RUN BACKGROUND basically does "./thecommand&" so it will stop after a restart, the onboarding example is ephemeral for simplicity.
If you want things to persist across restarts you'd have to add a systemd script or docker container the same way you'd run it in production.
RUN BACKGROUND basically does "./thecommand&" so it will stop after a restart, the onboarding example is ephemeral for simplicity.
If you want things to persist across restarts you'd have to add a systemd script or docker container the same way you'd run it in production.