Provided by: singularity-container_4.1.1+ds2-1ubuntu0.3_amd64 bug

NAME

       run-singularity - launch a Singularity containers with a runscript

DESCRIPTION

       Run the user-defined default command within a container

   Usage:
              singularity run [run options...] <container>

   Description:
              This  command  will  launch  a Singularity container and execute a runscript if one is defined for
              that container. The runscript is  a  metadata  file  within  the  container  that  contains  shell
              commands.  If the file is present (and executable) then this command will execute that file within
              the container automatically. All arguments following the container name will be passed directly to
              the runscript.

              singularity run accepts the following container formats:

       *.sif  Singularity Image Format (SIF). Native to Singularity 3.0+

       *.sqsh SquashFS format.  Native to Singularity 2.4+

       *.img  ext3 format. Native to Singularity versions < 2.4.

       directory/
              sandbox format.  Directory  containing  a  valid  root  file  system  and  optionally  Singularity
              meta-data.

       instance://*
              A local running instance of a container. (See the instance command group.)

       library://*
              A SIF container hosted on a Library (default https://cloud.sylabs.io/library)

       docker://*
              A Docker/OCI container hosted on Docker Hub or another OCI registry.

       shub://*
              A container hosted on Singularity Hub.

       oras://*
              A  SIF  container  hosted  on  an  OCI  registry  that supports the OCI Registry As Storage (ORAS)
              specification.

OPTIONS

       --add-caps string
              a comma separated capability list to add

       --allow-setuid
              allow setuid binaries in container (root only)

       --app string
              set an application to run inside a container

       --apply-cgroups string
              apply cgroups from file for container processes (root only)

       --authfile string
              Docker-style authentication file to use for writing/reading OCI registry credentials

       -B, --bind strings
              a user-bind path specification. spec has the format src[:dest[:opts]],  where  src  and  dest  are
              outside and inside paths. If dest is not given, it is set equal to src. Mount options ('opts') may
              be  specified as 'ro' (read-only) or 'rw' (read/write, which is the default).  Multiple bind paths
              can be given by a comma separated list.

       --blkio-weight int
              Block IO relative weight in range 10-1000, 0 to disable

       --blkio-weight-device strings
              Device specific block IO relative weight

       --cdi-dirs strings
              comma-separated list of directories in which CDI should look for device definition JSON files.  If
              omitted, default will be: /etc/cdi,/var/run/cdi

       -e, --cleanenv
              clean environment before running container

       --compat
              apply settings for increased OCI/Docker compatibility. Infers --containall, --no-init, --no-umask,
              --no-eval, --writable-tmpfs.

       -c, --contain
              use  minimal /dev and empty other directories (e.g. /tmp and $HOME) instead of sharing filesystems
              from your host

       -C, --containall
              contain not only file systems, but also PID, IPC, and environment

       --cpu-shares int
              CPU shares for container (default -1)

       --cpus string
              Number of CPUs available to container

       --cpuset-cpus string
              List of host CPUs available to container

       --cpuset-mems string
              List of host memory nodes available to container

       --cwd string
              initial working directory for payload process inside the container (synonym for --pwd)

       --device strings
              fully-qualified CDI device name(s).  A fully-qualified CDI  device  name  consists  of  a  VENDOR,
              CLASS,    and    NAME,    which   are   combined   as   follows:   <VENDOR>/<CLASS>=<NAME>   (e.g.
              vendor.com/device=mydevice).  Multiple fully-qualified CDI device names can be given  as  a  comma
              separated list.

       --disable-cache
              dont use cache, and dont create cache

       --dns string
              list of DNS server separated by commas to add in resolv.conf

       --docker-host string
              specify a custom Docker daemon host

       --docker-login
              login to a Docker Repository interactively

       --drop-caps string
              a comma separated capability list to drop

       --env stringToString
              pass environment variable to contained process (default [])

       --env-file string
              pass environment variables from file to contained process

       -f, --fakeroot
              run container in new user namespace as uid 0

       --fusemount strings
              A  FUSE  filesystem  mount  specification of the form '<type>:<fuse command> <mountpoint>' - where
              <type> is 'container' or 'host', specifying where the mount will be performed  ('container-daemon'
              or  'host-daemon'  will  run  the  FUSE process detached).  <fuse command> is the path to the FUSE
              executable, plus options for the mount. <mountpoint> is the location in the container to which the
              FUSE mount will be attached.  E.g. 'container:sshfs 10.0.0.1:/ /sshfs'. Implies --pid.

       -h, --help
              help for run

       -H, --home string
              a home directory specification. spec can either be a src path or src:dest pair. src is the  source
              path  of the home directory outside the container and dest overrides the home directory within the
              container.  (default "/home/buildd")

       --hostname string
              set container hostname. Infers --uts.

       -i, --ipc
              run container in a new IPC namespace

       --keep-layers
              Keep layers when creating an OCI-SIF. Do not squash to a single layer.

       --keep-privs
              let root user keep privileges in container (root only)

       --memory string
              Memory limit in bytes

       --memory-reservation string
              Memory soft limit in bytes

       --memory-swap string
              Swap limit, use -1 for unlimited swap

       --mount stringArray
              a mount specification e.g.  'type=bind,source=/opt,destination=/hostopt'.

       -n, --net
              run container in a new network namespace (sets up a bridge network interface by default)

       --network string
              specify desired network type separated by commas, each network will bring up a dedicated interface
              inside container (default "bridge")

       --network-args strings
              specify network arguments to pass to CNI plugins

       --no-compat
              (--oci mode) do not apply settings for increased OCI/Docker compatibility. Emulate native  runtime
              defaults without --contain etc.

       --no-eval
              do not shell evaluate env vars or OCI container CMD/ENTRYPOINT/ARGS

       --no-home
              do NOT mount users home directory if /home is not the current working directory

       --no-https
              use http instead of https for docker:// oras:// and library://<hostname>/... URIs

       --no-init
              do NOT start shim process with --pid

       --no-mount strings
              disable one or more 'mount xxx' options set in singularity.conf, specify absolute destination path
              to disable a bind path entry, or 'bind-paths' to disable all bind path entries.

       --no-oci
              Launch container with native runtime

       --no-pid
              do not run container in a new PID namespace

       --no-privs
              drop all privileges in container (root only in non-OCI mode)

       --no-setgroups
              disable setgroups when entering --fakeroot user namespace

       --no-tmp-sandbox
              Prohibits unpacking of images into temporary sandbox dirs

       --no-umask
              do not propagate umask to the container, set default 0022 umask

       --nv   enable Nvidia support

       --nvccli
              use nvidia-container-cli for GPU setup (experimental)

       --oci  Launch container with OCI runtime (experimental)

       --oom-kill-disable
              Disable OOM killer

       -o, --overlay strings
              use an overlayFS image for persistent data storage or as read-only layer of container

       --passphrase
              prompt for an encryption passphrase

       --pem-path string
              enter an path to a PEM formatted RSA key for an encrypted container

       -p, --pid
              run container in a new PID namespace

       --pids-limit int
              Limit number of container PIDs, use -1 for unlimited

       --rocm enable experimental Rocm support

       -S, --scratch strings
              include  a  scratch  directory  within  the container that is linked to a temporary dir (use -W to
              force location)

       --security strings
              enable security features (SELinux, Apparmor, Seccomp)

       --tmp-sandbox
              Forces unpacking of images into temporary sandbox dirs when a kernel or FUSE mount would otherwise
              be used.

       -u, --userns
              run container in a new user namespace, allowing Singularity  to  run  completely  unprivileged  on
              recent kernels. This disables some features of Singularity, for example it only works with sandbox
              images.

       --uts  run container in a new UTS namespace

       -W, --workdir string
              working directory to be used for /tmp and /var/tmp (if -c/--contain was also used)

       -w, --writable
              by  default  all  Singularity  containers  are  available as read only. This option makes the file
              system accessible as read/write.

       --writable-tmpfs
              makes the file system accessible as read-write with non  persistent  data  (with  overlay  support
              only)

EXAMPLES

              #  Here  we  see  that the runscript prints "Hello world: " $ singularity exec /tmp/debian.sif cat
              /singularity #!/bin/sh echo "Hello world: "

              # It runs with our inputs when we run the image $ singularity run /tmp/debian.sif  one  two  three
              Hello world: one two three

              # Note that this does the same thing $ ./tmp/debian.sif one two three

       For additional help or support, please visit https://www.sylabs.io/docs/

run-singularity 4.1.1+ds2-1ubuntu0.3                July 2025                                 RUN-SINGULARITY(1)