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Docker Cheat Sheet
Deseja melhorar este cheat sheet? Veja a seção de Contribuição
Conteúdo
- Porque usar docker
- Pré-requisitos
- Instalação
- Containers
- Imagens
- Redes
- Registro e Repositório
- Dockerfile
- Camadas
- Links
- Volumes
- Expondo portas
- Boas praticas
- Docker-Compose
- Segurança
- Dicas
- Contribuição
Porque usar Docker
"Com Docker, desenvolvedores podem construir qualquer app em qualquer linguagem usando quanquer conjunto de ferramentas. Apps Dockerizados são completamente portáveis e podem rodar em qualquer lugar -- OS X e Windows laptops, servidores QA rodando Ubuntu na nuvem e data centers em produção rodando Red Hat em Máquinas Virtuais.
Desenvolverodes podem iniciar a utilizá-lo rapidamente com um dos mais de 13.000 apps disponíveis no Docker hub. Docker gerencia e rastreia alterações e dependências, tornando mais fácil para sysadmins o entendimento do funcionamento de apps construido pelos desenvolvedores. Além disso, com Docker Hub, desenvolvedores podem automatizar o pipeline de build e compartilhar artifacts com colaboradores através de repositórios públicos ou privados.
Docker auxilia desenvilvedores a construir e entregar aplicações de alta qualidade de maneira mais rápida." -- O que é Docker (What is Docker)
Pré-requisitos
Eu utilizo Oh My Zsh com Docker plugin para autocompletar os comandos do docker.
Linux
O kernel 3.10.x é o requisito mínimo para o uso do Docker.
MacOS
É necessário “Mountain Lion” 10.8 ou mais recente.
Windows 10
É necessário que o Hyper-V esteja habilitado na BIOS. Além disso, para precessadores intel, o VT-D também precisa estar habilidado caso esteja disponível.
Windows Server
Windows Server 2016 é a versão mínima necessária para instalar o docker e o docker-compose. Existem limitações nessa versão, como por exemplo múltiplas redes virtuais e containers Linux. Windows Server 2019 ou posterior é recomendado.
Instalação
Linux
Um simples, fácil e rápido script é disponibilizado pelo Docker:
curl -sSL https://get.docker.com/ | sh
Se você não deseja rodar um shell script aleatório de internet, basta acessar as instruções de instalação para a sua distribuição.
Se você não sabe nada sobre Docker, provavelmente você deveria seguir essa série de tutoriais antes de continuar.
macOS
Baixe e instale o Docker Community Edition. Se você possui o Homebrew-Cask, apenas utilize o comando brew cask install docker. Ou baixe e instale o Docker Toolbox. Docker para Mac é ok, mas ele ainda não é tão pronto quanto a instalação da VirtualBox. Veja a comparação.
NOTA Docker Toolbox está no estado legacy. Você deveria usar o Docker Community Edition. Veja o Docker Toolbox.
Assim que você instalar o Docker Community Edition, clique no ícone do Docker no Launchpad. Em seguida inicie um container:
docker run hello-world
É isso! Agora você tem um Docker container rodando.
Se você não sabe nada sobre Docker, provavelmente você deveria seguir essa série de tutoriais antes de continuar.
Windows 10
Você encontra instruções para instalar o Docker Desktop para Windows neste link.
Uma vez instalado, abra o powershell como administrador
#Exibe a versão do docker instalado
docker version
#Todos comandos pull, create, e run 'hello-world' em apenas um:
docker run hello-world
Para continuar as instruções neste cheat sheet, clique com botão direito do mouse no ícone do Docker -- no menu iniciar ou onde quer que seja -- e vá em configurações. Para montar volumes, você precisa habilitar o disco C:/ para que as informaçõe sejam transmitidas para os containers (que ainda será explicado neste artigo).
Para trocar entre containers Windows e Linux, clique com o botão direito no icone do Docker e, na sequência, clique no botão para trocar sistema operacional dos containers. Após fazer isso, todos os containers ques estiveram rodando serão desligados e ficaram inacessíveis até que o SO do container ser trocado novamente.
Além disso, se você possui WSL ou WSL2 instalado no seu desktop, você pode instalar o Kernel do Linux para Windows. Instruções para executar tal tarefa podem ser encontradas [aqui] here. Atente-se ao fato de que para isso, é necessário o recurso do Subsistema Windows para Linux. Isso permitirá que os containers sejam acessados pelos sistemas operacionais WSL, bem como o ganho de eficiêcia da execução dos sistemas operacionais WSL no Docker. Por fim, tamém é preferível o uso do terminal Windows para tal tarefa.
Windows Server 2016 / 2019
Siga as instruções da Microsoft disponíveis aqui
Se estiver usando a última versão de 2019, esteja preparado para trabalhar com o powershell, uma vez que esta versão não possui interface desktop. Quando inciar a máquina, ela vai logar e ir direto para um janela powershell. É recomendado instalar um editor de texto dentre outras ferramentas utilizando Chocolatey.
Após a instalação, esses comandos devem funcionar:
#Exibe a versão do docker instalado
docker version
#Todos comandos pull, create, e run 'hello-world' em apenas um:
docker run hello-world
O Windows Server 2016 não é capar de rodar images Linux.
O Windows Server Build 2004 é capar de rodar containers Linux e Windows simultâneamente através do isolamento Hyper-V. Quando rodar os containers, utilize o comando --isolation=hyperv que vai isolar o container utilizando uma instância de kernel separada.
Checando a versão
É muito importante que você sempre saiba a versão do Docker que você está utilizando. Isso é muito útil porque você vai saber quais features são compatíveis com aquilo que você está rodado. Além disso, isso também é importante pois você saberá quais containers você deve rodar a partir da Docker store quando você estiver tentando usar containers templates. Sendo assim, vamos dar um olhar em como saber a versão do Docker que você está rodando no momento.
docker version: mostra a versão do Docker que você está rodando
Obtendo a versão do servidor:
$ docker version --format '{{.Server.Version}}'
1.8.0
Você também pode fazer um dump dos dados em JSON:
$ docker version --format '{{json .}}'
{"Client":{"Version":"1.8.0","ApiVersion":"1.20","GitCommit":"f5bae0a","GoVersion":"go1.4.2","Os":"linux","Arch":"am"}
Containers
Your basic isolated Docker process. Containers are to Virtual Machines as threads are to processes. Or you can think of them as chroots on steroids.
Lifecycle
docker createcreates a container but does not start it.docker renameallows the container to be renamed.docker runcreates and starts a container in one operation.docker rmdeletes a container.docker updateupdates a container's resource limits.
Normally if you run a container without options it will start and stop immediately, if you want keep it running you can use the command, docker run -td container_id this will use the option -t that will allocate a pseudo-TTY session and -d that will detach automatically the container (run container in background and print container ID).
If you want a transient container, docker run --rm will remove the container after it stops.
If you want to map a directory on the host to a docker container, docker run -v $HOSTDIR:$DOCKERDIR. Also see Volumes.
If you want to remove also the volumes associated with the container, the deletion of the container must include the -v switch like in docker rm -v.
There's also a logging driver available for individual containers in docker 1.10. To run docker with a custom log driver (i.e., to syslog), use docker run --log-driver=syslog.
Another useful option is docker run --name yourname docker_image because when you specify the --name inside the run command this will allow you to start and stop a container by calling it with the name the you specified when you created it.
Starting and Stopping
docker startstarts a container so it is running.docker stopstops a running container.docker restartstops and starts a container.docker pausepauses a running container, "freezing" it in place.docker unpausewill unpause a running container.docker waitblocks until running container stops.docker killsends a SIGKILL to a running container.docker attachwill connect to a running container.
If you want to detach from a running container, use Ctrl + p, Ctrl + q.
If you want to integrate a container with a host process manager, 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 section.
Restart policies on crashed docker instances are covered here.
CPU Constraints
You can limit CPU, either using a percentage of all CPUs, or by using specific cores.
For example, you can tell the cpu-shares setting. The setting is a bit strange -- 1024 means 100% of the CPU, so if you want the container to take 50% of all CPU cores, you should specify 512. See https://goldmann.pl/blog/2014/09/11/resource-management-in-docker/#_cpu for more:
docker run -it -c 512 agileek/cpuset-test
You can also only use some CPU cores using cpuset-cpus. See https://agileek.github.io/docker/2014/08/06/docker-cpuset/ for details and some nice videos:
docker run -it --cpuset-cpus=0,4,6 agileek/cpuset-test
Note that Docker can still see all of the CPUs inside the container -- it just isn't using all of them. See https://github.com/docker/docker/issues/20770 for more details.
Memory Constraints
You can also set memory constraints on Docker:
docker run -it -m 300M ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash
Capabilities
Linux capabilities can be set by using cap-add and cap-drop. See https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/#/runtime-privilege-and-linux-capabilities for details. This should be used for greater security.
To mount a FUSE based filesystem, you need to combine both --cap-add and --device:
docker run --rm -it --cap-add SYS_ADMIN --device /dev/fuse sshfs
Give access to a single device:
docker run -it --device=/dev/ttyUSB0 debian bash
Give access to all devices:
docker run -it --privileged -v /dev/bus/usb:/dev/bus/usb debian bash
More info about privileged containers here.
Info
docker psshows running containers.docker logsgets logs from container. (You can use a custom log driver, but logs is only available forjson-fileandjournaldin 1.10).docker inspectlooks at all the info on a container (including IP address).docker eventsgets events from container.docker portshows public facing port of container.docker topshows running processes in container.docker statsshows containers' resource usage statistics.docker diffshows changed files in the container's FS.
docker ps -a shows running and stopped containers.
docker stats --all shows a list of all containers, default shows just running.
Import / Export
docker cpcopies files or folders between a container and the local filesystem.docker exportturns container filesystem into tarball archive stream to STDOUT.
Executing Commands
docker execto execute a command in container.
To enter a running container, attach a new shell process to a running container called foo, use: docker exec -it foo /bin/bash.
Images
Images are just templates for docker containers.
Lifecycle
docker imagesshows all images.docker importcreates an image from a tarball.docker buildcreates image from Dockerfile.docker commitcreates image from a container, pausing it temporarily if it is running.docker rmiremoves an image.docker loadloads an image from a tar archive as STDIN, including images and tags (as of 0.7).docker savesaves an image to a tar archive stream to STDOUT with all parent layers, tags & versions (as of 0.7).
Info
docker historyshows history of image.docker tagtags an image to a name (local or registry).
Cleaning up
While you can use the docker rmi command to remove specific images, there's a tool called docker-gc that will safely clean up images that are no longer used by any containers. As of docker 1.13, docker image prune is also available for removing unused images. See Prune.
Load/Save image
Load an image from file:
docker load < my_image.tar.gz
Save an existing image:
docker save my_image:my_tag | gzip > my_image.tar.gz
Import/Export container
Import a container as an image from file:
cat my_container.tar.gz | docker import - my_image:my_tag
Export an existing container:
docker export my_container | gzip > my_container.tar.gz
Difference between loading a saved image and importing an exported container as an image
Loading an image using the load command creates a new image including its history.
Importing a container as an image using the import command creates a new image excluding the history which results in a smaller image size compared to loading an image.
Networks
Docker has a networks feature. Docker automatically creates 3 network interfaces when you install it (bridge, host none). A new container is launched into the bridge network by default. To enable communication between multiple containers, you can create a new network and launch containers in it. This enables containers to communicate to each other while being isolated from containers that are not connected to the network. Furthermore, it allows to map container names to their IP addresses. See working with networks for more details.
Lifecycle
docker network createNAME Create a new network (default type: bridge).docker network rmNAME Remove one or more networks by name or identifier. No containers can be connected to the network when deleting it.
Info
docker network lsList networksdocker network inspectNAME Display detailed information on one or more networks.
Connection
docker network connectNETWORK CONTAINER Connect a container to a networkdocker network disconnectNETWORK CONTAINER Disconnect a container from a network
You can specify a specific IP address for a container:
# create a new bridge network with your subnet and gateway for your ip block
docker network create --subnet 203.0.113.0/24 --gateway 203.0.113.254 iptastic
# run a nginx container with a specific ip in that block
$ docker run --rm -it --net iptastic --ip 203.0.113.2 nginx
# curl the ip from any other place (assuming this is a public ip block duh)
$ curl 203.0.113.2
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.
Docker.com hosts its own index to a central registry which contains a large number of repositories. Having said that, the central docker registry does not do a good job of verifying images and should be avoided if you're worried about security.
docker loginto login to a registry.docker logoutto logout from a registry.docker searchsearches registry for image.docker pullpulls an image from registry to local machine.docker pushpushes an image to the registry from local machine.
Run local registry
You can run a local registry by using the docker distribution project and looking at the local deploy instructions.
Also see the mailing list.
Dockerfile
The configuration file. Sets up a Docker container when you run docker build on it. Vastly preferable to docker commit.
Here are some common text editors and their syntax highlighting modules you could use to create Dockerfiles:
- If you use jEdit, I've put up a syntax highlighting module for Dockerfile you can use.
- Sublime Text 2
- Atom
- Vim
- Emacs
- TextMate
- VS Code
- Also see Docker meets the IDE
Instructions
- .dockerignore
- FROM Sets the Base Image for subsequent instructions.
- MAINTAINER (deprecated - use LABEL instead) Set the Author field of the generated images.
- RUN execute any commands in a new layer on top of the current image and commit the results.
- CMD provide defaults for an executing container.
- EXPOSE informs Docker that the container listens on the specified network ports at runtime. NOTE: does not actually make ports accessible.
- ENV sets environment variable.
- ADD copies new files, directories or remote file to container. Invalidates caches. Avoid
ADDand useCOPYinstead. - COPY copies new files or directories to container. By default this copies as root regardless of the USER/WORKDIR settings. Use
--chown=<user>:<group>to give ownership to another user/group. (Same forADD.) - ENTRYPOINT configures a container that will run as an executable.
- VOLUME creates a mount point for externally mounted volumes or other containers.
- USER sets the user name for following RUN / CMD / ENTRYPOINT commands.
- WORKDIR sets the working directory.
- ARG defines a build-time variable.
- ONBUILD adds a trigger instruction when the image is used as the base for another build.
- STOPSIGNAL sets the system call signal that will be sent to the container to exit.
- LABEL apply key/value metadata to your images, containers, or daemons.
- SHELL override default shell is used by docker to run commands.
- HEALTHCHECK tells docker how to test a container to check that it is still working.
Tutorial
Examples
- Examples
- Best practices for writing Dockerfiles
- Michael Crosby has some more Dockerfiles best practices / take 2.
- Building Good Docker Images / Building Better Docker Images
- Managing Container Configuration with Metadata
- How to write excellent Dockerfiles
Layers
The versioned filesystem in Docker is based on layers. They're like git commits or changesets for filesystems.
Links
Links are how Docker containers talk to each other through TCP/IP ports. Atlassian show worked examples. You can also resolve links by hostname.
This has been deprecated to some extent by user-defined networks.
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.
If you have a container with the name CONTAINER (specified by docker run --name CONTAINER) and in the Dockerfile, it has an exposed port:
EXPOSE 1337
Then if we create another container called LINKED like so:
docker run -d --link CONTAINER:ALIAS --name LINKED user/wordpress
Then the exposed ports and aliases of CONTAINER will show up in LINKED with the following environment variables:
$ALIAS_PORT_1337_TCP_PORT
$ALIAS_PORT_1337_TCP_ADDR
And you can connect to it that way.
To delete links, use docker rm --link.
Generally, linking between docker services is a subset of "service discovery", a big problem if you're planning to use Docker at scale in production. Please read The Docker Ecosystem: Service Discovery and Distributed Configuration Stores for more info.
Volumes
Docker volumes are free-floating filesystems. They don't have to be connected to a particular container. You can use volumes mounted from data-only containers for portability. As of Docker 1.9.0, Docker has named volumes which replace data-only containers. Consider using named volumes to implement it rather than data containers.
Lifecycle
Info
Volumes are useful in situations where you can't use links (which are TCP/IP only). For instance, if you need to have two docker instances communicate by leaving stuff on the filesystem.
You can mount them in several docker containers at once, using docker run --volumes-from.
Because volumes are isolated filesystems, they are often used to store state from computations between transient containers. That is, you can have a stateless and transient container run from a recipe, blow it away, and then have a second instance of the transient container pick up from where the last one left off.
See advanced volumes for more details. Container42 is also helpful.
You can map MacOS host directories as docker volumes:
docker run -v /Users/wsargent/myapp/src:/src
You can use remote NFS volumes if you're feeling brave.
You may also consider running data-only containers as described here to provide some data portability.
Be aware that you can mount files as volumes.
Exposing ports
Exposing incoming ports through the host container is fiddly but doable.
This is done by mapping the container port to the host port (only using localhost interface) using -p:
docker run -p 127.0.0.1:$HOSTPORT:$CONTAINERPORT --name CONTAINER -t someimage
You can tell Docker that the container listens on the specified network ports at runtime by using EXPOSE:
EXPOSE <CONTAINERPORT>
Note that EXPOSE does not expose the port itself -- only -p will do that. To expose the container's port on your localhost's port:
iptables -t nat -A DOCKER -p tcp --dport <LOCALHOSTPORT> -j DNAT --to-destination <CONTAINERIP>:<PORT>
If you're running Docker in Virtualbox, you then need to forward the port there as well, using forwarded_port. Define a range of ports in your Vagrantfile like this so 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
end
...
end
If you forget what you mapped the port to on the host container, use docker port to show it:
docker port CONTAINER $CONTAINERPORT
Best Practices
This is where general Docker best practices and war stories go:
- The Rabbit Hole of Using Docker in Automated Tests
- Bridget Kromhout has a useful blog post on running Docker in production at Dramafever.
- There's also a best practices blog post from Lyst.
- Building a Development Environment With Docker
- Discourse in a Docker Container
Docker-Compose
Compose is a tool for defining and running multi-container Docker applications. With Compose, you use a YAML file to configure your application’s services. Then, with a single command, you create and start all the services from your configuration. To learn more about all the features of Compose, see the list of features.
By using the following command you can start up your application:
docker-compose -f <docker-compose-file> up
You can also run docker-compose in detached mode using -d flag, then you can stop it whenever needed by the following command:
docker-compose stop
You can bring everything down, removing the containers entirely, with the down command. Pass --volumes to also remove the data volume.
Security
This is where security tips about Docker go. The Docker security page goes into more detail.
First things first: Docker runs as root. If you are in the docker group, you effectively have root access. If you expose the docker unix socket to a container, you are giving the container root access to the host.
Docker should not be your only defense. You should secure and harden it.
For an understanding of what containers leave exposed, you should read Understanding and Hardening Linux Containers by Aaron Grattafiori. This is a complete and comprehensive guide to the issues involved with containers, with a plethora of links and footnotes leading on to yet more useful content. The security tips following are useful if you've already hardened containers in the past, but are not a substitute for understanding.
Security Tips
For greatest security, you want to run Docker inside a virtual machine. This is straight from the Docker Security Team Lead -- slides / notes. Then, run with AppArmor / seccomp / SELinux / grsec etc to limit the container permissions. See the Docker 1.10 security features for more details.
Docker image ids are sensitive information and should not be exposed to the outside world. Treat them like passwords.
See the Docker Security Cheat Sheet by Thomas Sjögren: some good stuff about container hardening in there.
Check out the docker bench security script, download the white papers.
Snyk's 10 Docker Image Security Best Practices cheat sheet
You should start off by using a kernel with unstable patches for grsecurity / pax compiled in, such as Alpine Linux. If you are using grsecurity in production, you should spring for commercial support for the stable patches, same as you would do for RedHat. It's $200 a month, which is nothing to your devops budget.
Since docker 1.11 you can easily limit the number of active processes running inside a container to prevent fork bombs. This requires a linux kernel >= 4.3 with CGROUP_PIDS=y to be in the kernel configuration.
docker run --pids-limit=64
Also available since docker 1.11 is the ability to prevent processes from gaining new privileges. This feature have been in the linux kernel since version 3.5. You can read more about it in this blog post.
docker run --security-opt=no-new-privileges
From the Docker Security Cheat Sheet (it's in PDF which makes it hard to use, so copying below) by Container Solutions:
Turn off interprocess communication with:
docker -d --icc=false --iptables
Set the container to be read-only:
docker run --read-only
Verify images with a hashsum:
docker pull debian@sha256:a25306f3850e1bd44541976aa7b5fd0a29be
Set volumes to be read only:
docker run -v $(pwd)/secrets:/secrets:ro debian
Define and run a user in your Dockerfile so you don't run as root inside the container:
RUN groupadd -r user && useradd -r -g user user
USER user
User Namespaces
There's also work on user namespaces -- it is in 1.10 but is not enabled by default.
To enable user namespaces ("remap the userns") in Ubuntu 15.10, follow the blog example.
Security Videos
- Using Docker Safely
- Securing your applications using Docker
- Container security: Do containers actually contain?
- Linux Containers: Future or Fantasy?
Security Roadmap
The Docker roadmap talks about seccomp support. There is an AppArmor policy generator called bane, and they're working on security profiles.
Tips
Sources:
Prune
The new Data Management Commands have landed as of Docker 1.13:
docker system prunedocker volume prunedocker network prunedocker container prunedocker image prune
df
docker system df presents a summary of the space currently used by different docker objects.
Heredoc Docker Container
docker build -t htop - << EOF
FROM alpine
RUN apk --no-cache add htop
EOF
Last Ids
alias dl='docker ps -l -q'
docker run ubuntu echo hello world
docker commit $(dl) helloworld
Commit with command (needs Dockerfile)
docker commit -run='{"Cmd":["postgres", "-too -many -opts"]}' $(dl) postgres
Get IP address
docker inspect $(dl) | grep -wm1 IPAddress | cut -d '"' -f 4
or with jq installed:
docker inspect $(dl) | jq -r '.[0].NetworkSettings.IPAddress'
or using a go template:
docker inspect -f '{{ .NetworkSettings.IPAddress }}' <container_name>
or when building an image from Dockerfile, when you want to pass in a build argument:
DOCKER_HOST_IP=`ifconfig | grep -E "([0-9]{1,3}\.){3}[0-9]{1,3}" | grep -v 127.0.0.1 | awk '{ print $2 }' | cut -f2 -d: | head -n1`
echo DOCKER_HOST_IP = $DOCKER_HOST_IP
docker build \
--build-arg ARTIFACTORY_ADDRESS=$DOCKER_HOST_IP
-t sometag \
some-directory/
Get port mapping
docker inspect -f '{{range $p, $conf := .NetworkSettings.Ports}} {{$p}} -> {{(index $conf 0).HostPort}} {{end}}' <containername>
Find containers by regular expression
for i in $(docker ps -a | grep "REGEXP_PATTERN" | cut -f1 -d" "); do echo $i; done
Get Environment Settings
docker run --rm ubuntu env
Kill running containers
docker kill $(docker ps -q)
Delete all containers (force!! running or stopped containers)
docker rm -f $(docker ps -qa)
Delete old containers
docker ps -a | grep 'weeks ago' | awk '{print $1}' | xargs docker rm
Delete stopped containers
docker rm -v $(docker ps -a -q -f status=exited)
Delete containers after stopping
docker stop $(docker ps -aq) && docker rm -v $(docker ps -aq)
Delete dangling images
docker rmi $(docker images -q -f dangling=true)
Delete all images
docker rmi $(docker images -q)
Delete dangling volumes
As of Docker 1.9:
docker volume rm $(docker volume ls -q -f dangling=true)
In 1.9.0, the filter dangling=false does not work - it is ignored and will list all volumes.
Show image dependencies
docker images -viz | dot -Tpng -o docker.png
Slimming down Docker containers
- Cleaning APT in a RUN layer
This should be done in the same layer as other apt commands. Otherwise, the previous layers still persist the original information and your images will still be fat.
RUN {apt commands} \
&& apt-get clean \
&& rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/* /tmp/* /var/tmp/*
- Flatten an image
ID=$(docker run -d image-name /bin/bash)
docker export $ID | docker import – flat-image-name
- For backup
ID=$(docker run -d image-name /bin/bash)
(docker export $ID | gzip -c > image.tgz)
gzip -dc image.tgz | docker import - flat-image-name
Monitor system resource utilization for running containers
To check the CPU, memory, and network I/O usage of a single container, you can use:
docker stats <container>
For all containers listed by id:
docker stats $(docker ps -q)
For all containers listed by name:
docker stats $(docker ps --format '{{.Names}}')
For all containers listed by image:
docker ps -a -f ancestor=ubuntu
Remove all untagged images:
docker rmi $(docker images | grep “^” | awk '{split($0,a," "); print a[3]}')
Remove container by a regular expression:
docker ps -a | grep wildfly | awk '{print $1}' | xargs docker rm -f
Remove all exited containers:
docker rm -f $(docker ps -a | grep Exit | awk '{ print $1 }')
Volumes can be files
Be aware that you can mount files as volumes. For example you can inject a configuration file like this:
# copy file from container
docker run --rm httpd cat /usr/local/apache2/conf/httpd.conf > httpd.conf
# edit file
vim httpd.conf
# start container with modified configuration
docker run --rm -it -v "$PWD/httpd.conf:/usr/local/apache2/conf/httpd.conf:ro" -p "80:80" httpd
Contributing
Here's how to contribute to this cheat sheet.
Open README.md
Click README.md <-- this link



