Linux post-installation steps for Docker Engine
These optional post-installation procedures describe how to configure your Linux host machine to work better with Docker.
Manage Docker as a non-root user
The Docker daemon binds to a Unix socket, not a TCP port. By default it's the
root user that owns the Unix socket, and other users can only access it using
sudo. The Docker daemon always runs as the root user.
If you don't want to preface the docker command with sudo, create a Unix
group called docker and add users to it. When the Docker daemon starts, it
creates a Unix socket accessible by members of the docker group. On some Linux
distributions, the system automatically creates this group when installing
Docker Engine using a package manager. In that case, there is no need for you to
manually create the group.
Warning
The docker group grants root-level privileges to the user. For
details on how this impacts security in your system, see
Docker Daemon Attack Surface.
Note
To run Docker without root privileges, see Run the Docker daemon as a non-root user (Rootless mode).
To create the docker group and add your user:
- Create the
dockergroup.
sudo groupadd docker
- Add your user to the
dockergroup.
sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
- Log out and log back in so that your group membership is re-evaluated.
If you're running Linux in a virtual machine, it may be necessary to restart the virtual machine for changes to take effect.
You can also run the following command to activate the changes to groups:
newgrp docker
- Verify that you can run
dockercommands withoutsudo.
docker run hello-world
This command downloads a test image and runs it in a container. When the container runs, it prints a message and exits.
If you initially ran Docker CLI commands using sudo before adding your user
to the docker group, you may see the following error:
WARNING: Error loading config file: /home/user/.docker/config.json -
stat /home/user/.docker/config.json: permission denied
This error indicates that the permission settings for the ~/.docker/
directory are incorrect, due to having used the sudo command earlier.
To fix this problem, either remove the ~/.docker/ directory (it's recreated
automatically, but any custom settings are lost), or change its ownership and
permissions using the following commands:
sudo chown "$USER":"$USER" /home/"$USER"/.docker -R
sudo chmod g+rwx "$HOME/.docker" -R
Configure Docker to start on boot with systemd
Many modern Linux distributions use systemd to manage which services start when the system boots. On Debian and Ubuntu, the Docker service starts on boot by default. To automatically start Docker and containerd on boot for other Linux distributions using systemd, run the following commands:
sudo systemctl enable docker.service
sudo systemctl enable containerd.service
To stop this behavior, use disable instead.
sudo systemctl disable docker.service
sudo systemctl disable containerd.service
You can use systemd unit files to configure the Docker service on startup, for example to add an HTTP proxy, set a different directory or partition for the Docker runtime files, or other customizations. For an example, see Configure the daemon to use a proxy.
Configure default logging driver
Docker provides logging drivers for
collecting and viewing log data from all containers running on a host. The
default logging driver, json-file, writes log data to JSON-formatted files on
the host filesystem. Over time, these log files expand in size, leading to
potential exhaustion of disk resources.
To avoid issues with overusing disk for log data, consider one of the following options:
- Configure the
json-filelogging driver to turn on log rotation. - Use an alternative logging driver such as the "local" logging driver that performs log rotation by default.
- Use a logging driver that sends logs to a remote logging aggregator.
To use the json-file driver as the default logging driver, set the log-driver and log-opts keys to appropriate values in the daemon.json file, which is located in /etc/docker/ on Linux hosts or C:\ProgramData\docker\config\ on Windows Server. If the file does not exist, create it first. For more information about configuring Docker using daemon.json, see daemon.json.
The following example sets the log driver to json-file and sets the max-size and max-file options to enable automatic log-rotation.
{
"log-driver": "json-file",
"log-opts": {
"max-size": "10m",
"max-file": "3"
}
}
Note
log-opts configuration options in the daemon.json configuration file must be provided as strings. Boolean and numeric values (such as the value for max-file in the example above) must therefore be enclosed in quotes (").
Restart Docker for the changes to take effect for newly created containers. Existing containers don't use the new logging configuration automatically.
You can set the logging driver for a specific container by using the --log-driver flag to docker container create or docker run:
docker run \
--log-driver json-file --log-opt max-size=10m \
alpine echo hello world
Next steps
- Take a look at the Docker workshop to learn how to build an image and run it as a containerized application.