I am pretty new to docker and I started playing around with it.
I downloaded the latest mongo docker image: docker pull mongo
Then I view the image I downloaded (docker images) but the only information i have regarding the version of mongo is the tag which is just 'latest'
I found that I can use the docker inspect command to determine the version, which did prove helpful, but it is also very inconvenient.
since I read that each Image can have multiple tags, I am assuming the mongo image I downloaded has another tag with the version number.
How can I view all tags of an image I downloaded?
You can use registry api to do it, reference to this & this.
For your case, you can just use next command:
wget -q https://registry.hub.docker.com/v1/repositories/mongo/tags -O - | sed -e 's/[][]//g' -e 's/"//g' -e 's/ //g' | tr '}' '\n' | awk -F: '{print $3}'
Change the mongo to others if you need tags of other images.
You just downloaded one tag. in your case latest which is an alias to one other tag, most of the times but not always the highest version number. In this Case it's 4, 4.0 and 4.0.10 which are all the same images. But there is an even newer image which is released unstable and which is 4.1.
The mongo tags you can find here. It's always a good idea to check the dockerhub description of the images, there you will find a lot of information.
In order to see all the tags available for one image, you need to check on the registry where your image is stored. In your case, you're using the default public registry which you can find here.
You can find all the mongo tags, directly here.
In the description tab, you'll also see that, currently, the latest tag is also associated with the versions 4.0.10, 4.0 and 4.
Furthermore, in order to get a specific tag, you need to use this command:
docker image pull image:tag
For example, if you want to pull the version 4.0.10 of mongo then you need to type :
docker image pull mongo:4.0.10
I want to know when I pulled a certain image, when you run docker images The Created field appear but the date that the image was pulled don't.
If you installed docker-engine from official repositories on your linux, it should be installed in /var/lib/docker, for your own configuration, find the respective path.
There is /var/lib/docker/image/aufs/repositories.json file where docker stores images with their sha256 values.
cat /var/lib/docker/image/aufs/repositories.json
Find the image you are looking after and copy it's sha256 hash somewhere.
Then:
ls /var/lib/docker/image/aufs/imagedb/content/sha256 -lash
Find the sha265 value you found in repositories.json then look at the date.
I'd like to pull the images of CentOS, Tomcat, ... using their sha256 code, like in
docker pull myimage#sha256:0ecb2ad60
But I can't find the sha256-code to use anywhere.
I checked the DockerHub repository for any hint of the sha256-code, but couldn't find any. I downloaded the images by their tag
docker pull tomcat:7-jre8
and checked the image with docker inspect to see if there's a sha256 code in the metadata, but there is none (adding the sha256 code of the image would probably change the sha256 code).
Do I have to compute the sha256 code of an image myself and use that?
Latest answer
Edit suggested by OhJeez in the comments.
docker inspect --format='{{index .RepoDigests 0}}' $IMAGE
Original answer
I believe you can also get this using
docker inspect --format='{{.RepoDigests}}' $IMAGE
Works only in Docker 1.9 and if the image was originally pulled by the digest. Details are on the docker issue tracker.
You can get it by docker images --digests
REPOSITORY TAG DIGEST IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
docker/ucp-agent 2.1.0 sha256:a428de44a9059f31a59237a5881c2d2cffa93757d99026156e4ea544577ab7f3 583407a61900 3 weeks ago 22.3 MB
Simplest and most concise way is:
docker images --no-trunc --quiet $IMAGE
This returns only the sha256:... string and nothing else.
e.g.:
$ docker images --no-trunc --quiet debian:stretch-slim
sha256:220611111e8c9bbe242e9dc1367c0fa89eef83f26203ee3f7c3764046e02b248
Edit:
NOTE: this only works for images that are local. You can docker pull $IMAGE first, if required.
Just saw it:
When I pull an image, the sha256 code is diplayed at the bottom of the output (Digest: sha....):
docker pull tomcat:7-jre8
7-jre8: Pulling from library/tomcat
902b87aaaec9: Already exists
9a61b6b1315e: Already exists
...
4dcef5c50d60: Already exists
Digest: sha256:c34ce3c1fcc0c7431e1392cc3abd0dfe2192ffea1898d5250f199d3ac8d8720f
Status: Image is up to date for tomcat:7-jre8
This sha code
sha256:c34ce3c1fcc0c7431e1392cc3abd0dfe2192ffea1898d5250f199d3ac8d8720f
can be used to pull the image afterwards with
docker pull tomcat#sha256:c34ce3c1fcc0c7431e1392cc3abd0dfe2192ffea1898d5250f199d3ac8d8720f
This way you can be sure that the image is not changed and can be safely used for production.
I found the above methods to not work in some cases. They either:
don't deal well with multiple images with the same hash (in the case of .RepoDigests suggestion - when you want to use a specific registry path)
don't work well when pushing the image to registries
(in the case of .Id where it's a local hash, not the hash in the
registry).
The below method is delicate, but works for extracting the specific full 'name' and hash for a specific pushed container.
Here's the scenario - An image is uploaded separately to 2 different projects in the same repo, so querying RepoDigests returns 2 results.
$ docker inspect --format='{{.RepoDigests}}' gcr.io/alpha/homeapp:latest
[gcr.io/alpha/homeapp#sha256:ce7395d681afeb6afd68e73a8044e4a965ede52cd0799de7f97198cca6ece7ed gcr.io/beta/homeapp#sha256:ce7395d681afeb6afd68e73a8044e4a965ede52cd0799de7f97198cca6ece7ed]
I want to use the alpha result, but I can't predict which index it will be. So I need to manipulate the text output to remove the brackets and get each entry on a separate line. From there I can easily grep the result.
$ docker inspect --format='{{.RepoDigests}}' gcr.io/alpha/homeapp:latest | sed 's:^.\(.*\).$:\1:' | tr " " "\n" | grep alpha
gcr.io/alpha/homeapp#sha256:ce7395d681afeb6afd68e73a8044e4a965ede52cd0799de7f97198cca6ece7ed
In addition to the existing answers, you can use the --digests option while doing docker images to get a list of digests for all the images you have.
docker images --digests
You can add a grep to drill down further
docker images --digests | grep tomcat
You can find it at the time of pulling the image from the respective repository. Below command mentions Digest: sha256 at the time of pulling the docker image.
09:33 AM##~::>docker --version
Docker version 19.03.4, build 9013bf5
Digest: sha256:6e9f67fa63b0323e9a1e587fd71c561ba48a034504fb804fd26fd8800039835d
09:28 AM##~::>docker pull ubuntu
Using default tag: latest
latest: Pulling from library/ubuntu
7ddbc47eeb70: Pull complete
c1bbdc448b72: Pull complete
8c3b70e39044: Pull complete
45d437916d57: Pull complete
**Digest: sha256:6e9f67fa63b0323e9a1e587fd71c561ba48a034504fb804fd26fd8800039835d**
Status: Downloaded newer image for ubuntu:latest
docker.io/library/ubuntu:latest
Once, the image is downloaded, we can do the following
"ubuntu#sha256:6e9f67fa63b0323e9a1e587fd71c561ba48a034504fb804fd26fd8800039835d"
09:36 AM##~::>docker inspect ubuntu | grep -i sha256
"Id": "sha256:775349758637aff77bf85e2ff0597e86e3e859183ef0baba8b3e8fc8d3cba51c",
**"ubuntu#sha256:6e9f67fa63b0323e9a1e587fd71c561ba48a034504fb804fd26fd8800039835d"**
"Image": "sha256:f0caea6f785de71fe8c8b1b276a7094151df6058aa3f22d2902fe6b51f1a7a8f",
"Image": "sha256:f0caea6f785de71fe8c8b1b276a7094151df6058aa3f22d2902fe6b51f1a7a8f",
"sha256:cc967c529ced563b7746b663d98248bc571afdb3c012019d7f54d6c092793b8b",
"sha256:2c6ac8e5063e35e91ab79dfb7330c6154b82f3a7e4724fb1b4475c0a95dfdd33",
"sha256:6c01b5a53aac53c66f02ea711295c7586061cbe083b110d54dafbeb6cf7636bf",
"sha256:e0b3afb09dc386786d49d6443bdfb20bc74d77dcf68e152db7e5bb36b1cca638"
This should have been the Id field, that you could see in the old deprecated Docker Hub API
GET /v1/repositories/foo/bar/images HTTP/1.1
Host: index.docker.io
Accept: application/json
Parameters:
namespace – the namespace for the repo
repo_name – the name for the repo
Example Response:
HTTP/1.1 200
Vary: Accept
Content-Type: application/json
[{"id": "9e89cc6f0bc3c38722009fe6857087b486531f9a779a0c17e3ed29dae8f12c4f",
"checksum": "b486531f9a779a0c17e3ed29dae8f12c4f9e89cc6f0bc3c38722009fe6857087"},
{"id": "ertwetewtwe38722009fe6857087b486531f9a779a0c1dfddgfgsdgdsgds",
"checksum": "34t23f23fc17e3ed29dae8f12c4f9e89cc6f0bsdfgfsdgdsgdsgerwgew"}]
BUT: this is not how it is working now with the new docker distribution.
See issue 628: "Get image ID with tag name"
The /v1/ registry response /repositories/<repo>/tags used to list the image ID along with the tag handle.
/v2/ only seems to give the handle.
It would be useful to get the ID to compare to the ID found locally. The only place I can find the ID is in the v1Compat section of the manifest (which is overkill for the info I want)
The current (mid 2015) answer is:
This property of the V1 API was very computationally expensive for the way images are stored on the backend. Only the tag names are enumerated to avoid a secondary lookup.
In addition, the V2 API does not deal in Image IDs. Rather, it uses digests to identify layers, which can be calculated as property of the layer and are independently verifiable.
As mentioned by #zelphir, using digests is not a good way since it doesn't exist for a local-only image. I assume the image ID sha is the most accurate and consistent across tags/pull/push etc.
docker inspect --format='{{index .Id}}' $IMAGE
Does the trick.
Just issue docker pull tomcat:7-jre8 again and you will get what you want.
Recently the centos images in the global docker registry were updated (~4 days ago it seems). Before the update, I could successfully build off of the Centos 6 image but now I have some installation errors for some packages. When I look at the images from before and after, and then attempt to follow version history it looks something like
f1b10cd84249 --> b9aeeaeb5e17 (originally worked)
\-> fb9cc58bde0c --> a005304e4e74 (current version where my code breaks)
where the arrows show how the image was updated (left is oldest while right is newest). I'm curious as to how the images are different. Is there anyway to do a diff of the a005304e4e74 and b9aeeaeb5e17 images?
I've never tried, but I guess you could do:
$ docker export -o f1.tar b9aeeaeb5e17
$ docker export -o f2.tar a005304e4e74
$ diff <(tar -tvf f1.tar | sort) <(tar -tvf f2.tar | sort)
Export will create a tar of the filesystem, which we then use to get a diff of the file differences. (I got the diff syntax from Diff between two .tar.gz file lists in liunx )
You might find just running docker history on the images gives you enough information though.
I'm new to docker then I tried this command to pull 'docker pull base' but an error of FATA[0008] Error: image library/base:latest not found
anyone knows this problem?
The image "library/ubuntu/" mentions:
General use Ubuntu base image.
Tags available are “latest” (equivalent to the tags “precise” and “12.04”), “saucy” (“13.10”), “raring” (“13.04”), “quantel” (“12.10”), and “lucid” (“10.04”).
The “latest” tag is equivalent to the most recent Long Term Support (LTS) release of Ubuntu.
This image replaces the deprecated “base” image.
So if you were trying to pull the latest ubuntu image, a git pull ubuntu:latest should work.