I was doing some complex stuff with docker, but as turn out I don't know what -it
flag means.
Recently I've come across on some example of docker run
command which has confused me a little.
docker run -itd ubuntu:xenial /bin/bash
My question is what is sense to write -it
flag here, if container during instantiation run bin/bash
In documentation we have an example
docker run --name test -it debian
with explanation
The -it instructs Docker to allocate a pseudo-TTY connected to the
container’s stdin; creating an interactive bash shell in the
container.
and explanation for -t flag from help page
-t, --tty Allocate a pseudo-TTY
if I delete -it flag during
docker run -d ubuntu:xenial /bin/bash
my newly created container doesn't live so much
in docker ps -a
it is designated as exited
Sorry, if my question quite stupid, I can't find explanation on the Internet (I have significant misunderstanding of that point).
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