a file from host to a container.
176
177                     podman cp /myapp/app.conf containerID:/myapp/app.conf
178
179
180
181              • Copy  a  file  from a container to a directory on another con‐
182                tainer.
183
184                     podman cp containerID1:/myfile.txt containerID2:/tmp
185
186
187
188              • Copy a directory on a container to a directory on the host.
189
190                     podman cp containerID:/myapp/ /myapp/
191
192
193
194              • Copy the contents of a directory on a container to a directory
195                on the host.
196
197                     podman cp containerID:/home/myuser/. /home/myuser/
198
199
200
201              • Copy a directory on a container into a directory on another.
202
203                     podman cp containerA:/myapp containerB:/newapp
204
205
206
207              • Stream a tar archive from STDIN to a container.
208
209                     podman cp - containerID:/myfiles.tar.gz < myfiles.tar.gz
210
211
212
213
214

SEE ALSO

216       podman(1), podman-mount(1), podman-unmount(1)
217
218
219
220                                                                  podman-cp(1)
Impressum