NOTE: This used to be a gist that continually expanded. It's now a github project because it's considerably easier for other people to edit, fix and expand on Docker using Github. Just click [README.md](https://github.com/wsargent/docker-cheat-sheet/blob/master/README.md), and then on the "writing pen" icon on the right to edit.
"With Docker, developers can build any app in any language using any toolchain. “Dockerized” apps are completely portable and can run anywhere - colleagues’ OS X and Windows laptops, QA servers running Ubuntu in the cloud, and production data center VMs running Red Hat.
Developers can get going quickly by starting with one of the 13,000+ apps available on Docker Hub. Docker manages and tracks changes and dependencies, making it easier for sysadmins to understand how the apps that developers build work. And with Docker Hub, developers can automate their build pipeline and share artifacts with collaborators through public or private repositories.
Docker helps developers build and ship higher-quality applications, faster." -- [What is Docker](https://www.docker.com/whatisdocker/#copy1)
I use [Oh My Zsh](https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh) with the [Docker plugin](https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/wiki/Plugins#docker) for autocompletion of docker commands. YMMV.
### Linux
You should have at least a 3.8 kernel, but 3.10.x is [recommended](http://docs.docker.com/installation/binaries/#check-kernel-dependencies).
The canonical way to use Docker is with the aid of the boot2docker VM. However, using the out of the box boot2docker doesn't give me control over my Vagrant instances (especially the lack of port forwarding). So here's how to use boot2docker from a Vagrant instance.
We use the [YungSang modified boot2docker instance](https://github.com/YungSang/boot2docker-vagrant-box) from the [Vagrant Cloud](https://vagrantcloud.com/yungsang/boxes/boot2docker) -- this opens up port forwarding to the network, so is not safe on public wifi:
[Your basic isolated Docker process](http://etherealmind.com/basics-docker-containers-hypervisors-coreos/). Containers are to Virtual Machines as threads are to processes. Or you can think of them as chroots on steroids.
* __Containers are not transient__. `docker run` doesn't do what you think.
* __Containers are not limited to running a single command or process.__ You can use [supervisord](http://docs.docker.io/examples/using_supervisord/) or [runit](https://github.com/phusion/baseimage-docker).
If you want to map a directory on the host to a docker container, `docker run -v $HOSTDIR:$DOCKERDIR`. Also see [Volumes](https://github.com/wsargent/docker-cheat-sheet/#volumes).
If you want to integrate a container with a [host process manager](http://docs.docker.io/use/host_integration/), start the daemon with `-r=false` then use `docker start -a`.
If you want to expose container ports through the host, see the [exposing ports](https://github.com/wsargent/docker-cheat-sheet#exposing-ports) section.
There doesn't seem to be a way to use docker directly to import files into a container's filesystem. The closest thing is to mount a host file or directory as a data volume and copy it from inside the container.
From Docker v.1.3 it is possible to inject a new processes to a running container using [docker-exec](https://docs.docker.com/reference/commandline/cli/#exec). To enter a running container just attach a new shell process to a running container called foo, use: `docker exec -it foo /bin/bash`.
Prior to v.1.3, the "official" way to enter a docker container while it's running is to use `nsenter`, which uses [libcontainer under the hood](http://jpetazzo.github.io/2014/03/23/lxc-attach-nsinit-nsenter-docker-0-9/). Using an `sshd` daemon is [considered evil](http://jpetazzo.github.io/2014/06/23/docker-ssh-considered-evil/).
Unfortunately, nsenter requires some configuration and installation. If your operating system does not include nsenter (usually in a package named util-linux or similar, although it has to be quite a recent version), the easiest way is probably to install it through docker, as described in the first of the following links:
`nsenter` allows you to run any command (e.g. a shell) inside a container that's already running another command (e.g. your database or webserver). This allows you to see all mounted volumes, check on processes, log files etc. inside a running container.
The first installation method described above also installs a small wrapper script wrapping `nsenter` named `docker-enter` that makes executing a shell inside a running container as easy as `docker-enter CONTAINER` and any other command via `docker-enter CONTAINER COMMAND`.
* [`docker images`](http://docs.docker.io/reference/commandline/cli/#images) shows all images.
* [`docker import`](http://docs.docker.io/reference/commandline/cli/#import) creates an image from a tarball.
* [`docker build`](http://docs.docker.io/reference/commandline/cli/#build) creates image from Dockerfile.
* [`docker commit`](http://docs.docker.io/reference/commandline/cli/#commit) creates image from a container.
* [`docker rmi`](http://docs.docker.io/reference/commandline/cli/#rmi) removes an image.
* [`docker insert`](http://docs.docker.io/reference/commandline/cli/#insert) inserts a file from URL into image. (kind of odd, you'd think images would be immutable after create)
* [`docker load`](http://docs.docker.io/reference/commandline/cli/#load) loads an image from a tar archive as STDIN, including images and tags (as of 0.7).
* [`docker save`](http://docs.docker.io/reference/commandline/cli/#save) saves an image to a tar archive stream to STDOUT with all parent layers, tags & versions (as of 0.7).
### Info
* [`docker history`](http://docs.docker.io/reference/commandline/cli/#history) shows history of image.
* [`docker tag`](http://docs.docker.io/reference/commandline/cli/#tag) tags an image to a name (local or registry).
## Registry & Repository
A repository is a *hosted* collection of tagged images that together create the file system for a container.
A registry is a *host* -- a server that stores repositories and provides an HTTP API for [managing the uploading and downloading of repositories](http://docs.docker.io/use/workingwithrepository/).
[The configuration file](https://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/). Sets up a Docker container when you run `docker build` on it. Vastly preferable to `docker commit`.
Best to look at [http://github.com/wsargent/docker-devenv](http://github.com/wsargent/docker-devenv) and the [best practices](http://crosbymichael.com/dockerfile-best-practices.html) / [take 2](http://crosbymichael.com/dockerfile-best-practices-take-2.html) for more details.
If you use [jEdit](http://jedit.org), I've put up a syntax highlighting module for [Dockerfile](https://github.com/wsargent/jedit-docker-mode) you can use.
The [versioned filesystem](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aufs) in Docker is based on layers. They're like [git commits or changesets for filesystems](https://docs.docker.com/terms/layer/).
Links are how Docker containers talk to each other [through TCP/IP ports](http://docs.docker.io/use/working_with_links_names/). [Linking into Redis](http://docs.docker.io/use/working_with_links_names/#links-service-discovery-for-docker) and [Atlassian](http://blogs.atlassian.com/2013/11/docker-all-the-things-at-atlassian-automation-and-wiring/) show worked examples. You can also (in 0.11) resolve [links by hostname](http://docs.docker.io/use/working_with_links_names/#resolving-links-by-name).
NOTE: If you want containers to ONLY communicate with each other through links, start the docker daemon with `-icc=false` to disable inter process communication.
Docker volumes are [free-floating filesystems](http://docs.docker.com/userguide/dockervolumes/). They don't have to be connected to a particular container.
Volumes are useful in situations where you can't use links (which are TCP/IP only). For instance, if you need to have two docker instances communicate by leaving stuff on the filesystem.
You can mount them in several docker containers at once, using `docker run -volume-from`
Because volumes are isolated filesystems, they are often used to store state from computations between transient containers. That is, you can have a stateless and transient container run from a recipe, blow it away, and then have a second instance of the transient container pick up from where the last one left off.
As of 1.3, you can [map MacOS host directories as docker volumes](http://docs.docker.com/userguide/dockervolumes/#mount-a-host-directory-as-a-data-volume) through boot2docker:
Exposing ports through the host container is [fiddly but doable](http://docs.docker.io/use/port_redirection/#binding-a-port-to-an-host-interface).
First expose the port in your Dockerfile:
```
EXPOSE <CONTAINERPORT>
```
Then map the container port to the host port (only using localhost interface):
```
docker run -p 127.0.0.1:$HOSTPORT:$CONTAINERPORT --name CONTAINER -t someimage
```
If you're running Docker in Virtualbox, you then need to forward the port there as well. It can be useful to define something in Vagrantfile to expose a range of ports so that you can dynamically map them:
```
Vagrant.configure(VAGRANTFILE_API_VERSION) do |config|
...
(49000..49900).each do |port|
config.vm.network :forwarded_port, :host => port, :guest => port