2.9 KiB
inspect
Usage: docker inspect [OPTIONS] NAME|ID [NAME|ID...]
Return low-level information on one or multiple containers, images, volumes,
networks, nodes, services, or tasks identified by name or ID.
Options:
-f, --format Format the output using the given go template
--help Print usage
-s, --size Display total file sizes if the type is container
values are "image" or "container" or "task
--type Return JSON for specified type
By default, this will render all results in a JSON array. If the container and image have the same name, this will return container JSON for unspecified type. If a format is specified, the given template will be executed for each result.
Go's text/template package describes all the details of the format.
Examples
Get an instance's IP address:
For the most part, you can pick out any field from the JSON in a fairly straightforward manner.
$ docker inspect --format='{{range .NetworkSettings.Networks}}{{.IPAddress}}{{end}}' $INSTANCE_ID
Get an instance's MAC address:
For the most part, you can pick out any field from the JSON in a fairly straightforward manner.
$ docker inspect --format='{{range .NetworkSettings.Networks}}{{.MacAddress}}{{end}}' $INSTANCE_ID
Get an instance's log path:
$ docker inspect --format='{{.LogPath}}' $INSTANCE_ID
Get a Task's image name:
$ docker inspect --format='{{.Container.Spec.Image}}' $INSTANCE_ID
List all port bindings:
One can loop over arrays and maps in the results to produce simple text output:
$ docker inspect --format='{{range $p, $conf := .NetworkSettings.Ports}} {{$p}} -> {{(index $conf 0).HostPort}} {{end}}' $INSTANCE_ID
Find a specific port mapping:
The .Field
syntax doesn't work when the field name begins with a
number, but the template language's index
function does. The
.NetworkSettings.Ports
section contains a map of the internal port
mappings to a list of external address/port objects. To grab just the
numeric public port, you use index
to find the specific port map, and
then index
0 contains the first object inside of that. Then we ask for
the HostPort
field to get the public address.
$ docker inspect --format='{{(index (index .NetworkSettings.Ports "8787/tcp") 0).HostPort}}' $INSTANCE_ID
Get a subsection in JSON format:
If you request a field which is itself a structure containing other
fields, by default you get a Go-style dump of the inner values.
Docker adds a template function, json
, which can be applied to get
results in JSON format.
$ docker inspect --format='{{json .Config}}' $INSTANCE_ID