Docker Cheat Sheet for Sysadmins

Introduction

Docker Cheat Sheet will have most of the useful docker commands with all available options for sysadmins and developers in day to day activity.

If anyone would like to contribute in this docker cheat sheet sent me an email with contents to subscribers@linuxsysadmins.com

Docker Cheatsheet

Creating a dedicated mount point for docker

It’s good to start with a dedicated mount point for docker by creating a logical volume.

# fdisk /dev/sdb
# pvcreate /dev/sdb1
# vgcreate vg_docker /dev/sdb1
# lvcreate -n lv_docker -l 100%FREE vg_docker
# mkfs.xfs /dev/mapper/vg_docker/lv_docker
# mount /dev/mapper/vg_docker/lv_docker /var/lib/docker

Extending docker mount point

In case if we need more space under /var/lib/docker, add a new disk and extend the existing VG, LV, at last, grow the XFS mount point.

# fdisk /dev/sdc
# pvcreate /dev/sdc1
# vgextend vg_docker /dev/sdc1
# lvextend -l +100%FREE /dev/mapper/vg_docker/lv_docker
# xfs_growfs /var/lib/docker

Enabling Docker Repo, Installing and starting Docker

# cd /etc/yum.repos.d/; 
# curl -O https://download.docker.com/linux/centos/docker-ce.repo
# yum repolist
# yum install yum-utils device-mapper-persistent-data lvm2 -y
# yum install docker-ce docker-ce-cli containerd.io -y
# sudo systemctl start docker
# sudo systemctl enable docker

Granting Normal user to run docker commands

# sudo usermod -aG docker babinlonston

Verifying Docker Version

# docker -v
# docker info
# docker system info

Searching, Pulling, listing and Removing Docker images.

# docker search nginx
# docker pull nginx
# docker pull nginx:1.14
# docker images
# docker rmi nginx
# docker rmi nginx:1.14

Starting a container, with tag

# docker run nginx
# docker run -d nginx:1.14
# docker run -d --name web_server nginx
# docker run -d --name web_server1 nginx:1.14

Launching a container and login into it

# docker run --name web_server2 -it nginx /bin/bash

Listing all running and stopped containers

# docker ps
# docker ps -a

Accessing shell of a running Container after launch

# docker exec -it web_server /bin/bash

Executing a command on a running Container

# docker exec web_server cat /etc/hosts
# docker exec web_server env

Restarting, Stopping and Deleting

# docker restart web_server
# docker stop web_server1 nginx
# docker stop $(docker ps -aq)
# docker rm web_server1
# docker rm $(docker ps -aq)

Reference: How to manage Docker containers

Stop or kill by sending SIGKILL

# docker kill exec web_server2
# docker kill -s SIGKILL exec web_server2

Launch and expose the network.

# docker run --name web_server3 -p 8080:80 -d -it nginx
# docker run -d --name web_server4 -p 192.168.107.105:8080:80 nginx

Reference: How to connect Docker containers and expose the network

Running Inspect to Know the IP of a Container

# docker inspect web_server
# docker inspect web_server | grep -i -A 1 'IPAddress|ExposedPorts'
# docker inspect -f '{{ .NetworkSettings.IPAddress }}' web_server
# docker inspect -f '{{ .Config.ExposedPorts }}' web_server

Attaching a Volume

# mkdir /mysql_container 
# chown -R 27:27 /mysql_container 
# chcon -t svirt_sandbox_file_t /mysql_container  #temp
                      or
# semanage fcontext -a -t svirt_sandbox_file_t '/mysql_container(/.*)?'  #Persistent

# docker run --name mysql-pro-dbsrv -d -v /mysql_container:/var/lib/mysql/ -e MYSQL_ROOT_USER=root -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=password123 mysql

Reference: Managing Docker data persistently by attaching a volume

Docker export, import, load and save

# docker export apache > linuxsysadins.local.tar
# docker import - website < linuxsysadins.local.tar 
# docker save -o website_backup.local.tar website
# docker load < website_backup.local.tar

Creating a Docker file and Building image with a Volume

# mkdir /root/linuxsysadmins
# vim /root/linuxsysadmins/Dockerfile

Replace with your required values.

 FROM centos
 MAINTAINER Babin Lonston
 RUN yum update -y && yum install httpd mod_ssl -y
 VOLUME /var/www/html
 ADD linuxsysadmins.local.conf /etc/httpd/conf.d/linuxsysadmins.local.conf
 ADD index.html /var/www/html/index.html
 CMD ["/usr/sbin/httpd", "-D", "FOREGROUND"]
 EXPOSE 80/tcp

Creating a virtual host configuration

# vim linuxsysadmins.local.conf
<VirtualHost *:80>
    ServerAdmin siteadmin@linuxsysadmins.local
    DocumentRoot /var/www/html
    ServerName linuxsysadmins.local
    ServerAlias nixsysadmins.local
    ErrorLog "/var/log/httpd/linuxsysadmins.local-error_log
    CustomLog "/var/log/httpd/linuxsysadmins.local-access_log common
</VirtualHost>

Create an index.html file for Apache

# vim /root/linuxsysadmins/index.html

Append with your content.

<html>
<body>
<h1>This is Test page for linuxsysadmins.local</h1>
</body>
</html>

Build an image using docker file. Make sure to use “.” as shown below to build from the current directory.

# docker build  -t linuxsysadmins.local .
# docker images

Pushing images to Docker Hub

Log in to Docker hub using “docker login“, tag the image and push to your repository.

# docker login
# docker tag linuxsysadmins.local babinlonston/linuxsysadmins.local:0.1
# docker images
# docker push babinlonston/linuxsysadmins.local:0.1

Find the changes with an image and running Container

To list out the changed files on a container by comparing with its image

# docker run -d --name webserver nginx
# docker diff webserver
[root@docker ~]# docker diff webserver 
 C /var
 C /var/cache
 C /var/cache/nginx
 A /var/cache/nginx/client_temp
 A /var/cache/nginx/fastcgi_temp
 A /var/cache/nginx/proxy_temp
 A /var/cache/nginx/scgi_temp
 A /var/cache/nginx/uwsgi_temp
 C /run
 A /run/nginx.pid

Creating and mounting Volumes

Creating a Volume on Container

# docker run -d -v /var/www/html --name websrv linuxsysadmins.local

Mounting a local directory inside a Container

# docker run -d --name webserver_hosted -v /var/www/html:/var/www/html linuxsysadmins.local

Creating, Inspecting, Removing unused and Deleting a Volume

To create a volume for different applications, inspecting a volume, remove a local unused volume.

# docker volume ls
# docker volume create web_apps
# docker volume inspect web_apps
# docker volume prune
# docker volume rm web_apps1
[root@docker ~]# docker volume inspect web_apps
 [
     {
         "CreatedAt": "2019-07-03T00:47:33+05:30",
         "Driver": "local",
         "Labels": {},
         "Mountpoint": "/var/lib/docker/volumes/web_apps/_data",
         "Name": "web_apps",
         "Options": {},
         "Scope": "local"
     }
 ]

Create Docker Network

Creating a network for communicating between container and host, this will be a bridge by default. Use Inspect to know more information about the network.

# docker network create --subnet 192.168.109.0/24 --gateway 192.168.109.2 web_apps_net
# docker network inspect web_apps_net
# docker network ls
[root@docker ~]# docker network inspect web_apps_net 
 [
     {
         "Name": "web_apps_net",
         "Id": "f2cca056137040b8e05d6e70cd4287a056356642e49ee9f264ef06b6b637f35e",
         "Created": "2019-07-03T21:54:30.35434543+05:30",
         "Scope": "local",
         "Driver": "bridge",
         "EnableIPv6": false,
         "IPAM": {
             "Driver": "default",
             "Options": {},
             "Config": [
                 {
                     "Subnet": "192.168.109.0/24",
                     "Gateway": "192.168.109.2"
                 }
             ]
         },
         "Internal": false,
         "Attachable": false,
         "Ingress": false,
         "ConfigFrom": {
             "Network": ""
         },
         "ConfigOnly": false,
         "Containers": {},
         "Options": {},
         "Labels": {}
     }
 ]
 [root@docker ~]#

Assigning a static IP address to a Container

Start a container from nginx image by assigning a static IP address and verify the same.

# docker run -d --name web_apps_srv1 --network web_apps_net --ip 192.168.109.100 nginx
# docker inspect web_apps_srv1
# docker inspect -f '{{ .NetworkSettings.IPAddress }}' web_apps_srv1
# curl 192.168.109.100

Verify using curl by pointing to Nginx server’s static IP.

[root@docker ~]# curl 192.168.109.100
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Welcome to nginx!</title>
<style>
    body {
        width: 35em;
        margin: 0 auto;
        font-family: Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif;
    }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Welcome to nginx!</h1>
<p>If you see this page, the nginx web server is successfully installed and
working. Further configuration is required.</p>

<p>For online documentation and support please refer to
<a href="http://nginx.org/">nginx.org</a>.<br/>
Commercial support is available at
<a href="http://nginx.com/">nginx.com</a>.</p>

<p><em>Thank you for using nginx.</em></p>
</body>
</html>
[root@docker ~]#

Disconnecting and Reconnecting Network from a Container

To disconnect a network from a container use “disconnect network container“. Once disconnected, we need to specify the IP again while reconnecting the network to the Container. Finally, inspect the IP once connected.

# docker network disconnect web_apps_net web_apps_srv1
# docker inspect web_apps_srv1
# docker network connect web_apps_net web_apps_srv1 --ip 192.168.109.100
# docker inspect web_apps_srv1

Removing a Network and Prune

To remove a network using “network rm“. To remove all unused network those are not attached to any container will be removed while we run “network prune“.

# docker inspect web_apps_net
# docker network rm web_apps_net
# docker network ls
# docker network prune

Linking multiple containers

The example is shown for linking two containers. We need to run a WordPress site, for that let us prepare to launch two containers and link each other.

We are creating a dedicated network for web server and DB server.

# docker pull mariadb
# docker pull wordpress

# docker network create --subnet 192.168.107.0/24 --gateway 192.168.107.2 web_net
# docker run -d --name web_db --network web_net --ip 192.168.107.10 -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=redhat123 -e MYSQL_DATABASE=web_db -e MYSQL_USER=redhat -e MYSQL_PASSWORD=redhat123 mariadb
# docker run -d --name web_srv --network web_net --ip 192.168.107.11 -e WORDPRESS_DB_HOST=web_db:3306 -e WORDPRESS_DB_USER=redhat -e WORDPRESS_DB_PASSWORD=redhat123 -e WORDPRESS_DB_NAME=web_db -e WORDPRESS_TABLE_PREFIX=wp_docweb --link web_db -p 8080:80 wordpress

Working with Docker Swarm

To initialise the swarm use “swarm init

# docker swarm init --advertise-addr 192.168.107.136 --listen-addr 192.168.107.136:2377

Output for reference.

[root@docker ~]# docker swarm init --advertise-addr 192.168.107.136 --listen-addr 192.168.107.136:2377
 Swarm initialized: current node (63qud8ovv00aqaws072oxxa9h) is now a manager.

 To add a worker to this swarm, run the following command:

 docker swarm join --token SWMTKN-1-48q24en6jyyi6nvjmrdukzlr5h20n0rtrzcvdveo67l0n9zyh3-2japtts5gppa1q3zdvkfbiabf 192.168.107.136:2377

 To add a manager to this swarm, run 'docker swarm join-token manager' and follow the instructions.

 [root@docker ~]#

Allow the firewall for port 2377.

# firewall-cmd --add-port=2377/tcp --zone=public --permanent
# firewall-cmd --reload
# firewall-cmd --list-all

Back to worker node client1.linuxsysadmins.local and run below command to join the swarm as a worker.

# docker swarm join --token SWMTKN-1-48q24en6jyyi6nvjmrdukzlr5h20n0rtrzcvdveo67l0n9zyh3-2japtts5gppa1q3zdvkfbiabf 192.168.107.136:2377

Output for reference

[root@client1 ~]# docker swarm join --token SWMTKN-1-48q24en6jyyi6nvjmrdukzlr5h20n0rtrzcvdveo67l0n9zyh3-2japtts5gppa1q3zdvkfbiabf 192.168.107.136:2377
 This node joined a swarm as a worker.
[root@client1 ~]# 

List the joined worker nodes from the manager.

# docker node ls

Output for reference

[root@docker ~]# docker node  ls
 ID                            HOSTNAME                       STATUS              AVAILABILITY        MANAGER STATUS      ENGINE VERSION
 kaqbo9t94vhactbuavpo60wno     client1.linuxsysadmins.local   Ready               Active                                  18.09.7
 63qud8ovv00aqaws072oxxa9h *   docker.linuxsysadmins.local    Ready               Active              Leader              18.09.7
 [root@docker ~]#

To leave from Swarm

# docker swarm leave
# docker swarm leave --force

Will update soon with more commands in this docker cheat sheet.

Conclusion

Docker Cheat Sheet for sysadmins will be updated frequently whenever we use something in production. Subscribe to our newsletter and stay with us for future updates.

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