Docker Setup and Configuration
Install using the repository
Before you install Docker Engine for the first time on a new host machine, you need to set up the Docker repository. Afterward, you can install and update Docker from the repository.
SET UP THE REPOSITORY
Update theÂ
apt
 package index and install packages to allowÂapt
 to use a repository over HTTPS:$ sudo apt-get update $ sudo apt-get install \ apt-transport-https \ ca-certificates \ curl \ gnupg-agent \ software-properties-common
Add Docker’s official GPG key:
$ curl -fsSL https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu/gpg | sudo apt-key add -
Verify that you now have the key with the fingerprintÂ
9DC8 5822 9FC7 DD38 854AÂ Â E2D8 8D81 803C 0EBF CD88
, by searching for the last 8 characters of the fingerprint.$ sudo apt-key fingerprint 0EBFCD88 pub rsa4096 2017-02-22 [SCEA] 9DC8 5822 9FC7 DD38 854A E2D8 8D81 803C 0EBF CD88 uid [ unknown] Docker Release (CE deb) <docker@docker.com> sub rsa4096 2017-02-22 [S]
Use the following command to set up the stable repository. To add the nightly or test repository, add the wordÂ
nightly
 orÂtest
 (or both) after the wordÂstable
 in the commands below.Note: TheÂ
lsb_release -cs
 sub-command below returns the name of your Ubuntu distribution, such asÂxenial
. Sometimes, in a distribution like Linux Mint, you might need to changeÂ$(lsb_release -cs)
 to your parent Ubuntu distribution. For example, if you are usingÂLinux Mint Tessa
, you could useÂbionic
. Docker does not offer any guarantees on untested and unsupported Ubuntu distributions.x86_64 / amd64
INSTALL DOCKER ENGINE
Update theÂ
apt
 package index, and install the latest version of Docker Engine and containerd, or go to the next step to install a specific version:If you have multiple Docker repositories enabled, installing or updating without specifying a version in theÂ
apt-get install
 orÂapt-get update
 command always installs the highest possible version, which may not be appropriate for your stability needs.To install a specific version of Docker Engine, list the available versions in the repo, then select and install:
a. List the versions available in your repo:
b. Install a specific version using the version string from the second column, for example,Â
5:18.09.1~3-0~ubuntu-xenial
.Verify that Docker Engine is installed correctly by running theÂ
hello-world
 image.This command downloads a test image and runs it in a container. When the container runs, it prints an informational message and exits.
Docker Engine is installed and running. The docker
 group is created but no users are added to it. You need to use sudo
 to run Docker commands.
Manage Docker as a non-root user
The Docker daemon binds to a Unix socket instead of a TCP port. By default that Unix socket is owned by the user root
 and other users can only access it using sudo
. The Docker daemon always runs as the root
 user.
If you don’t want to preface the docker
 command with sudo
, create a Unix group called docker
 and add users to it. When the Docker daemon starts, it creates a Unix socket accessible by members of the docker
 group.
Warning
TheÂ
docker
 group grants privileges equivalent to theÂroot
 user. For details on how this impacts security in your system.
Note:
To run Docker without root privileges.
Rootless mode is currently available as an experimental feature.
To create the docker
 group and add your user:
Create theÂ
docker
 group.Add your user to theÂ
docker
 group.Log out and log back in so that your group membership is re-evaluated.
If testing on a virtual machine, it may be necessary to restart the virtual machine for changes to take effect.
On a desktop Linux environment such as X Windows, log out of your session completely and then log back in.
On Linux, you can also run the following command to activate the changes to groups:
Verify that you can runÂ
docker
 commands withoutÂsudo
.This command downloads a test image and runs it in a container. When the container runs, it prints an informational message and exits.
If you initially ran Docker CLI commands usingÂ
sudo
 before adding your user to theÂdocker
 group, you may see the following error, which indicates that yourÂ~/.docker/
 directory was created with incorrect permissions due to theÂsudo
 commands.To fix this problem, either remove theÂ
~/.docker/
 directory (it is recreated automatically, but any custom settings are lost), or change its ownership and permissions using the following commands:
Configure Docker to start on boot
Most current Linux distributions (RHEL, CentOS, Fedora, Ubuntu 16.04 and higher) use systemd
 to manage which services start when the system boots. Ubuntu 14.10 and below use upstart
.
systemd
To disable this behavior, use disable
 instead.
upstart
Docker is automatically configured to start on boot using upstart
. To disable this behavior, use the following command:
chkconfig
Use a different storage engine
For information about the different storage engines. The default storage engine and the list of supported storage engines depend on your host’s Linux distribution and available kernel drivers.
Configure default logging driver
Docker provides the capability to collect and view log data from all containers running on a host via a series of logging drivers. The default logging driver, json-file
, writes log data to JSON-formatted files on the host filesystem. Over time, these log files expand in size, leading to potential exhaustion of disk resources.
Configure where the Docker daemon listens for connections
By default, the Docker daemon listens for connections on a UNIX socket to accept requests from local clients. It is possible to allow Docker to accept requests from remote hosts by configuring it to listen on an IP address and port as well as the UNIX socket.
Secure your connection
Before configuring Docker to accept connections from remote hosts it is critically important that you understand the security implications of opening docker to the network. If steps are not taken to secure the connection, it is possible for remote non-root users to gain root access on the host. For more information on how to use TLS certificates to secure this connection
Configuring Docker to accept remote connections can be done with the docker.service
 systemd unit file for Linux distributions using systemd, such as recent versions of RedHat, CentOS, Ubuntu and SLES, or with the daemon.json
 file which is recommended for Linux distributions that do not use systemd.
systemd vs daemon.json
Configuring Docker to listen for connections using both theÂ
systemd
 unit file and theÂdaemon.json
 file causes a conflict that prevents Docker from starting.
Configuring remote access with systemd
 unit file
Use the commandÂ
sudo systemctl edit docker.service
 to open an override file forÂdocker.service
 in a text editor.Add or modify the following lines, substituting your own values.
Save the file.
Reload theÂ
systemctl
 configuration.Restart Docker.
Check to see whether the change was honored by reviewing the output ofÂ
netstat
 to confirmÂdockerd
 is listening on the configured port.
Configuring remote access with daemon.json
Set theÂ
hosts
 array in theÂ/etc/docker/daemon.json
 to connect to the UNIX socket and an IP address, as follows:Restart Docker.
Check to see whether the change was honored by reviewing the output ofÂ
netstat
 to confirmÂdockerd
 is listening on the configured port.
Enable IPv6 on the Docker daemon
To enable IPv6 on the Docker daemon, see Enable IPv6 support.
Troubleshooting
Kernel compatibility
Docker cannot run correctly if your kernel is older than version 3.10 or if it is missing some modules. To check kernel compatibility, you can download and run the check-config.sh
 script.
The script only works on Linux, not macOS.
Cannot connect to the Docker daemon
If you see an error such as the following, your Docker client may be configured to connect to a Docker daemon on a different host, and that host may not be reachable.
To see which host your client is configured to connect to, check the value of the DOCKER_HOST
 variable in your environment.
If this command returns a value, the Docker client is set to connect to a Docker daemon running on that host. If it is unset, the Docker client is set to connect to the Docker daemon running on the local host. If it is set in error, use the following command to unset it:
You may need to edit your environment in files such as ~/.bashrc
 or ~/.profile
 to prevent the DOCKER_HOST
 variable from being set erroneously.
If DOCKER_HOST
 is set as intended, verify that the Docker daemon is running on the remote host and that a firewall or network outage is not preventing you from connecting.
IP forwarding problems
If you manually configure your network using systemd-network
 with systemd
 version 219 or higher, Docker containers may not be able to access your network. Beginning with systemd
 version 220, the forwarding setting for a given network (net.ipv4.conf.<interface>.forwarding
) defaults to off. This setting prevents IP forwarding. It also conflicts with Docker’s behavior of enabling the net.ipv4.conf.all.forwarding
 setting within containers.
To work around this on RHEL, CentOS, or Fedora, edit the <interface>.network
 file in /usr/lib/systemd/network/
 on your Docker host (ex: /usr/lib/systemd/network/80-container-host0.network
) and add the following block within the [Network]
 section.
This configuration allows IP forwarding from the container as expected.
DNS resolver found in resolv.conf and containers can't use it
Linux systems which use a GUI often have a network manager running, which uses a dnsmasq
 instance running on a loopback address such as 127.0.0.1
 or 127.0.1.1
 to cache DNS requests, and adds this entry to /etc/resolv.conf
. The dnsmasq
 service speeds up DNS look-ups and also provides DHCP services. This configuration does not work within a Docker container which has its own network namespace, because the Docker container resolves loopback addresses such as 127.0.0.1
 to itself, and it is very unlikely to be running a DNS server on its own loopback address.
If Docker detects that no DNS server referenced in /etc/resolv.conf
 is a fully functional DNS server, the following warning occurs and Docker uses the public DNS servers provided by Google at 8.8.8.8
 and 8.8.4.4
 for DNS resolution.
If you see this warning, first check to see if you use dnsmasq
:
If your container needs to resolve hosts which are internal to your network, the public nameservers are not adequate. You have two choices:
You can specify a DNS server for Docker to use, or
You can disableÂ
dnsmasq
 in NetworkManager. If you do this, NetworkManager adds your true DNS nameserver toÂ/etc/resolv.conf
, but you lose the possible benefits ofÂdnsmasq
.
You only need to use one of these methods.
Specify DNS servers for Docker
The default location of the configuration file is /etc/docker/daemon.json
. You can change the location of the configuration file using the --config-file
 daemon flag. The documentation below assumes the configuration file is located at /etc/docker/daemon.json
.
Create or edit the Docker daemon configuration file, which defaults toÂ
/etc/docker/daemon.json
 file, which controls the Docker daemon configuration.Add aÂ
dns
 key with one or more IP addresses as values. If the file has existing contents, you only need to add or edit theÂdns
 line.If your internal DNS server cannot resolve public IP addresses, include at least one DNS server which can, so that you can connect to Docker Hub and so that your containers can resolve internet domain names.
Save and close the file.
Restart the Docker daemon.
Verify that Docker can resolve external IP addresses by trying to pull an image:
If necessary, verify that Docker containers can resolve an internal hostname by pinging it.
DISABLEÂ DNSMASQ
Ubuntu
If you prefer not to change the Docker daemon’s configuration to use a specific IP address, follow these instructions to disable dnsmasq
 in NetworkManager.
Edit theÂ
/etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf
 file.Comment out theÂ
dns=dnsmasq
 line by adding aÂ#
 character to the beginning of the line.Save and close the file.
Restart both NetworkManager and Docker. As an alternative, you can reboot your system.
Allow access to the remote API through a firewall
If you run a firewall on the same host as you run Docker and you want to access the Docker Remote API from another host and remote access is enabled, you need to configure your firewall to allow incoming connections on the Docker port, which defaults to 2376
 if TLS encrypted transport is enabled or 2375
 otherwise.
Two common firewall daemons are UFW (often used for Ubuntu systems) and firewalld (often used for RPM-based systems). Consult the documentation for your OS and firewall, but the following information might help you get started. These options are fairly permissive and you may want to use a different configuration that locks your system down more.
UFW: SetÂ
DEFAULT_FORWARD_POLICY="ACCEPT"
 in your configuration.firewalld: Add rules similar to the following to your policy (one for incoming requests and one for outgoing requests). Be sure the interface names and chain names are correct.
Your kernel does not support cgroup swap limit capabilities
On Ubuntu or Debian hosts, You may see messages similar to the following when working with an image.
This warning does not occur on RPM-based systems, which enable these capabilities by default.
If you don’t need these capabilities, you can ignore the warning. You can enable these capabilities on Ubuntu or Debian by following these instructions. Memory and swap accounting incur an overhead of about 1% of the total available memory and a 10% overall performance degradation, even if Docker is not running.
Log into the Ubuntu or Debian host as a user withÂ
sudo
 privileges.Edit theÂ
/etc/default/grub
 file. Add or edit theÂGRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX
 line to add the following two key-value pairs:Save and close the file.
Update GRUB.
If your GRUB configuration file has incorrect syntax, an error occurs. In this case, repeat steps 2 and 3.
The changes take effect when the system is rebooted.