podman-wait

podman-wait(1) General Commands Manual podman-wait(1)

NAME

   podman-wait - Wait on one or more containers to stop and print their exit codes

SYNOPSIS

   podman wait [options] container [...]

   podman container wait [options] container [...]

DESCRIPTION

   Waits  on one or more containers to stop.  The container can be referred to by its name or ID.  In the case of multiple containers, Podman waits on each consecutively.  After all con
   ditions are satisfied, the containers' return codes are printed separated by newline in the same order as they were given to the command.  An exit code of -1 is emitted for all condi
   tions other than "stopped" and "exited".

   When waiting for containers with a restart policy of always or on-failure, such as those created by podman kube play, the containers may be repeatedly exiting and restarting, possibly
   with different exit codes. podman wait will only display and detect the first exit after the wait command was started.

   When running a container with podman run --rm wait does not wait for the container to be fully removed. To wait for the removal of a container use --condition=removing.

OPTIONS --condition=state

   Container state or condition to wait for.  Can be specified multiple times where at least one condition must match for the command to return.  Supported values are "configured", "cre‐
   ated", "exited", "healthy", "initialized", "paused", "removing", "running", "stopped",  "stopping", "unhealthy".  The default condition is "stopped".

--help, -h

   Print usage statement

--ignore

   Ignore errors when a specified container is missing and mark its return code as -1.

--interval, -i=duration

   Time interval to wait before polling for completion. A duration string is a sequence of decimal numbers, each with optional fraction and a unit suffix, such  as  "300ms",  "-1.5h"  or
   "2h45m". Valid time units are "ns", "us" (or "µs"), "ms", "s", "m", "h". Time unit defaults to "ms".

--latest, -l

   Instead  of  providing the container name or ID, use the last created container.  Note: the last started container can be from other users of Podman on the host machine.  (This option
   is not available with the remote Podman client, including Mac and Windows (excluding WSL2) machines)

EXAMPLES

   Wait for the specified container to exit.

   $ podman wait mywebserver
   0

   Wait for the latest container to exit. (This option is not available with the remote Podman client, including Mac and Windows (excluding WSL2) machines)

   $ podman wait --latest
   0

   Wait for the container to exit, checking every two seconds.

   $ podman wait --interval 2s mywebserver
   0

   Wait for the container by ID. This container exits with error status 1:

   $ podman wait 860a4b23
   1

   Wait for both specified containers to exit.

   $ podman wait mywebserver myftpserver
   0
   125

   Wait for the named container to exit, but do not fail if the container does not exist.

   $ podman wait --ignore does-not-exist
   -1

SEE ALSO

   podman(1)

HISTORY

   September 2017, Originally compiled by Brent Baudebbaude@redhat.com mailto:bbaude@redhat.com

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