args property
Specifies arguments for the command that runs when the container starts.
This overrides the container's
[CMD
](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd). Specify
this field as an array of executable and arguments, similar to a Docker
CMD
's "default parameters" form. If you don't specify this field but do
specify the command field, then the command from the command
field runs
without any additional arguments. See the [Kubernetes documentation about
how the command
and args
fields interact with a container's
ENTRYPOINT
and
CMD
](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/inject-data-application/define-command-argument-container/#notes).
If you don't specify this field and don't specify the commmand
field,
then the container's
[ENTRYPOINT
](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd)
and CMD
determine what runs based on their default behavior. See the
[Docker documentation about how CMD
and ENTRYPOINT
interact](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#understand-how-cmd-and-entrypoint-interact).
In this field, you can reference [environment variables set by AI
Platform
Prediction](/ai-platform/prediction/docs/custom-container-requirements#aip-variables)
and environment variables set in the env field. You cannot reference
environment variables set in the Docker image. In order for environment
variables to be expanded, reference them by using the following syntax: $(
VARIABLE_NAME) Note that this differs from Bash variable expansion, which
does not use parentheses. If a variable cannot be resolved, the reference
in the input string is used unchanged. To avoid variable expansion, you
can escape this syntax with $$
; for example: $$(VARIABLE_NAME) This
field corresponds to the args
field of the
Kubernetes Containers v1 core API.
Immutable.
Implementation
core.List<core.String>? args;