# stats Display a live stream of container(s) resource usage statistics ### Aliases `docker container stats`, `docker stats` ### Options | Name | Type | Default | Description | |:----------------------|:---------|:--------|:-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | `-a`, `--all` | | | Show all containers (default shows just running) | | [`--format`](#format) | `string` | | Format output using a custom template:
'table': Print output in table format with column headers (default)
'table TEMPLATE': Print output in table format using the given Go template
'json': Print in JSON format
'TEMPLATE': Print output using the given Go template.
Refer to https://docs.docker.com/go/formatting/ for more information about formatting output with templates | | `--no-stream` | | | Disable streaming stats and only pull the first result | | `--no-trunc` | | | Do not truncate output | ## Description The `docker stats` command returns a live data stream for running containers. To limit data to one or more specific containers, specify a list of container names or ids separated by a space. You can specify a stopped container but stopped containers do not return any data. If you need more detailed information about a container's resource usage, use the `/containers/(id)/stats` API endpoint. > **Note** > > On Linux, the Docker CLI reports memory usage by subtracting cache usage from > the total memory usage. The API does not perform such a calculation but rather > provides the total memory usage and the amount from the cache so that clients > can use the data as needed. The cache usage is defined as the value of > `total_inactive_file` field in the `memory.stat` file on cgroup v1 hosts. > > On Docker 19.03 and older, the cache usage was defined as the value of `cache` > field. On cgroup v2 hosts, the cache usage is defined as the value of > `inactive_file` field. > **Note** > > The `PIDS` column contains the number of processes and kernel threads created > by that container. Threads is the term used by Linux kernel. Other equivalent > terms are "lightweight process" or "kernel task", etc. A large number in the > `PIDS` column combined with a small number of processes (as reported by `ps` > or `top`) may indicate that something in the container is creating many threads. ## Examples Running `docker stats` on all running containers against a Linux daemon. ```console $ docker stats CONTAINER ID NAME CPU % MEM USAGE / LIMIT MEM % NET I/O BLOCK I/O PIDS b95a83497c91 awesome_brattain 0.28% 5.629MiB / 1.952GiB 0.28% 916B / 0B 147kB / 0B 9 67b2525d8ad1 foobar 0.00% 1.727MiB / 1.952GiB 0.09% 2.48kB / 0B 4.11MB / 0B 2 e5c383697914 test-1951.1.kay7x1lh1twk9c0oig50sd5tr 0.00% 196KiB / 1.952GiB 0.01% 71.2kB / 0B 770kB / 0B 1 4bda148efbc0 random.1.vnc8on831idyr42slu578u3cr 0.00% 1.672MiB / 1.952GiB 0.08% 110kB / 0B 578kB / 0B 2 ``` If you don't [specify a format string using `--format`](#format), the following columns are shown. | Column name | Description | |---------------------------|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | `CONTAINER ID` and `Name` | the ID and name of the container | | `CPU %` and `MEM %` | the percentage of the host's CPU and memory the container is using | | `MEM USAGE / LIMIT` | the total memory the container is using, and the total amount of memory it is allowed to use | | `NET I/O` | The amount of data the container has received and sent over its network interface | | `BLOCK I/O` | The amount of data the container has written to and read from block devices on the host | | `PIDs` | the number of processes or threads the container has created | Running `docker stats` on multiple containers by name and id against a Linux daemon. ```console $ docker stats awesome_brattain 67b2525d8ad1 CONTAINER ID NAME CPU % MEM USAGE / LIMIT MEM % NET I/O BLOCK I/O PIDS b95a83497c91 awesome_brattain 0.28% 5.629MiB / 1.952GiB 0.28% 916B / 0B 147kB / 0B 9 67b2525d8ad1 foobar 0.00% 1.727MiB / 1.952GiB 0.09% 2.48kB / 0B 4.11MB / 0B 2 ``` Running `docker stats` on container with name nginx and getting output in `json` format. ```console $ docker stats nginx --no-stream --format "{{ json . }}" {"BlockIO":"0B / 13.3kB","CPUPerc":"0.03%","Container":"nginx","ID":"ed37317fbf42","MemPerc":"0.24%","MemUsage":"2.352MiB / 982.5MiB","Name":"nginx","NetIO":"539kB / 606kB","PIDs":"2"} ``` Running `docker stats` with customized format on all (Running and Stopped) containers. ```console $ docker stats --all --format "table {{.Container}}\t{{.CPUPerc}}\t{{.MemUsage}}" fervent_panini 5acfcb1b4fd1 humble_visvesvaraya big_heisenberg CONTAINER CPU % MEM USAGE / LIMIT fervent_panini 0.00% 56KiB / 15.57GiB 5acfcb1b4fd1 0.07% 32.86MiB / 15.57GiB humble_visvesvaraya 0.00% 0B / 0B big_heisenberg 0.00% 0B / 0B ``` `humble_visvesvaraya` and `big_heisenberg` are stopped containers in the above example. Running `docker stats` on all running containers against a Windows daemon. ```powershell PS E:\> docker stats CONTAINER ID CPU % PRIV WORKING SET NET I/O BLOCK I/O 09d3bb5b1604 6.61% 38.21 MiB 17.1 kB / 7.73 kB 10.7 MB / 3.57 MB 9db7aa4d986d 9.19% 38.26 MiB 15.2 kB / 7.65 kB 10.6 MB / 3.3 MB 3f214c61ad1d 0.00% 28.64 MiB 64 kB / 6.84 kB 4.42 MB / 6.93 MB ``` Running `docker stats` on multiple containers by name and id against a Windows daemon. ```powershell PS E:\> docker ps -a CONTAINER ID NAME IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES 3f214c61ad1d awesome_brattain nanoserver "cmd" 2 minutes ago Up 2 minutes big_minsky 9db7aa4d986d mad_wilson windowsservercore "cmd" 2 minutes ago Up 2 minutes mad_wilson 09d3bb5b1604 fervent_panini windowsservercore "cmd" 2 minutes ago Up 2 minutes affectionate_easley PS E:\> docker stats 3f214c61ad1d mad_wilson CONTAINER ID NAME CPU % PRIV WORKING SET NET I/O BLOCK I/O 3f214c61ad1d awesome_brattain 0.00% 46.25 MiB 76.3 kB / 7.92 kB 10.3 MB / 14.7 MB 9db7aa4d986d mad_wilson 9.59% 40.09 MiB 27.6 kB / 8.81 kB 17 MB / 20.1 MB ``` ### Format the output (--format) The formatting option (`--format`) pretty prints container output using a Go template. Valid placeholders for the Go template are listed below: | Placeholder | Description | |--------------|----------------------------------------------| | `.Container` | Container name or ID (user input) | | `.Name` | Container name | | `.ID` | Container ID | | `.CPUPerc` | CPU percentage | | `.MemUsage` | Memory usage | | `.NetIO` | Network IO | | `.BlockIO` | Block IO | | `.MemPerc` | Memory percentage (Not available on Windows) | | `.PIDs` | Number of PIDs (Not available on Windows) | When using the `--format` option, the `stats` command either outputs the data exactly as the template declares or, when using the `table` directive, includes column headers as well. The following example uses a template without headers and outputs the `Container` and `CPUPerc` entries separated by a colon (`:`) for all images: ```console $ docker stats --format "{{.Container}}: {{.CPUPerc}}" 09d3bb5b1604: 6.61% 9db7aa4d986d: 9.19% 3f214c61ad1d: 0.00% ``` To list all containers statistics with their name, CPU percentage and memory usage in a table format you can use: ```console $ docker stats --format "table {{.Container}}\t{{.CPUPerc}}\t{{.MemUsage}}" CONTAINER CPU % PRIV WORKING SET 1285939c1fd3 0.07% 796 KiB / 64 MiB 9c76f7834ae2 0.07% 2.746 MiB / 64 MiB d1ea048f04e4 0.03% 4.583 MiB / 64 MiB ``` The default format is as follows: On Linux: "table {{.ID}}\t{{.Name}}\t{{.CPUPerc}}\t{{.MemUsage}}\t{{.MemPerc}}\t{{.NetIO}}\t{{.BlockIO}}\t{{.PIDs}}" On Windows: "table {{.ID}}\t{{.Name}}\t{{.CPUPerc}}\t{{.MemUsage}}\t{{.NetIO}}\t{{.BlockIO}}"