Difference between revisions of "Docker commands"
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In order to monitor the status of running containers, run: | In order to monitor the status of running containers, run: | ||
docker stats | docker stats | ||
+ | |||
+ | In order to monitor performance of processes inside a container, run: | ||
+ | docker top container1 | ||
If you need to get rid of all images: | If you need to get rid of all images: | ||
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In order to troubleshoot the container, you can attach to a shell using: | In order to troubleshoot the container, you can attach to a shell using: | ||
− | docker | + | docker exec -it webserver /bin/bash |
Latest revision as of 14:05, 9 January 2024
Add your docker user to the docker group:
usermod -a -G docker ec2-user
In order to create one container via CLI this command below will be the equivalent of the compose file further below.
docker create \ --name=webserver --net=host -e VERSION=latest \ -e PUID=$(id -u docker) -e PGID=$(id -g docker) \ -v /var/www/html:/app:ro \ --restart unless-stopped nginx docker start nginx
docker-compose.yaml
version: '2' services: myproject: container_name: webserver build: ./ volumes: - /var/www/html:/app restart: always network_mode: host
If using the compose file above, the container can be executed using:
docker-compose up -d
In order to monitor the status of running containers, run:
docker stats
In order to monitor performance of processes inside a container, run:
docker top container1
If you need to get rid of all images:
docker system prune -a
In order to troubleshoot the container, you can attach to a shell using:
docker exec -it webserver /bin/bash