dockerd

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NAME

   dockerd - Enable daemon mode

SYNOPSIS

   dockerd   [--add-runtime[=[]]]  [--allow-nondistributable-artifacts[=[]]]  [--api-cors-header=[=API-CORS-HEADER]]  [--authorization-plugin[=[]]]  [-b|--bridge[=BRIDGE]]  [--bip[=BIP]]
   [--cgroup-parent[=[]]] [--config-file[=path]] [--containerd[=SOCKET-PATH]] [--data-root[=/var/lib/docker]] [-D|--debug]  [--default-cgroupns-mode[=host]]  [--default-gateway[=DEFAULT-
   GATEWAY]] [--default-gateway-v6[=DEFAULT-GATEWAY-V6]] [--default-address-pool[=DEFAULT-ADDRESS-POOL]] [--default-network-opt[=DRIVER=OPT=VALUE]] [--default-runtime[=runc]] [--default-
   ipc-mode=MODE]  [--default-shm-size[=64MiB]]  [--default-ulimit[=[]]] [--dns[=[]]] [--dns-opt[=[]]] [--dns-search[=[]]] [--exec-opt[=[]]] [--exec-root[=/var/run/docker]] [--experimen
   tal[=false]] [--fixed-cidr[=FIXED-CIDR]]  [--fixed-cidr-v6[=FIXED-CIDR-V6]]  [-G|--group[=docker]]  [-H|--host[=[]]]  [--help]  [--http-proxy[""]]  [--https-proxy[""]]  [--icc[=true]]
   [--init[=false]]   [--init-path[=""]]   [--insecure-registry[=[]]]  [--ip[=0.0.0.0]]  [--ip-forward[=true]]  [--ip-masq[=true]]  [--iptables[=true]]  [--ipv6]  [--isolation[=default]]
   [-l|--log-level[=info]] [--label[=[]]]  [--live-restore[=false]]  [--log-driver[=json-file]]  [--log-opt[=map[]]]  [--mtu[=0]]  [--max-concurrent-downloads[=3]]  [--max-concurrent-up
   loads[=5]] [--max-download-attempts[=5]] [--no-proxy[""]] [--node-generic-resources[=[]]] [-p|--pidfile[=/var/run/docker.pid]] [--raw-logs] [--registry-mirror[=[]]] [-s|--storage-dri
   ver[=STORAGE-DRIVER]]  [--seccomp-profile[=SECCOMP-PROFILE-PATH]]  [--selinux-enabled]  [--shutdown-timeout[=15]]  [--storage-opt[=[]]] [--swarm-default-advertise-addr[=IP|INTERFACE]]
   [--tls]  [--tlscacert[=~/.docker/ca.pem]]  [--tlscert[=~/.docker/cert.pem]]   [--tlskey[=~/.docker/key.pem]]   [--tlsverify]   [--userland-proxy[=true]]   [--userland-proxy-path[=""]]
   [--userns-remap[=default]] [--validate]

DESCRIPTION

   dockerd is used for starting the Docker daemon (i.e., to command the daemon to manage images, containers etc).  So dockerd is a server, as a daemon.

   To  run the Docker daemon you can specify dockerd.  You can check the daemon options using dockerd --help.  Daemon options should be specified after the dockerd keyword in the follow
   ing format.

   dockerd [OPTIONS]

OPTIONS

   --add-runtime=[]
     Runtimes can be registered with the daemon either via the configuration file or using the --add-runtime command line argument.

   The following is an example adding 2 runtimes via the configuration:

   {
        "default-runtime": "runc",
        "runtimes": {
             "runc": {
                  "path": "runc"
             },
             "custom": {
                  "path": "/usr/local/bin/my-runc-replacement",
                  "runtimeArgs": [
                       "--debug"
                  ]
             }
        }
   }

   This is the same example via the command line:

   $ sudo dockerd --add-runtime runc=runc --add-runtime custom=/usr/local/bin/my-runc-replacement

   Note: defining runtime arguments via the command line is not supported.

   --allow-nondistributable-artifacts=[]
     Push nondistributable artifacts to the specified registries.

   List can contain elements with CIDR notation to specify a whole subnet.

   This option is useful when pushing images containing nondistributable
     artifacts to a registry on an air-gapped network so hosts on that network can
     pull the images without connecting to another server.

   Warning: Nondistributable artifacts typically have restrictions on how
     and where they can be distributed and shared. Only use this feature to push
     artifacts to private registries and ensure that you are in compliance with
     any terms that cover redistributing nondistributable artifacts.

   --api-cors-header=""
     Set CORS headers in the Engine API. Default is cors disabled. Give urls like
     "http://foo, http://bar, ...". Give "*" to allow all.

   --authorization-plugin=""
     Set authorization plugins to load

   -b, --bridge=""
     Attach containers to a pre-existing network bridge; use 'none' to disable
     container networking

   --bip=""
     Use the provided CIDR notation address for the dynamically created bridge
     (docker0); Mutually exclusive of -b

   --cgroup-parent=""
     Set parent cgroup for all containers. Default is "/docker" for fs cgroup
     driver and "system.slice" for systemd cgroup driver.

   --config-file="/etc/docker/daemon.json"
     Specifies the JSON file path to load the configuration from. Default is
     /etc/docker/daemon.json.

   --containerd=""
     Path to containerd socket.

   --data-root=""
     Path to the directory used to store persisted Docker data such as
     configuration for resources, swarm cluster state, and filesystem data for
     images, containers, and local volumes. Default is /var/lib/docker.

   -D, --debug=true|false
     Enable debug mode. Default is false.

   --default-cgroupns-mode="host|private"
     Set the default cgroup namespace mode for newly created containers. The argument
     can either be host or private. If unset, this defaults to host on cgroup v1,
     or private on cgroup v2.

   --default-gateway=""
     IPv4 address of the container default gateway; this address must be part of
     the bridge subnet (which is defined by -b or --bip)

   --default-gateway-v6=""
     IPv6 address of the container default gateway

   --default-address-pool=""
     Default address pool from which IPAM driver selects a subnet for the networks.
     Example: base=172.30.0.0/16,size=24 will set the default
     address pools for the selected scope networks to {172.30.[0-255].0/24}

   --default-network-opt=DRIVER=OPT=VALUE
     Default network driver options

   --default-runtime="runtime"
     Set default runtime if there're more than one specified by --add-runtime.

   --default-ipc-mode="private|shareable"
     Set the default IPC mode for newly created containers. The argument
     can either be private or shareable.

   --default-shm-size=size
     Set the daemon-wide default shm size for containers. Default is 64MiB.

   --default-ulimit=[]
     Default ulimits for containers.

   --dns=""
     Force Docker to use specific DNS servers.

   --dns-opt=""
     DNS options to use.

   --dns-search=[]
     DNS search domains to use.

   --exec-opt=[]
     Set runtime execution options. See RUNTIME EXECUTION OPTIONS.

   --exec-root=""
     Path to use as the root of the Docker execution state files. Default is
     /var/run/docker.

   --experimental=""
     Enable the daemon experimental features.

   --fixed-cidr=""
     IPv4 subnet for fixed IPs (e.g., 10.20.0.0/16); this subnet must be nested in
     the bridge subnet (which is defined by -b or --bip).

   --fixed-cidr-v6=""
     IPv6 subnet for global IPv6 addresses (e.g., 2a00:1450::/64)

   -G, --group=""
     Group to assign the unix socket specified by -H when running in daemon mode.
     use '' (the empty string) to disable setting of a group. Default is docker.

   -H, --host=[unix:///var/run/docker.sock]: tcp://[host:port] to bind or unix://[/path/to/socket] to use.
     The socket(s) to bind to in daemon mode specified using one or more
     tcp://host:port, unix:///path/to/socket, fd://* or fd://socketfd.

   --help
     Print usage statement

   --http-proxy""
     Proxy URL for HTTP requests unless overridden by NoProxy.

   --https-proxy""
     Proxy URL for HTTPS requests unless overridden by NoProxy.

   --icc=true|false
     Allow unrestricted inter-container and Docker daemon host communication. If
     disabled, containers can still be linked together using the --link option
     (see docker-run(1)). Default is true.

   --init
     Run an init process inside containers for signal forwarding and process
     reaping.

   --init-path
     Path to the docker-init binary.

   --insecure-registry=[]
     Enable insecure registry communication, i.e., enable un-encrypted and/or
     untrusted communication.

   List of insecure registries can contain an element with CIDR notation to
     specify a whole subnet. Insecure registries accept HTTP and/or accept HTTPS
     with certificates from unknown CAs.

   Enabling --insecure-registry is useful when running a local registry.
     However, because its use creates security vulnerabilities it should ONLY be
     enabled for testing purposes.  For increased security, users should add their
     CA to their system's list of trusted CAs instead of using
     --insecure-registry.

   --ip=""
     Default IP address to use when binding container ports. Default is 0.0.0.0.

   --ip-forward=true|false
     Enables IP forwarding on the Docker host. The default is true. This flag
     interacts with the IP forwarding setting on your host system's kernel. If
     your system has IP forwarding disabled, this setting enables it. If your
     system has IP forwarding enabled, setting this flag to false
     has no effect.

   This setting will also enable IPv6 forwarding if you have both
     --ip-forward=true and --fixed-cidr-v6 set. Note that this may reject
     Router Advertisements and interfere with the host's existing IPv6
     configuration. For more information, please consult the documentation about
     "Advanced Networking - IPv6".

   --ip-masq=true|false
     Enable IP masquerading for bridge's IP range. Default is true.

   --iptables=true|false
     Enable Docker's addition of iptables rules. Default is true.

   --ipv6=true|false
     Enable IPv6 support. Default is false. Docker will create an IPv6-enabled
     bridge with address fe80::1 which will allow you to create IPv6-enabled
     containers. Use together with --fixed-cidr-v6 to provide globally routable
     IPv6 addresses. IPv6 forwarding will be enabled if not used with
     --ip-forward=false. This may collide with your host's current IPv6
     settings. For more information please consult the documentation about
     "Advanced Networking - IPv6".

   --isolation="default"
      Isolation specifies the type of isolation technology used by containers.
      Note that the default on Windows server is process, and the default on
      Windows client is hyperv. Linux only supports default.

   -l, --log-level="debug|info|warn|error|fatal"
     Set the logging level. Default is info.

   --label="[]"
     Set key=value labels to the daemon (displayed in docker info)

   --live-restore=false
     Enable live restore of running containers when the daemon starts so that they
     are not restarted. This option is applicable only for docker daemon running
     on Linux host.

   --log-driver="json-file|syslog|journald|gelf|fluentd|awslogs|splunk|etwlogs|gcplogs|none"
     Default driver for container logs. Default is json-file.
     Warning: docker logs command works only for json-file logging driver.

   --log-opt=[]
     Logging driver specific options.

   --mtu=0
     Set the containers network mtu. Default is 0.

   --max-concurrent-downloads=3
     Set the max concurrent downloads. Default is 3.

   --max-concurrent-uploads=5
     Set the max concurrent uploads. Default is 5.

   --max-download-attempts=5
     Set the max download attempts for each pull. Default is 5.

   --no-proxy="""
     Comma-separated values specifying hosts that should be excluded from proxying.

   --node-generic-resources=[]
     Advertise user-defined resource. Default is [].
     Use this if your swarm cluster has some nodes with custom
     resources (e.g: NVIDIA GPU, SSD, ...) and you need your services to land on
     nodes advertising these resources.
     Usage example: --node-generic-resources "NVIDIA-GPU=UUID1"
     --node-generic-resources "NVIDIA-GPU=UUID2"

   -p, --pidfile="path"
     Path to use for daemon PID file. Default is /var/run/docker.pid.

   --raw-logs
     Output daemon logs in full timestamp format without ANSI coloring. If this
     flag is not set, the daemon outputs condensed, colorized logs if a terminal
     is detected, or full ("raw") output otherwise.

   --registry-mirror=://
     Prepend a registry mirror to be used for image pulls. May be specified
     multiple times.

   -s, --storage-driver=""
     Force the Docker runtime to use a specific storage driver.

   --seccomp-profile=""
     Path to seccomp profile.

   --selinux-enabled=true|false
     Enable selinux support. Default is false.

   --shutdown-timeout=seconds
     Set the shutdown timeout value in seconds. Default is 15.

   --storage-opt=[]
     Set storage driver options. See STORAGE DRIVER OPTIONS.

   --swarm-default-advertise-addr=IP|INTERFACE
     Set default address or interface for swarm to advertise as its
     externally-reachable address to other cluster members. This can be a
     hostname, an IP address, or an interface such as eth0. A port cannot be
     specified with this option.

   --tls=true|false
     Use TLS; implied by --tlsverify. Default is false.

   --tlscacert=~/.docker/ca.pem
     Trust certs signed only by this CA.

   --tlscert=~/.docker/cert.pem
     Path to TLS certificate file.

   --tlskey=~/.docker/key.pem
     Path to TLS key file.

   --tlsverify=true|false
     Use TLS and verify the remote (daemon: verify client, client: verify daemon).
     Default is false.

   --userland-proxy=true|false
     Rely on a userland proxy implementation for inter-container and
     outside-to-container loopback communications. Default is true.

   --userland-proxy-path=""
     Path to the userland proxy binary.

   --userns-remap=default|uid:gid|user:group|user|uid
     Enable user namespaces for containers on the daemon. Specifying "default"
     will cause a new user and group to be created to handle UID and GID range
     remapping for the user namespace mappings used for contained processes.
     Specifying a user (or uid) and optionally a group (or gid) will cause the
     daemon to lookup the user and group's subordinate ID ranges for use as the
     user namespace mappings for contained processes.

   --validate
     Validate daemon configuration and exit.

STORAGE DRIVER OPTIONS

   Docker uses storage backends (known as "storage drivers" in the Docker internals) to create writable containers from images.  Many of these backends use operating system  level  tech
   nologies and can be configured.

   Specify  options  to  the storage backend with --storage-opt flags. The backends that currently take options are zfs and btrfs.  Options for zfs start with zfs., and options for btrfs
   start with btrfs..

ZFS options zfs.fsname

   Set zfs filesystem under which docker will create its own datasets.  By default docker will pick up the zfs filesystem where docker graph (/var/lib/docker) is located.

   Example use: dockerd -s zfs --storage-opt zfs.fsname=zroot/docker

Btrfs options btrfs.min_space

   Specifies the minimum size to use when creating the subvolume which is used for containers. If user uses disk quota for btrfs when creating or running a container  with  --storage-opt
   size option, docker should ensure the size cannot be smaller than btrfs.min_space.

   Example use: docker daemon -s btrfs --storage-opt btrfs.min_space=10G

Access authorization

   Docker's  access authorization can be extended by authorization plugins that your organization can purchase or build themselves. You can install one or more authorization plugins when
   you start the Docker daemon using the --authorization-plugin=PLUGIN_ID option.

   dockerd --authorization-plugin=plugin1 --authorization-plugin=plugin2,...

   The PLUGIN_ID value is either the plugin's name or a path to its specification file. The plugin's implementation determines whether you can specify a name or path. Consult  with  your
   Docker administrator to get information about the plugins available to you.

   Once  a  plugin is installed, requests made to the daemon through the command line or Docker's Engine API are allowed or denied by the plugin.  If you have multiple plugins installed,
   each plugin, in order, must allow the request for it to complete.

   For information about how to create an authorization plugin, see access authorization plugin https://docs.docker.com/engine/extend/plugins_authorization/ section in the  Docker  ex
   tend section of this documentation.

RUNTIME EXECUTION OPTIONS

   You can configure the runtime using options specified with the --exec-opt flag.  All the flag's options have the native prefix. A single native.cgroupdriver option is available.

   The  native.cgroupdriver option specifies the management of the container's cgroups. You can only specify cgroupfs or systemd. If you specify systemd and it is not available, the sys
   tem errors out. If you omit the native.cgroupdriver option,cgroupfs is used on cgroup v1 hosts, systemd is used on cgroup v2 hosts with systemd available.

   This example sets the cgroupdriver to systemd:

   $ sudo dockerd --exec-opt native.cgroupdriver=systemd

   Setting this option applies to all containers the daemon launches.

HISTORY

   Sept 2015, Originally compiled by Shishir Mahajan shishir.mahajan@redhat.com mailto:shishir.mahajan@redhat.com based on docker.com source material and internal work.

Docker Community SEPTEMBER 2015 DOCKERD(8)