This quickstart assumes you have a working installation of Docker. To verify Docker is installed, use the following command:
# Check that you have a working install
$ docker info
If you get docker: command not found
or something like/var/lib/docker/repositories: permission denied
you may have anincomplete Docker installation or insufficient privileges to accessDocker on your machine. With the default installation of Docker docker
commands need to be run by a user that is in the docker
group or by theroot
user.
Depending on your Docker system configuration, you may be requiredto preface each docker
command with sudo
. One way to avoid having to usesudo
with the docker
commands is to create a Unix group called docker
andadd users that will be entering docker
commands to the ‘docker’ group.
For more information about installing Docker or sudo
configuration, refer tothe installation instructions for your operating system.
Download a pre-built image
# Download an ubuntu image
$ docker pull ubuntu
This will find the ubuntu
image by name onDocker Huband download it from Docker Hub to a localimage cache.
Note:When the image is successfully downloaded, you see a 12 characterhash
539c0211cd76: Download complete
which is theshort form of the image ID. These short image IDs are the first 12characters of the full image ID - which can be found usingdocker inspect
ordocker images --no-trunc=true
.
Running an interactive shell
To run an interactive shell in the Ubuntu image:
$ docker run -i -t ubuntu /bin/bash
The -i
flag starts an interactive container. The -t
flag creates apseudo-TTY that attaches stdin
and stdout
.
To detach the tty
without exiting the shell, use the escape sequenceCtrl-p
+ Ctrl-q
. The container will continue to exist in a stopped stateonce exited. To list all containers, stopped and running, use the docker ps -a
command.
Bind Docker to another host/port or a Unix socket
Warning:Changing the default
docker
daemon binding to aTCP port or Unix docker user group will increase your security risksby allowing non-root users to gain root access on the host. Make sureyou control access todocker
. If you are bindingto a TCP port, anyone with access to that port has full Docker access;so it is not advisable on an open network.
With -H
it is possible to make the Docker daemon to listen on aspecific IP and port. By default, it will listen onunix:///var/run/docker.sock
to allow only local connections by theroot user. You could set it to 0.0.0.0:2375
or a specific host IPto give access to everybody, but that is not recommended becausethen it is trivial for someone to gain root access to the host where thedaemon is running.
Similarly, the Docker client can use -H
to connect to a custom port.The Docker client will default to connecting to unix:///var/run/docker.sock
on Linux, and tcp://127.0.0.1:2376
on Windows.
-H
accepts host and port assignment in the following format:
tcp://[host]:[port][path] or unix://path
For example:
tcp://
-> TCP connection to127.0.0.1
on either port2376
when TLS encryptionis on, or port2375
when communication is in plain text.tcp://host:2375
-> TCP connection onhost:2375tcp://host:2375/path
-> TCP connection onhost:2375 and prepend path to all requestsunix://path/to/socket
-> Unix socket locatedatpath/to/socket
-H
, when empty, will default to the same value aswhen no -H
was passed in.
-H
also accepts short form for TCP bindings:
`host:` or `host:port` or `:port`
Run Docker in daemon mode:
$ sudo <path to>/docker daemon -H 0.0.0.0:5555 &
Download an ubuntu
image:
$ docker -H :5555 pull ubuntu
You can use multiple -H
, for example, if you want to listen on bothTCP and a Unix socket
# Run docker in daemon mode
$ sudo <path to>/docker daemon -H tcp://127.0.0.1:2375 -H unix:///var/run/docker.sock &
# Download an ubuntu image, use default Unix socket
$ docker pull ubuntu
# OR use the TCP port
$ docker -H tcp://127.0.0.1:2375 pull ubuntu
Starting a long-running worker process
# Start a very useful long-running process
$ JOB=$(docker run -d ubuntu /bin/sh -c "while true; do echo Hello world; sleep 1; done")
# Collect the output of the job so far
$ docker logs $JOB
# Kill the job
$ docker kill $JOB
Listing containers
$ docker ps # Lists only running containers
$ docker ps -a # Lists all containers
Controlling containers
# Start a new container
$ JOB=$(docker run -d ubuntu /bin/sh -c "while true; do echo Hello world; sleep 1; done")
# Stop the container
$ docker stop $JOB
# Start the container
$ docker start $JOB
# Restart the container
$ docker restart $JOB
# SIGKILL a container
$ docker kill $JOB
# Remove a container
$ docker stop $JOB # Container must be stopped to remove it
$ docker rm $JOB
Bind a service on a TCP port
# Bind port 4444 of this container, and tell netcat to listen on it
$ JOB=$(docker run -d -p 4444 ubuntu:12.10 /bin/nc -l 4444)
# Which public port is NATed to my container?
$ PORT=$(docker port $JOB 4444 | awk -F: '{ print $2 }')
# Connect to the public port
$ echo hello world | nc 127.0.0.1 $PORT
# Verify that the network connection worked
$ echo "Daemon received: $(docker logs $JOB)"
Committing (saving) a container state
Save your containers state to an image, so the state can bere-used.
When you commit your container, Docker only stores the diff (difference) betweenthe source image and the current state of the container’s image. To list imagesyou already have, use the docker images
command.
# Commit your container to a new named image
$ docker commit <container> <some_name>
# List your images
$ docker images
You now have an image state from which you can create new instances.
Where to go next
- Work your way through the Docker User Guide
- Read more about Share Images via Repositories
- Review Command Line