cli.rst 45 KB

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  1. :title: Command Line Interface
  2. :description: Docker's CLI command description and usage
  3. :keywords: Docker, Docker documentation, CLI, command line
  4. .. _cli:
  5. Command Line Help
  6. -----------------
  7. To list available commands, either run ``docker`` with no parameters or execute
  8. ``docker help``::
  9. $ sudo docker
  10. Usage: docker [OPTIONS] COMMAND [arg...]
  11. -H=[unix:///var/run/docker.sock]: tcp://[host]:port to bind/connect to or unix://[/path/to/socket] to use. When host=[127.0.0.1] is omitted for tcp or path=[/var/run/docker.sock] is omitted for unix sockets, default values are used.
  12. A self-sufficient runtime for linux containers.
  13. ...
  14. .. _cli_options:
  15. Types of Options
  16. ----------------
  17. Boolean
  18. ~~~~~~~
  19. Boolean options look like ``-d=false``. The value you see is the
  20. default value which gets set if you do **not** use the boolean
  21. flag. If you do call ``run -d``, that sets the opposite boolean value,
  22. so in this case, ``true``, and so ``docker run -d`` **will** run in
  23. "detached" mode, in the background. Other boolean options are similar
  24. -- specifying them will set the value to the opposite of the default
  25. value.
  26. Multi
  27. ~~~~~
  28. Options like ``-a=[]`` indicate they can be specified multiple times::
  29. docker run -a stdin -a stdout -a stderr -i -t ubuntu /bin/bash
  30. Sometimes this can use a more complex value string, as for ``-v``::
  31. docker run -v /host:/container example/mysql
  32. Strings and Integers
  33. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  34. Options like ``-name=""`` expect a string, and they can only be
  35. specified once. Options like ``-c=0`` expect an integer, and they can
  36. only be specified once.
  37. ----
  38. Commands
  39. --------
  40. .. _cli_daemon:
  41. ``daemon``
  42. ----------
  43. ::
  44. Usage of docker:
  45. -D, --debug=false: Enable debug mode
  46. -H, --host=[]: Multiple tcp://host:port or unix://path/to/socket to bind in daemon mode, single connection otherwise. systemd socket activation can be used with fd://[socketfd].
  47. --api-enable-cors=false: Enable CORS headers in the remote API
  48. -b, --bridge="": Attach containers to a pre-existing network bridge; use 'none' to disable container networking
  49. --bip="": Use this CIDR notation address for the network bridge's IP, not compatible with -b
  50. -d, --daemon=false: Enable daemon mode
  51. --dns=[]: Force docker to use specific DNS servers
  52. -g, --graph="/var/lib/docker": Path to use as the root of the docker runtime
  53. --icc=true: Enable inter-container communication
  54. --ip="0.0.0.0": Default IP address to use when binding container ports
  55. --iptables=true: Disable docker's addition of iptables rules
  56. -p, --pidfile="/var/run/docker.pid": Path to use for daemon PID file
  57. -r, --restart=true: Restart previously running containers
  58. -s, --storage-driver="": Force the docker runtime to use a specific storage driver
  59. -v, --version=false: Print version information and quit
  60. -mtu, --mtu=0: Set the containers network MTU; if no value is provided: default to the default route MTU or 1500 if not default route is available
  61. The Docker daemon is the persistent process that manages containers. Docker uses the same binary for both the
  62. daemon and client. To run the daemon you provide the ``-d`` flag.
  63. To force Docker to use devicemapper as the storage driver, use ``docker -d -s devicemapper``.
  64. To set the DNS server for all Docker containers, use ``docker -d -dns 8.8.8.8``.
  65. To run the daemon with debug output, use ``docker -d -D``.
  66. The docker client will also honor the ``DOCKER_HOST`` environment variable to set
  67. the ``-H`` flag for the client.
  68. ::
  69. docker -H tcp://0.0.0.0:4243 ps
  70. # or
  71. export DOCKER_HOST="tcp://0.0.0.0:4243"
  72. docker ps
  73. # both are equal
  74. To run the daemon with `systemd socket activation <http://0pointer.de/blog/projects/socket-activation.html>`_, use ``docker -d -H fd://``.
  75. Using ``fd://`` will work perfectly for most setups but you can also specify individual sockets too ``docker -d -H fd://3``.
  76. If the specified socket activated files aren't found then docker will exit.
  77. You can find examples of using systemd socket activation with docker and systemd in the `docker source tree <https://github.com/dotcloud/docker/blob/master/contrib/init/systemd/socket-activation/>`_.
  78. .. warning::
  79. Docker and LXC do not support the use of softlinks for either the Docker data directory (``/var/lib/docker``) or for ``/tmp``.
  80. If your system is likely to be set up in that way, you can use ``readlink -f`` to canonicalise the links:
  81. ``TMPDIR=$(readlink -f /tmp) /usr/local/bin/docker -d -D -g $(readlink -f /var/lib/docker) -H unix:// $EXPOSE_ALL > /var/lib/boot2docker/docker.log 2>&1``
  82. .. _cli_attach:
  83. ``attach``
  84. ----------
  85. ::
  86. Usage: docker attach CONTAINER
  87. Attach to a running container.
  88. --no-stdin=false: Do not attach stdin
  89. --sig-proxy=true: Proxify all received signal to the process (even in non-tty mode)
  90. You can detach from the container again (and leave it running) with
  91. ``CTRL-c`` (for a quiet exit) or ``CTRL-\`` to get a stacktrace of
  92. the Docker client when it quits. When you detach from the container's
  93. process the exit code will be returned to the client.
  94. To stop a container, use ``docker stop``.
  95. To kill the container, use ``docker kill``.
  96. .. _cli_attach_examples:
  97. Examples:
  98. ~~~~~~~~~
  99. .. code-block:: bash
  100. $ ID=$(sudo docker run -d ubuntu /usr/bin/top -b)
  101. $ sudo docker attach $ID
  102. top - 02:05:52 up 3:05, 0 users, load average: 0.01, 0.02, 0.05
  103. Tasks: 1 total, 1 running, 0 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie
  104. Cpu(s): 0.1%us, 0.2%sy, 0.0%ni, 99.7%id, 0.0%wa, 0.0%hi, 0.0%si, 0.0%st
  105. Mem: 373572k total, 355560k used, 18012k free, 27872k buffers
  106. Swap: 786428k total, 0k used, 786428k free, 221740k cached
  107. PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
  108. 1 root 20 0 17200 1116 912 R 0 0.3 0:00.03 top
  109. top - 02:05:55 up 3:05, 0 users, load average: 0.01, 0.02, 0.05
  110. Tasks: 1 total, 1 running, 0 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie
  111. Cpu(s): 0.0%us, 0.2%sy, 0.0%ni, 99.8%id, 0.0%wa, 0.0%hi, 0.0%si, 0.0%st
  112. Mem: 373572k total, 355244k used, 18328k free, 27872k buffers
  113. Swap: 786428k total, 0k used, 786428k free, 221776k cached
  114. PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
  115. 1 root 20 0 17208 1144 932 R 0 0.3 0:00.03 top
  116. top - 02:05:58 up 3:06, 0 users, load average: 0.01, 0.02, 0.05
  117. Tasks: 1 total, 1 running, 0 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie
  118. Cpu(s): 0.2%us, 0.3%sy, 0.0%ni, 99.5%id, 0.0%wa, 0.0%hi, 0.0%si, 0.0%st
  119. Mem: 373572k total, 355780k used, 17792k free, 27880k buffers
  120. Swap: 786428k total, 0k used, 786428k free, 221776k cached
  121. PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
  122. 1 root 20 0 17208 1144 932 R 0 0.3 0:00.03 top
  123. ^C$
  124. $ sudo docker stop $ID
  125. .. _cli_build:
  126. ``build``
  127. ---------
  128. ::
  129. Usage: docker build [OPTIONS] PATH | URL | -
  130. Build a new container image from the source code at PATH
  131. -t, --time="": Repository name (and optionally a tag) to be applied
  132. to the resulting image in case of success.
  133. -q, --quiet=false: Suppress verbose build output.
  134. --no-cache: Do not use the cache when building the image.
  135. --rm: Remove intermediate containers after a successful build
  136. The files at ``PATH`` or ``URL`` are called the "context" of the build. The
  137. build process may refer to any of the files in the context, for example when
  138. using an :ref:`ADD <dockerfile_add>` instruction. When a single ``Dockerfile``
  139. is given as ``URL``, then no context is set. When a Git repository is set as
  140. ``URL``, then the repository is used as the context
  141. .. _cli_build_examples:
  142. .. seealso:: :ref:`dockerbuilder`.
  143. Examples:
  144. ~~~~~~~~~
  145. .. code-block:: bash
  146. $ sudo docker build .
  147. Uploading context 10240 bytes
  148. Step 1 : FROM busybox
  149. Pulling repository busybox
  150. ---> e9aa60c60128MB/2.284 MB (100%) endpoint: https://cdn-registry-1.docker.io/v1/
  151. Step 2 : RUN ls -lh /
  152. ---> Running in 9c9e81692ae9
  153. total 24
  154. drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4.0K Mar 12 2013 bin
  155. drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 4.0K Oct 19 00:19 dev
  156. drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4.0K Oct 19 00:19 etc
  157. drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4.0K Nov 15 23:34 lib
  158. lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 3 Mar 12 2013 lib64 -> lib
  159. dr-xr-xr-x 116 root root 0 Nov 15 23:34 proc
  160. lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 3 Mar 12 2013 sbin -> bin
  161. dr-xr-xr-x 13 root root 0 Nov 15 23:34 sys
  162. drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4.0K Mar 12 2013 tmp
  163. drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4.0K Nov 15 23:34 usr
  164. ---> b35f4035db3f
  165. Step 3 : CMD echo Hello World
  166. ---> Running in 02071fceb21b
  167. ---> f52f38b7823e
  168. Successfully built f52f38b7823e
  169. This example specifies that the ``PATH`` is ``.``, and so all the files in
  170. the local directory get tar'd and sent to the Docker daemon. The ``PATH``
  171. specifies where to find the files for the "context" of the build on
  172. the Docker daemon. Remember that the daemon could be running on a
  173. remote machine and that no parsing of the ``Dockerfile`` happens at the
  174. client side (where you're running ``docker build``). That means that
  175. *all* the files at ``PATH`` get sent, not just the ones listed to
  176. :ref:`ADD <dockerfile_add>` in the ``Dockerfile``.
  177. The transfer of context from the local machine to the Docker daemon is
  178. what the ``docker`` client means when you see the "Uploading context"
  179. message.
  180. .. code-block:: bash
  181. $ sudo docker build -t vieux/apache:2.0 .
  182. This will build like the previous example, but it will then tag the
  183. resulting image. The repository name will be ``vieux/apache`` and the
  184. tag will be ``2.0``
  185. .. code-block:: bash
  186. $ sudo docker build - < Dockerfile
  187. This will read a ``Dockerfile`` from *stdin* without context. Due to
  188. the lack of a context, no contents of any local directory will be sent
  189. to the ``docker`` daemon. Since there is no context, a ``Dockerfile``
  190. ``ADD`` only works if it refers to a remote URL.
  191. .. code-block:: bash
  192. $ sudo docker build github.com/creack/docker-firefox
  193. This will clone the GitHub repository and use the cloned repository as
  194. context. The ``Dockerfile`` at the root of the repository is used as
  195. ``Dockerfile``. Note that you can specify an arbitrary Git repository
  196. by using the ``git://`` schema.
  197. .. _cli_commit:
  198. ``commit``
  199. ----------
  200. ::
  201. Usage: docker commit [OPTIONS] CONTAINER [REPOSITORY[:TAG]]
  202. Create a new image from a container's changes
  203. -m, --message="": Commit message
  204. -a, --author="": Author (eg. "John Hannibal Smith <hannibal@a-team.com>"
  205. --run="": Configuration to be applied when the image is launched with `docker run`.
  206. (ex: -run='{"Cmd": ["cat", "/world"], "PortSpecs": ["22"]}')
  207. .. _cli_commit_examples:
  208. Commit an existing container
  209. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  210. .. code-block:: bash
  211. $ sudo docker ps
  212. ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS
  213. c3f279d17e0a ubuntu:12.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours
  214. 197387f1b436 ubuntu:12.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours
  215. $ docker commit c3f279d17e0a SvenDowideit/testimage:version3
  216. f5283438590d
  217. $ docker images | head
  218. REPOSITORY TAG ID CREATED VIRTUAL SIZE
  219. SvenDowideit/testimage version3 f5283438590d 16 seconds ago 335.7 MB
  220. Change the command that a container runs
  221. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  222. Sometimes you have an application container running just a service and you need
  223. to make a quick change and then change it back.
  224. In this example, we run a container with ``ls`` and then change the image to
  225. run ``ls /etc``.
  226. .. code-block:: bash
  227. $ docker run -t -name test ubuntu ls
  228. bin boot dev etc home lib lib64 media mnt opt proc root run sbin selinux srv sys tmp usr var
  229. $ docker commit -run='{"Cmd": ["ls","/etc"]}' test test2
  230. 933d16de9e70005304c1717b5c6f2f39d6fd50752834c6f34a155c70790011eb
  231. $ docker run -t test2
  232. adduser.conf gshadow login.defs rc0.d
  233. alternatives gshadow- logrotate.d rc1.d
  234. apt host.conf lsb-base rc2.d
  235. ...
  236. Full -run example
  237. .................
  238. The ``--run`` JSON hash changes the ``Config`` section when running ``docker inspect CONTAINERID``
  239. or ``config`` when running ``docker inspect IMAGEID``.
  240. (Multiline is okay within a single quote ``'``)
  241. .. code-block:: bash
  242. $ sudo docker commit -run='
  243. {
  244. "Entrypoint" : null,
  245. "Privileged" : false,
  246. "User" : "",
  247. "VolumesFrom" : "",
  248. "Cmd" : ["cat", "-e", "/etc/resolv.conf"],
  249. "Dns" : ["8.8.8.8", "8.8.4.4"],
  250. "MemorySwap" : 0,
  251. "AttachStdin" : false,
  252. "AttachStderr" : false,
  253. "CpuShares" : 0,
  254. "OpenStdin" : false,
  255. "Volumes" : null,
  256. "Hostname" : "122612f45831",
  257. "PortSpecs" : ["22", "80", "443"],
  258. "Image" : "b750fe79269d2ec9a3c593ef05b4332b1d1a02a62b4accb2c21d589ff2f5f2dc",
  259. "Tty" : false,
  260. "Env" : [
  261. "HOME=/",
  262. "PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin"
  263. ],
  264. "StdinOnce" : false,
  265. "Domainname" : "",
  266. "WorkingDir" : "/",
  267. "NetworkDisabled" : false,
  268. "Memory" : 0,
  269. "AttachStdout" : false
  270. }' $CONTAINER_ID
  271. .. _cli_cp:
  272. ``cp``
  273. ------
  274. ::
  275. Usage: docker cp CONTAINER:PATH HOSTPATH
  276. Copy files/folders from the containers filesystem to the host
  277. path. Paths are relative to the root of the filesystem.
  278. .. code-block:: bash
  279. $ sudo docker cp 7bb0e258aefe:/etc/debian_version .
  280. $ sudo docker cp blue_frog:/etc/hosts .
  281. .. _cli_diff:
  282. ``diff``
  283. --------
  284. ::
  285. Usage: docker diff CONTAINER
  286. List the changed files and directories in a container's filesystem
  287. There are 3 events that are listed in the 'diff':
  288. 1. ```A``` - Add
  289. 2. ```D``` - Delete
  290. 3. ```C``` - Change
  291. For example:
  292. .. code-block:: bash
  293. $ sudo docker diff 7bb0e258aefe
  294. C /dev
  295. A /dev/kmsg
  296. C /etc
  297. A /etc/mtab
  298. A /go
  299. A /go/src
  300. A /go/src/github.com
  301. A /go/src/github.com/dotcloud
  302. A /go/src/github.com/dotcloud/docker
  303. A /go/src/github.com/dotcloud/docker/.git
  304. ....
  305. .. _cli_events:
  306. ``events``
  307. ----------
  308. ::
  309. Usage: docker events
  310. Get real time events from the server
  311. --since="": Show previously created events and then stream.
  312. (either seconds since epoch, or date string as below)
  313. .. _cli_events_example:
  314. Examples
  315. ~~~~~~~~
  316. You'll need two shells for this example.
  317. Shell 1: Listening for events
  318. .............................
  319. .. code-block:: bash
  320. $ sudo docker events
  321. Shell 2: Start and Stop a Container
  322. ...................................
  323. .. code-block:: bash
  324. $ sudo docker start 4386fb97867d
  325. $ sudo docker stop 4386fb97867d
  326. Shell 1: (Again .. now showing events)
  327. ......................................
  328. .. code-block:: bash
  329. [2013-09-03 15:49:26 +0200 CEST] 4386fb97867d: (from 12de384bfb10) start
  330. [2013-09-03 15:49:29 +0200 CEST] 4386fb97867d: (from 12de384bfb10) die
  331. [2013-09-03 15:49:29 +0200 CEST] 4386fb97867d: (from 12de384bfb10) stop
  332. Show events in the past from a specified time
  333. .............................................
  334. .. code-block:: bash
  335. $ sudo docker events -since 1378216169
  336. [2013-09-03 15:49:29 +0200 CEST] 4386fb97867d: (from 12de384bfb10) die
  337. [2013-09-03 15:49:29 +0200 CEST] 4386fb97867d: (from 12de384bfb10) stop
  338. $ sudo docker events -since '2013-09-03'
  339. [2013-09-03 15:49:26 +0200 CEST] 4386fb97867d: (from 12de384bfb10) start
  340. [2013-09-03 15:49:29 +0200 CEST] 4386fb97867d: (from 12de384bfb10) die
  341. [2013-09-03 15:49:29 +0200 CEST] 4386fb97867d: (from 12de384bfb10) stop
  342. $ sudo docker events -since '2013-09-03 15:49:29 +0200 CEST'
  343. [2013-09-03 15:49:29 +0200 CEST] 4386fb97867d: (from 12de384bfb10) die
  344. [2013-09-03 15:49:29 +0200 CEST] 4386fb97867d: (from 12de384bfb10) stop
  345. .. _cli_export:
  346. ``export``
  347. ----------
  348. ::
  349. Usage: docker export CONTAINER
  350. Export the contents of a filesystem as a tar archive to STDOUT
  351. For example:
  352. .. code-block:: bash
  353. $ sudo docker export red_panda > latest.tar
  354. .. _cli_history:
  355. ``history``
  356. -----------
  357. ::
  358. Usage: docker history [OPTIONS] IMAGE
  359. Show the history of an image
  360. --no-trunc=false: Don't truncate output
  361. -q, --quiet=false: only show numeric IDs
  362. To see how the ``docker:latest`` image was built:
  363. .. code-block:: bash
  364. $ docker history docker
  365. ID CREATED CREATED BY
  366. docker:latest 19 hours ago /bin/sh -c #(nop) ADD . in /go/src/github.com/dotcloud/docker
  367. cf5f2467662d 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c #(nop) ENTRYPOINT ["hack/dind"]
  368. 3538fbe372bf 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c #(nop) WORKDIR /go/src/github.com/dotcloud/docker
  369. 7450f65072e5 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c #(nop) VOLUME /var/lib/docker
  370. b79d62b97328 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c apt-get install -y -q lxc
  371. 36714852a550 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c apt-get install -y -q iptables
  372. 8c4c706df1d6 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c /bin/echo -e '[default]\naccess_key=$AWS_ACCESS_KEY\nsecret_key=$AWS_SECRET_KEYn' > /.s3cfg
  373. b89989433c48 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c pip install python-magic
  374. a23e640d85b5 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c pip install s3cmd
  375. 41f54fec7e79 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c apt-get install -y -q python-pip
  376. d9bc04add907 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c apt-get install -y -q reprepro dpkg-sig
  377. e74f4760fa70 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c gem install --no-rdoc --no-ri fpm
  378. 1e43224726eb 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c apt-get install -y -q ruby1.9.3 rubygems libffi-dev
  379. 460953ae9d7f 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c #(nop) ENV GOPATH=/go:/go/src/github.com/dotcloud/docker/vendor
  380. 8b63eb1d666b 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c #(nop) ENV PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/goroot/bin
  381. 3087f3bcedf2 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c #(nop) ENV GOROOT=/goroot
  382. 635840d198e5 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c cd /goroot/src && ./make.bash
  383. 439f4a0592ba 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c curl -s https://go.googlecode.com/files/go1.1.2.src.tar.gz | tar -v -C / -xz && mv /go /goroot
  384. 13967ed36e93 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c #(nop) ENV CGO_ENABLED=0
  385. bf7424458437 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c apt-get install -y -q build-essential
  386. a89ec997c3bf 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c apt-get install -y -q mercurial
  387. b9f165c6e749 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c apt-get install -y -q git
  388. 17a64374afa7 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c apt-get install -y -q curl
  389. d5e85dc5b1d8 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c apt-get update
  390. 13e642467c11 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c echo 'deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu precise main universe' > /etc/apt/sources.list
  391. ae6dde92a94e 2 weeks ago /bin/sh -c #(nop) MAINTAINER Solomon Hykes <solomon@dotcloud.com>
  392. ubuntu:12.04 6 months ago
  393. .. _cli_images:
  394. ``images``
  395. ----------
  396. ::
  397. Usage: docker images [OPTIONS] [NAME]
  398. List images
  399. -a, --all=false: show all images (by default filter out the intermediate images used to build)
  400. --no-trunc=false: Don't truncate output
  401. -q, --quiet=false: only show numeric IDs
  402. --tree=false: output graph in tree format
  403. --viz=false: output graph in graphviz format
  404. Listing the most recently created images
  405. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  406. .. code-block:: bash
  407. $ sudo docker images | head
  408. REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED VIRTUAL SIZE
  409. <none> <none> 77af4d6b9913 19 hours ago 1.089 GB
  410. committest latest b6fa739cedf5 19 hours ago 1.089 GB
  411. <none> <none> 78a85c484f71 19 hours ago 1.089 GB
  412. docker latest 30557a29d5ab 20 hours ago 1.089 GB
  413. <none> <none> 0124422dd9f9 20 hours ago 1.089 GB
  414. <none> <none> 18ad6fad3402 22 hours ago 1.082 GB
  415. <none> <none> f9f1e26352f0 23 hours ago 1.089 GB
  416. tryout latest 2629d1fa0b81 23 hours ago 131.5 MB
  417. <none> <none> 5ed6274db6ce 24 hours ago 1.089 GB
  418. Listing the full length image IDs
  419. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  420. .. code-block:: bash
  421. $ sudo docker images --no-trunc | head
  422. REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED VIRTUAL SIZE
  423. <none> <none> 77af4d6b9913e693e8d0b4b294fa62ade6054e6b2f1ffb617ac955dd63fb0182 19 hours ago 1.089 GB
  424. committest latest b6fa739cedf5ea12a620a439402b6004d057da800f91c7524b5086a5e4749c9f 19 hours ago 1.089 GB
  425. <none> <none> 78a85c484f71509adeaace20e72e941f6bdd2b25b4c75da8693efd9f61a37921 19 hours ago 1.089 GB
  426. docker latest 30557a29d5abc51e5f1d5b472e79b7e296f595abcf19fe6b9199dbbc809c6ff4 20 hours ago 1.089 GB
  427. <none> <none> 0124422dd9f9cf7ef15c0617cda3931ee68346455441d66ab8bdc5b05e9fdce5 20 hours ago 1.089 GB
  428. <none> <none> 18ad6fad340262ac2a636efd98a6d1f0ea775ae3d45240d3418466495a19a81b 22 hours ago 1.082 GB
  429. <none> <none> f9f1e26352f0a3ba6a0ff68167559f64f3e21ff7ada60366e2d44a04befd1d3a 23 hours ago 1.089 GB
  430. tryout latest 2629d1fa0b81b222fca63371ca16cbf6a0772d07759ff80e8d1369b926940074 23 hours ago 131.5 MB
  431. <none> <none> 5ed6274db6ceb2397844896966ea239290555e74ef307030ebb01ff91b1914df 24 hours ago 1.089 GB
  432. Displaying images visually
  433. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  434. .. code-block:: bash
  435. $ sudo docker images --viz | dot -Tpng -o docker.png
  436. .. image:: docker_images.gif
  437. :alt: Example inheritance graph of Docker images.
  438. Displaying image hierarchy
  439. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  440. .. code-block:: bash
  441. $ sudo docker images --tree
  442. ├─8dbd9e392a96 Size: 131.5 MB (virtual 131.5 MB) Tags: ubuntu:12.04,ubuntu:latest,ubuntu:precise
  443. └─27cf78414709 Size: 180.1 MB (virtual 180.1 MB)
  444. └─b750fe79269d Size: 24.65 kB (virtual 180.1 MB) Tags: ubuntu:12.10,ubuntu:quantal
  445. ├─f98de3b610d5 Size: 12.29 kB (virtual 180.1 MB)
  446. │ └─7da80deb7dbf Size: 16.38 kB (virtual 180.1 MB)
  447. │ └─65ed2fee0a34 Size: 20.66 kB (virtual 180.2 MB)
  448. │ └─a2b9ea53dddc Size: 819.7 MB (virtual 999.8 MB)
  449. │ └─a29b932eaba8 Size: 28.67 kB (virtual 999.9 MB)
  450. │ └─e270a44f124d Size: 12.29 kB (virtual 999.9 MB) Tags: progrium/buildstep:latest
  451. └─17e74ac162d8 Size: 53.93 kB (virtual 180.2 MB)
  452. └─339a3f56b760 Size: 24.65 kB (virtual 180.2 MB)
  453. └─904fcc40e34d Size: 96.7 MB (virtual 276.9 MB)
  454. └─b1b0235328dd Size: 363.3 MB (virtual 640.2 MB)
  455. └─7cb05d1acb3b Size: 20.48 kB (virtual 640.2 MB)
  456. └─47bf6f34832d Size: 20.48 kB (virtual 640.2 MB)
  457. └─f165104e82ed Size: 12.29 kB (virtual 640.2 MB)
  458. └─d9cf85a47b7e Size: 1.911 MB (virtual 642.2 MB)
  459. └─3ee562df86ca Size: 17.07 kB (virtual 642.2 MB)
  460. └─b05fc2d00e4a Size: 24.96 kB (virtual 642.2 MB)
  461. └─c96a99614930 Size: 12.29 kB (virtual 642.2 MB)
  462. └─a6a357a48c49 Size: 12.29 kB (virtual 642.2 MB) Tags: ndj/mongodb:latest
  463. .. _cli_import:
  464. ``import``
  465. ----------
  466. ::
  467. Usage: docker import URL|- [REPOSITORY[:TAG]]
  468. Create an empty filesystem image and import the contents of the tarball
  469. (.tar, .tar.gz, .tgz, .bzip, .tar.xz, .txz) into it, then optionally tag it.
  470. At this time, the URL must start with ``http`` and point to a single
  471. file archive (.tar, .tar.gz, .tgz, .bzip, .tar.xz, or .txz) containing a
  472. root filesystem. If you would like to import from a local directory or
  473. archive, you can use the ``-`` parameter to take the data from *stdin*.
  474. Examples
  475. ~~~~~~~~
  476. Import from a remote location
  477. .............................
  478. This will create a new untagged image.
  479. .. code-block:: bash
  480. $ sudo docker import http://example.com/exampleimage.tgz
  481. Import from a local file
  482. ........................
  483. Import to docker via pipe and *stdin*.
  484. .. code-block:: bash
  485. $ cat exampleimage.tgz | sudo docker import - exampleimagelocal:new
  486. Import from a local directory
  487. .............................
  488. .. code-block:: bash
  489. $ sudo tar -c . | docker import - exampleimagedir
  490. Note the ``sudo`` in this example -- you must preserve the ownership of the
  491. files (especially root ownership) during the archiving with tar. If you are not
  492. root (or the sudo command) when you tar, then the ownerships might not get
  493. preserved.
  494. .. _cli_info:
  495. ``info``
  496. --------
  497. ::
  498. Usage: docker info
  499. Display system-wide information.
  500. .. code-block:: bash
  501. $ sudo docker info
  502. Containers: 292
  503. Images: 194
  504. Debug mode (server): false
  505. Debug mode (client): false
  506. Fds: 22
  507. Goroutines: 67
  508. LXC Version: 0.9.0
  509. EventsListeners: 115
  510. Kernel Version: 3.8.0-33-generic
  511. WARNING: No swap limit support
  512. .. _cli_insert:
  513. ``insert``
  514. ----------
  515. ::
  516. Usage: docker insert IMAGE URL PATH
  517. Insert a file from URL in the IMAGE at PATH
  518. Use the specified ``IMAGE`` as the parent for a new image which adds a
  519. :ref:`layer <layer_def>` containing the new file. The ``insert`` command does
  520. not modify the original image, and the new image has the contents of the parent
  521. image, plus the new file.
  522. Examples
  523. ~~~~~~~~
  524. Insert file from GitHub
  525. .......................
  526. .. code-block:: bash
  527. $ sudo docker insert 8283e18b24bc https://raw.github.com/metalivedev/django/master/postinstall /tmp/postinstall.sh
  528. 06fd35556d7b
  529. .. _cli_inspect:
  530. ``inspect``
  531. -----------
  532. ::
  533. Usage: docker inspect CONTAINER|IMAGE [CONTAINER|IMAGE...]
  534. Return low-level information on a container/image
  535. -f, --format="": Format the output using the given go template.
  536. By default, this will render all results in a JSON array. If a format
  537. is specified, the given template will be executed for each result.
  538. Go's `text/template <http://golang.org/pkg/text/template/>`_ package
  539. describes all the details of the format.
  540. Examples
  541. ~~~~~~~~
  542. Get an instance's IP Address
  543. ............................
  544. For the most part, you can pick out any field from the JSON in a
  545. fairly straightforward manner.
  546. .. code-block:: bash
  547. $ sudo docker inspect --format='{{.NetworkSettings.IPAddress}}' $INSTANCE_ID
  548. List All Port Bindings
  549. ......................
  550. One can loop over arrays and maps in the results to produce simple
  551. text output:
  552. .. code-block:: bash
  553. $ sudo docker inspect -format='{{range $p, $conf := .NetworkSettings.Ports}} {{$p}} -> {{(index $conf 0).HostPort}} {{end}}' $INSTANCE_ID
  554. Find a Specific Port Mapping
  555. ............................
  556. The ``.Field`` syntax doesn't work when the field name begins with a
  557. number, but the template language's ``index`` function does. The
  558. ``.NetworkSettings.Ports`` section contains a map of the internal port
  559. mappings to a list of external address/port objects, so to grab just
  560. the numeric public port, you use ``index`` to find the specific port
  561. map, and then ``index`` 0 contains first object inside of that. Then
  562. we ask for the ``HostPort`` field to get the public address.
  563. .. code-block:: bash
  564. $ sudo docker inspect -format='{{(index (index .NetworkSettings.Ports "8787/tcp") 0).HostPort}}' $INSTANCE_ID
  565. .. _cli_kill:
  566. ``kill``
  567. --------
  568. ::
  569. Usage: docker kill [OPTIONS] CONTAINER [CONTAINER...]
  570. Kill a running container (send SIGKILL, or specified signal)
  571. -s, --signal="KILL": Signal to send to the container
  572. The main process inside the container will be sent SIGKILL, or any signal specified with option ``--signal``.
  573. Known Issues (kill)
  574. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  575. * :issue:`197` indicates that ``docker kill`` may leave directories
  576. behind and make it difficult to remove the container.
  577. * :issue:`3844` lxc 1.0.0 beta3 removed ``lcx-kill`` which is used by Docker versions before 0.8.0;
  578. see the issue for a workaround.
  579. .. _cli_load:
  580. ``load``
  581. --------
  582. ::
  583. Usage: docker load < repository.tar
  584. Loads a tarred repository from the standard input stream.
  585. Restores both images and tags.
  586. .. _cli_login:
  587. ``login``
  588. ---------
  589. ::
  590. Usage: docker login [OPTIONS] [SERVER]
  591. Register or Login to the docker registry server
  592. -e, --email="": email
  593. -p, --password="": password
  594. -u, --username="": username
  595. If you want to login to a private registry you can
  596. specify this by adding the server name.
  597. example:
  598. docker login localhost:8080
  599. .. _cli_logs:
  600. ``logs``
  601. --------
  602. ::
  603. Usage: docker logs [OPTIONS] CONTAINER
  604. Fetch the logs of a container
  605. -f, --follow=false: Follow log output
  606. The ``docker logs`` command is a convenience which batch-retrieves whatever
  607. logs are present at the time of execution. This does not guarantee execution
  608. order when combined with a ``docker run`` (i.e. your run may not have generated
  609. any logs at the time you execute ``docker logs``).
  610. The ``docker logs --follow`` command combines ``docker logs`` and ``docker attach``:
  611. it will first return all logs from the beginning and then continue streaming
  612. new output from the container's stdout and stderr.
  613. .. _cli_port:
  614. ``port``
  615. --------
  616. ::
  617. Usage: docker port [OPTIONS] CONTAINER PRIVATE_PORT
  618. Lookup the public-facing port which is NAT-ed to PRIVATE_PORT
  619. .. _cli_ps:
  620. ``ps``
  621. ------
  622. ::
  623. Usage: docker ps [OPTIONS]
  624. List containers
  625. -a, --all=false: Show all containers. Only running containers are shown by default.
  626. --no-trunc=false: Don't truncate output
  627. -q, --quiet=false: Only display numeric IDs
  628. Running ``docker ps`` showing 2 linked containers.
  629. .. code-block:: bash
  630. $ docker ps
  631. CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
  632. 4c01db0b339c ubuntu:12.04 bash 17 seconds ago Up 16 seconds webapp
  633. d7886598dbe2 crosbymichael/redis:latest /redis-server --dir 33 minutes ago Up 33 minutes 6379/tcp redis,webapp/db
  634. fd2645e2e2b5 busybox:latest top 10 days ago Ghost insane_ptolemy
  635. The last container is marked as a ``Ghost`` container. It is a container that was running when the docker daemon was restarted (upgraded, or ``-H`` settings changed). The container is still running, but as this docker daemon process is not able to manage it, you can't attach to it. To bring them out of ``Ghost`` Status, you need to use ``docker kill`` or ``docker restart``.
  636. .. _cli_pull:
  637. ``pull``
  638. --------
  639. ::
  640. Usage: docker pull NAME
  641. Pull an image or a repository from the registry
  642. .. _cli_push:
  643. ``push``
  644. --------
  645. ::
  646. Usage: docker push NAME
  647. Push an image or a repository to the registry
  648. .. _cli_restart:
  649. ``restart``
  650. -----------
  651. ::
  652. Usage: docker restart [OPTIONS] NAME
  653. Restart a running container
  654. .. _cli_rm:
  655. ``rm``
  656. ------
  657. ::
  658. Usage: docker rm [OPTIONS] CONTAINER
  659. Remove one or more containers
  660. --link="": Remove the link instead of the actual container
  661. Known Issues (rm)
  662. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  663. * :issue:`197` indicates that ``docker kill`` may leave directories
  664. behind and make it difficult to remove the container.
  665. Examples:
  666. ~~~~~~~~~
  667. .. code-block:: bash
  668. $ sudo docker rm /redis
  669. /redis
  670. This will remove the container referenced under the link ``/redis``.
  671. .. code-block:: bash
  672. $ sudo docker rm --link /webapp/redis
  673. /webapp/redis
  674. This will remove the underlying link between ``/webapp`` and the ``/redis`` containers removing all
  675. network communication.
  676. .. code-block:: bash
  677. $ sudo docker rm `docker ps -a -q`
  678. This command will delete all stopped containers. The command ``docker ps -a -q`` will return all
  679. existing container IDs and pass them to the ``rm`` command which will delete them. Any running
  680. containers will not be deleted.
  681. .. _cli_rmi:
  682. ``rmi``
  683. -------
  684. ::
  685. Usage: docker rmi IMAGE [IMAGE...]
  686. Remove one or more images
  687. Removing tagged images
  688. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  689. Images can be removed either by their short or long ID's, or their image names.
  690. If an image has more than one name, each of them needs to be removed before the
  691. image is removed.
  692. .. code-block:: bash
  693. $ sudo docker images
  694. REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
  695. test1 latest fd484f19954f 23 seconds ago 7 B (virtual 4.964 MB)
  696. test latest fd484f19954f 23 seconds ago 7 B (virtual 4.964 MB)
  697. test2 latest fd484f19954f 23 seconds ago 7 B (virtual 4.964 MB)
  698. $ sudo docker rmi fd484f19954f
  699. Error: Conflict, cannot delete image fd484f19954f because it is tagged in multiple repositories
  700. 2013/12/11 05:47:16 Error: failed to remove one or more images
  701. $ sudo docker rmi test1
  702. Untagged: fd484f19954f4920da7ff372b5067f5b7ddb2fd3830cecd17b96ea9e286ba5b8
  703. $ sudo docker rmi test2
  704. Untagged: fd484f19954f4920da7ff372b5067f5b7ddb2fd3830cecd17b96ea9e286ba5b8
  705. $ sudo docker images
  706. REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
  707. test1 latest fd484f19954f 23 seconds ago 7 B (virtual 4.964 MB)
  708. $ sudo docker rmi test
  709. Untagged: fd484f19954f4920da7ff372b5067f5b7ddb2fd3830cecd17b96ea9e286ba5b8
  710. Deleted: fd484f19954f4920da7ff372b5067f5b7ddb2fd3830cecd17b96ea9e286ba5b8
  711. .. _cli_run:
  712. ``run``
  713. -------
  714. ::
  715. Usage: docker run [OPTIONS] IMAGE[:TAG] [COMMAND] [ARG...]
  716. Run a command in a new container
  717. -a, --attach=map[]: Attach to stdin, stdout or stderr
  718. -c, --cpu-shares=0: CPU shares (relative weight)
  719. --cidfile="": Write the container ID to the file
  720. -d, --detach=false: Detached mode: Run container in the background, print new container id
  721. -e, --env=[]: Set environment variables
  722. -h, --host="": Container host name
  723. -i, --interactive=false: Keep stdin open even if not attached
  724. --privileged=false: Give extended privileges to this container
  725. -m, --memory="": Memory limit (format: <number><optional unit>, where unit = b, k, m or g)
  726. -n, --networking=true: Enable networking for this container
  727. -p, --publish=[]: Map a network port to the container
  728. --rm=false: Automatically remove the container when it exits (incompatible with -d)
  729. -t, --tty=false: Allocate a pseudo-tty
  730. -u, --user="": Username or UID
  731. --dns=[]: Set custom dns servers for the container
  732. -v, --volume=[]: Create a bind mount to a directory or file with: [host-path]:[container-path]:[rw|ro]. If a directory "container-path" is missing, then docker creates a new volume.
  733. --volumes-from="": Mount all volumes from the given container(s)
  734. --entrypoint="": Overwrite the default entrypoint set by the image
  735. -w, --workdir="": Working directory inside the container
  736. --lxc-conf=[]: Add custom lxc options -lxc-conf="lxc.cgroup.cpuset.cpus = 0,1"
  737. --sig-proxy=true: Proxify all received signal to the process (even in non-tty mode)
  738. --expose=[]: Expose a port from the container without publishing it to your host
  739. --link="": Add link to another container (name:alias)
  740. --name="": Assign the specified name to the container. If no name is specific docker will generate a random name
  741. -P, --publish-all=false: Publish all exposed ports to the host interfaces
  742. The ``docker run`` command first ``creates`` a writeable container layer over
  743. the specified image, and then ``starts`` it using the specified command. That
  744. is, ``docker run`` is equivalent to the API ``/containers/create`` then
  745. ``/containers/(id)/start``.
  746. The ``docker run`` command can be used in combination with ``docker commit`` to
  747. :ref:`change the command that a container runs <cli_commit_examples>`.
  748. See :ref:`port_redirection` for more detailed information about the ``--expose``,
  749. ``-p``, ``-P`` and ``--link`` parameters, and :ref:`working_with_links_names` for
  750. specific examples using ``--link``.
  751. Known Issues (run -volumes-from)
  752. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  753. * :issue:`2702`: "lxc-start: Permission denied - failed to mount"
  754. could indicate a permissions problem with AppArmor. Please see the
  755. issue for a workaround.
  756. Examples:
  757. ~~~~~~~~~
  758. .. code-block:: bash
  759. $ sudo docker run --cidfile /tmp/docker_test.cid ubuntu echo "test"
  760. This will create a container and print ``test`` to the console. The
  761. ``cidfile`` flag makes Docker attempt to create a new file and write the
  762. container ID to it. If the file exists already, Docker will return an
  763. error. Docker will close this file when ``docker run`` exits.
  764. .. code-block:: bash
  765. $ sudo docker run -t -i --rm ubuntu bash
  766. root@bc338942ef20:/# mount -t tmpfs none /mnt
  767. mount: permission denied
  768. This will *not* work, because by default, most potentially dangerous
  769. kernel capabilities are dropped; including ``cap_sys_admin`` (which is
  770. required to mount filesystems). However, the ``-privileged`` flag will
  771. allow it to run:
  772. .. code-block:: bash
  773. $ sudo docker run --privileged ubuntu bash
  774. root@50e3f57e16e6:/# mount -t tmpfs none /mnt
  775. root@50e3f57e16e6:/# df -h
  776. Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
  777. none 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /mnt
  778. The ``-privileged`` flag gives *all* capabilities to the container,
  779. and it also lifts all the limitations enforced by the ``device``
  780. cgroup controller. In other words, the container can then do almost
  781. everything that the host can do. This flag exists to allow special
  782. use-cases, like running Docker within Docker.
  783. .. code-block:: bash
  784. $ sudo docker run -w /path/to/dir/ -i -t ubuntu pwd
  785. The ``-w`` lets the command being executed inside directory given,
  786. here ``/path/to/dir/``. If the path does not exists it is created inside the
  787. container.
  788. .. code-block:: bash
  789. $ sudo docker run -v `pwd`:`pwd` -w `pwd` -i -t ubuntu pwd
  790. The ``-v`` flag mounts the current working directory into the container.
  791. The ``-w`` lets the command being executed inside the current
  792. working directory, by changing into the directory to the value
  793. returned by ``pwd``. So this combination executes the command
  794. using the container, but inside the current working directory.
  795. .. code-block:: bash
  796. $ sudo docker run -v /doesnt/exist:/foo -w /foo -i -t ubuntu bash
  797. When the host directory of a bind-mounted volume doesn't exist, Docker
  798. will automatically create this directory on the host for you. In the
  799. example above, Docker will create the ``/doesnt/exist`` folder before
  800. starting your container.
  801. .. code-block:: bash
  802. $ sudo docker run -t -i -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -v ./static-docker:/usr/bin/docker busybox sh
  803. By bind-mounting the docker unix socket and statically linked docker binary
  804. (such as that provided by https://get.docker.io), you give the container
  805. the full access to create and manipulate the host's docker daemon.
  806. .. code-block:: bash
  807. $ sudo docker run -p 127.0.0.1:80:8080 ubuntu bash
  808. This binds port ``8080`` of the container to port ``80`` on ``127.0.0.1`` of the
  809. host machine. :ref:`port_redirection` explains in detail how to manipulate ports
  810. in Docker.
  811. .. code-block:: bash
  812. $ sudo docker run --expose 80 ubuntu bash
  813. This exposes port ``80`` of the container for use within a link without
  814. publishing the port to the host system's interfaces. :ref:`port_redirection`
  815. explains in detail how to manipulate ports in Docker.
  816. .. code-block:: bash
  817. $ sudo docker run --name console -t -i ubuntu bash
  818. This will create and run a new container with the container name
  819. being ``console``.
  820. .. code-block:: bash
  821. $ sudo docker run --link /redis:redis --name console ubuntu bash
  822. The ``--link`` flag will link the container named ``/redis`` into the
  823. newly created container with the alias ``redis``. The new container
  824. can access the network and environment of the redis container via
  825. environment variables. The ``--name`` flag will assign the name ``console``
  826. to the newly created container.
  827. .. code-block:: bash
  828. $ sudo docker run --volumes-from 777f7dc92da7,ba8c0c54f0f2:ro -i -t ubuntu pwd
  829. The ``--volumes-from`` flag mounts all the defined volumes from the
  830. referenced containers. Containers can be specified by a comma seperated
  831. list or by repetitions of the ``--volumes-from`` argument. The container
  832. ID may be optionally suffixed with ``:ro`` or ``:rw`` to mount the volumes in
  833. read-only or read-write mode, respectively. By default, the volumes are mounted
  834. in the same mode (read write or read only) as the reference container.
  835. A complete example
  836. ..................
  837. .. code-block:: bash
  838. $ sudo docker run -d --name static static-web-files sh
  839. $ sudo docker run -d --expose=8098 --name riak riakserver
  840. $ sudo docker run -d -m 100m -e DEVELOPMENT=1 -e BRANCH=example-code -v $(pwd):/app/bin:ro --name app appserver
  841. $ sudo docker run -d -p 1443:443 --dns=dns.dev.org -v /var/log/httpd --volumes-from static --link riak --link app -h www.sven.dev.org --name web webserver
  842. $ sudo docker run -t -i --rm --volumes-from web -w /var/log/httpd busybox tail -f access.log
  843. This example shows 5 containers that might be set up to test a web application change:
  844. 1. Start a pre-prepared volume image ``static-web-files`` (in the background) that has CSS, image and static HTML in it, (with a ``VOLUME`` instruction in the ``Dockerfile`` to allow the web server to use those files);
  845. 2. Start a pre-prepared ``riakserver`` image, give the container name ``riak`` and expose port ``8098`` to any containers that link to it;
  846. 3. Start the ``appserver`` image, restricting its memory usage to 100MB, setting two environment variables ``DEVELOPMENT`` and ``BRANCH`` and bind-mounting the current directory (``$(pwd)``) in the container in read-only mode as ``/app/bin``;
  847. 4. Start the ``webserver``, mapping port ``443`` in the container to port ``1443`` on the Docker server, setting the DNS server to ``dns.dev.org``, creating a volume to put the log files into (so we can access it from another container), then importing the files from the volume exposed by the ``static`` container, and linking to all exposed ports from ``riak`` and ``app``. Lastly, we set the hostname to ``web.sven.dev.org`` so its consistent with the pre-generated SSL certificate;
  848. 5. Finally, we create a container that runs ``tail -f access.log`` using the logs volume from the ``web`` container, setting the workdir to ``/var/log/httpd``. The ``-rm`` option means that when the container exits, the container's layer is removed.
  849. .. _cli_save:
  850. ``save``
  851. ---------
  852. ::
  853. Usage: docker save image > repository.tar
  854. Streams a tarred repository to the standard output stream.
  855. Contains all parent layers, and all tags + versions.
  856. .. _cli_search:
  857. ``search``
  858. ----------
  859. ::
  860. Usage: docker search TERM
  861. Search the docker index for images
  862. --no-trunc=false: Don't truncate output
  863. -s, --stars=0: Only displays with at least xxx stars
  864. -t, --trusted=false: Only show trusted builds
  865. .. _cli_start:
  866. ``start``
  867. ---------
  868. ::
  869. Usage: docker start [OPTIONS] CONTAINER
  870. Start a stopped container
  871. -a, --attach=false: Attach container's stdout/stderr and forward all signals to the process
  872. -i, --interactive=false: Attach container's stdin
  873. .. _cli_stop:
  874. ``stop``
  875. --------
  876. ::
  877. Usage: docker stop [OPTIONS] CONTAINER [CONTAINER...]
  878. Stop a running container (Send SIGTERM, and then SIGKILL after grace period)
  879. -t, --time=10: Number of seconds to wait for the container to stop before killing it.
  880. The main process inside the container will receive SIGTERM, and after a grace period, SIGKILL
  881. .. _cli_tag:
  882. ``tag``
  883. -------
  884. ::
  885. Usage: docker tag [OPTIONS] IMAGE REPOSITORY[:TAG]
  886. Tag an image into a repository
  887. -f, --force=false: Force
  888. .. _cli_top:
  889. ``top``
  890. -------
  891. ::
  892. Usage: docker top CONTAINER [ps OPTIONS]
  893. Lookup the running processes of a container
  894. .. _cli_version:
  895. ``version``
  896. -----------
  897. Show the version of the Docker client, daemon, and latest released version.
  898. .. _cli_wait:
  899. ``wait``
  900. --------
  901. ::
  902. Usage: docker wait [OPTIONS] NAME
  903. Block until a container stops, then print its exit code.