docker info

Description

Display system-wide information

Usage

docker info [OPTIONS]

Options

Name, shorthand Default Description
--format , -f Format the output using the given Go template

Parent command

Command Description
docker The base command for the Docker CLI.

Extended description

This command displays system wide information regarding the Docker installation. Information displayed includes the kernel version, number of containers and images. The number of images shown is the number of unique images. The same image tagged under different names is counted only once.

If a format is specified, the given template will be executed instead of the default format. Go’s text/template package describes all the details of the format.

Depending on the storage driver in use, additional information can be shown, such as pool name, data file, metadata file, data space used, total data space, metadata space used, and total metadata space.

The data file is where the images are stored and the metadata file is where the meta data regarding those images are stored. When run for the first time Docker allocates a certain amount of data space and meta data space from the space available on the volume where /var/lib/docker is mounted.

Examples

Show output

The example below shows the output for a daemon running on Red Hat Enterprise Linux, using the devicemapper storage driver. As can be seen in the output, additional information about the devicemapper storage driver is shown:

$ docker info

Containers: 14
 Running: 3
 Paused: 1
 Stopped: 10
Images: 52
Server Version: 1.10.3
Storage Driver: devicemapper
 Pool Name: docker-202:2-25583803-pool
 Pool Blocksize: 65.54 kB
 Base Device Size: 10.74 GB
 Backing Filesystem: xfs
 Data file: /dev/loop0
 Metadata file: /dev/loop1
 Data Space Used: 1.68 GB
 Data Space Total: 107.4 GB
 Data Space Available: 7.548 GB
 Metadata Space Used: 2.322 MB
 Metadata Space Total: 2.147 GB
 Metadata Space Available: 2.145 GB
 Udev Sync Supported: true
 Deferred Removal Enabled: false
 Deferred Deletion Enabled: false
 Deferred Deleted Device Count: 0
 Data loop file: /var/lib/docker/devicemapper/devicemapper/data
 Metadata loop file: /var/lib/docker/devicemapper/devicemapper/metadata
 Library Version: 1.02.107-RHEL7 (2015-12-01)
Execution Driver: native-0.2
Logging Driver: json-file
Plugins:
 Volume: local
 Network: null host bridge
Kernel Version: 3.10.0-327.el7.x86_64
Operating System: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server 7.2 (Maipo)
OSType: linux
Architecture: x86_64
CPUs: 1
Total Memory: 991.7 MiB
Name: ip-172-30-0-91.ec2.internal
ID: I54V:OLXT:HVMM:TPKO:JPHQ:CQCD:JNLC:O3BZ:4ZVJ:43XJ:PFHZ:6N2S
Docker Root Dir: /var/lib/docker
Debug mode (client): false
Debug mode (server): false
Username: gordontheturtle
Registry: https://index.docker.io/v1/
Insecure registries:
 myinsecurehost:5000
 127.0.0.0/8

Show debugging output

Here is a sample output for a daemon running on Ubuntu, using the overlay2 storage driver and a node that is part of a 2-node swarm:

$ docker -D info

Containers: 14
 Running: 3
 Paused: 1
 Stopped: 10
Images: 52
Server Version: 1.13.0
Storage Driver: overlay2
 Backing Filesystem: extfs
 Supports d_type: true
 Native Overlay Diff: false
Logging Driver: json-file
Cgroup Driver: cgroupfs
Plugins:
 Volume: local
 Network: bridge host macvlan null overlay
Swarm: active
 NodeID: rdjq45w1op418waxlairloqbm
 Is Manager: true
 ClusterID: te8kdyw33n36fqiz74bfjeixd
 Managers: 1
 Nodes: 2
 Orchestration:
  Task History Retention Limit: 5
 Raft:
  Snapshot Interval: 10000
  Number of Old Snapshots to Retain: 0
  Heartbeat Tick: 1
  Election Tick: 3
 Dispatcher:
  Heartbeat Period: 5 seconds
 CA Configuration:
  Expiry Duration: 3 months
 Root Rotation In Progress: false
 Node Address: 172.16.66.128 172.16.66.129
 Manager Addresses:
  172.16.66.128:2477
Runtimes: runc
Default Runtime: runc
Init Binary: docker-init
containerd version: 8517738ba4b82aff5662c97ca4627e7e4d03b531
runc version: ac031b5bf1cc92239461125f4c1ffb760522bbf2
init version: N/A (expected: v0.13.0)
Security Options:
 apparmor
 seccomp
  Profile: default
Kernel Version: 4.4.0-31-generic
Operating System: Ubuntu 16.04.1 LTS
OSType: linux
Architecture: x86_64
CPUs: 2
Total Memory: 1.937 GiB
Name: ubuntu
ID: H52R:7ZR6:EIIA:76JG:ORIY:BVKF:GSFU:HNPG:B5MK:APSC:SZ3Q:N326
Docker Root Dir: /var/lib/docker
Debug Mode (client): true
Debug Mode (server): true
 File Descriptors: 30
 Goroutines: 123
 System Time: 2016-11-12T17:24:37.955404361-08:00
 EventsListeners: 0
Http Proxy: http://test:[email protected]:8080
Https Proxy: https://test:[email protected]:8080
No Proxy: localhost,127.0.0.1,docker-registry.somecorporation.com
Registry: https://index.docker.io/v1/
WARNING: No swap limit support
Labels:
 storage=ssd
 staging=true
Experimental: false
Insecure Registries:
 127.0.0.0/8
Registry Mirrors:
  http://192.168.1.2/
  http://registry-mirror.example.com:5000/
Live Restore Enabled: false

The global -D option causes all docker commands to output debug information.

Format the output

You can also specify the output format:

$ docker info --format '{{json .}}'

{"ID":"I54V:OLXT:HVMM:TPKO:JPHQ:CQCD:JNLC:O3BZ:4ZVJ:43XJ:PFHZ:6N2S","Containers":14, ...}

Run docker info on Windows

Here is a sample output for a daemon running on Windows Server 2016:

E:\docker>docker info

Containers: 1
 Running: 0
 Paused: 0
 Stopped: 1
Images: 17
Server Version: 1.13.0
Storage Driver: windowsfilter
 Windows:
Logging Driver: json-file
Plugins:
 Volume: local
 Network: nat null overlay
Swarm: inactive
Default Isolation: process
Kernel Version: 10.0 14393 (14393.206.amd64fre.rs1_release.160912-1937)
Operating System: Windows Server 2016 Datacenter
OSType: windows
Architecture: x86_64
CPUs: 8
Total Memory: 3.999 GiB
Name: WIN-V0V70C0LU5P
ID: NYMS:B5VK:UMSL:FVDZ:EWB5:FKVK:LPFL:FJMQ:H6FT:BZJ6:L2TD:XH62
Docker Root Dir: C:\control
Debug Mode (client): false
Debug Mode (server): false
Registry: https://index.docker.io/v1/
Insecure Registries:
 127.0.0.0/8
Registry Mirrors:
  http://192.168.1.2/
  http://registry-mirror.example.com:5000/
Live Restore Enabled: false

Warnings about kernel support

If your operating system does not enable certain capabilities, you may see warnings such as one of the following, when you run docker info:

WARNING: Your kernel does not support swap limit capabilities. Limitation discarded.
WARNING: No swap limit support

You can ignore these warnings unless you actually need the ability to limit these resources, in which case you should consult your operating system’s documentation for enabling them. Learn more.

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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
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https://docs.docker.com/v18.09/engine/reference/commandline/info/