Update docker start commands (drop back into shell using docker start -ai <id>) and CREDITS.md

pull/219/head
sickcodes 4 years ago
parent 5bd86a58f6
commit 37ed54da3d

@ -57,3 +57,9 @@ These credits refer to the contributors to this repository:
[@MrBenFTW](https://github.com/MrBenFTW) - Tempfix for arch #150
[@edsonboldrini](https://github.com/edsonboldrini) - Update README.md #161
[@TheHackerCoding](https://github.com/TheHackerCoding) - Typo in README.md #194
[@panos](https://github.com/panos) - Improved README #212
[@ggjulio](https://github.com/ggjulio) - Restarting an "auto" container #216

@ -121,7 +121,7 @@ In that case, **remove** the two lines in your command:
#### I have used Docker-OSX before and wish to extract my Mac OS X image.
Use `docker commit`, copy the ID, and then run `docker start <Replace this with your ID>`.
Use `docker commit`, copy the ID, and then run `docker start -ai <Replace this with your ID>`.
**Alternatively:**
@ -195,8 +195,8 @@ Containers that use `sickcodes/docker-osx:auto` can be stopped while being start
# find last container
docker ps -a
# docker start old container with -i for interactive
docker start -i <Replace this with your ID>
# docker start old container with -i for interactive, -a for attach STDIN/STDOUT
docker start -ai -i <Replace this with your ID>
```
### Quick Start Own Image (naked container image)
@ -381,7 +381,7 @@ If you don't run this you will have a new image every time.
docker ps --all
# docker start the container ID
docker start abc123xyz567
docker start -ai abc123xyz567
# if you have many containers, you can try automate it with filters like this
# docker ps --all --filter "ancestor=sickcodes/docker-osx"

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