--- title: "import" description: "The import command description and usage" keywords: "import, file, system, container" --- # import ```markdown Usage: docker import [OPTIONS] file|URL|- [REPOSITORY[:TAG]] Import the contents from a tarball to create a filesystem image Options: -c, --change value Apply Dockerfile instruction to the created image (default []) --help Print usage -m, --message string Set commit message for imported image --platform string Set platform if server is multi-platform capable ``` ## Description You can specify a `URL` or `-` (dash) to take data directly from `STDIN`. The `URL` can point to an archive (.tar, .tar.gz, .tgz, .bzip, .tar.xz, or .txz) containing a filesystem or to an individual file on the Docker host. If you specify an archive, Docker untars it in the container relative to the `/` (root). If you specify an individual file, you must specify the full path within the host. To import from a remote location, specify a `URI` that begins with the `http://` or `https://` protocol. The `--change` option will apply `Dockerfile` instructions to the image that is created. Supported `Dockerfile` instructions: `CMD`|`ENTRYPOINT`|`ENV`|`EXPOSE`|`ONBUILD`|`USER`|`VOLUME`|`WORKDIR` ## Examples ### Import from a remote location This will create a new untagged image. ```bash $ docker import http://example.com/exampleimage.tgz ``` ### Import from a local file - Import to docker via pipe and `STDIN`. ```bash $ cat exampleimage.tgz | docker import - exampleimagelocal:new ``` - Import with a commit message. ```bash $ cat exampleimage.tgz | docker import --message "New image imported from tarball" - exampleimagelocal:new ``` - Import to docker from a local archive. ```bash $ docker import /path/to/exampleimage.tgz ``` ### Import from a local directory ```bash $ sudo tar -c . | docker import - exampleimagedir ``` ### Import from a local directory with new configurations ```bash $ sudo tar -c . | docker import --change "ENV DEBUG=true" - exampleimagedir ``` Note the `sudo` in this example – you must preserve the ownership of the files (especially root ownership) during the archiving with tar. If you are not root (or the sudo command) when you tar, then the ownerships might not get preserved. ## When the daemon supports multiple operating systems If the daemon supports multiple operating systems, and the image being imported does not match the default operating system, it may be necessary to add `--platform`. This would be necessary when importing a Linux image into a Windows daemon. ```bash $ docker import --platform=linux .\linuximage.tar ```