diff --git a/_vendor/github.com/docker/cli/docs/reference/dockerd.md b/_vendor/github.com/docker/cli/docs/reference/dockerd.md index d0be72e45b..8b472c67f1 100644 --- a/_vendor/github.com/docker/cli/docs/reference/dockerd.md +++ b/_vendor/github.com/docker/cli/docs/reference/dockerd.md @@ -133,7 +133,7 @@ to [the `daemon.json` file](#daemon-configuration-file). The following list of environment variables are supported by the `dockerd` daemon. Some of these environment variables are supported both by the Docker Daemon and -the `docker` CLI. Refer to [Environment variables](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/cli/#environment-variables) +the `docker` CLI. Refer to [Environment variables](https://docs.docker.com/reference/cli/docker/#environment-variables) to learn about environment variables supported by the `docker` CLI. | Variable | Description | @@ -169,7 +169,7 @@ in three ways: options. (Docker Engine version 23.0 or later). The command-line and configuration file options take precedence over environment -variables. Refer to [control and configure Docker with systemd](https://docs.docker.com/config/daemon/systemd/#httphttps-proxy) +variables. Refer to [control and configure Docker with systemd](https://docs.docker.com/engine/daemon/proxy/) to set these environment variables on a host using `systemd`. ### Daemon socket option @@ -332,7 +332,7 @@ drivers: `overlay2`, `fuse-overlayfs`, `btrfs`, and `zfs`. and is selected by default. Unless users have a strong reason to prefer another storage driver, `overlay2` should be used. -You can find out more about storage drivers and how to select one in [Select a storage driver](https://docs.docker.com/storage/storagedriver/select-storage-driver/). +You can find out more about storage drivers and how to select one in [Select a storage driver](https://docs.docker.com/engine/storage/drivers/select-storage-driver/). On Windows, the Docker daemon only supports the `windowsfilter` storage driver. @@ -424,7 +424,7 @@ installed outside of `PATH`, must be registered with the daemon, either via the configuration file or using the `--add-runtime` command line flag. For examples on how to use other container runtimes, see -[Alternative container runtimes](https://docs.docker.com/engine/alternative-runtimes/) +[Alternative container runtimes](https://docs.docker.com/engine/daemon/alternative-runtimes/) ##### Configure runtimes using `daemon.json` @@ -609,7 +609,7 @@ $ sudo dockerd --add-runtime = Defining runtime arguments via the command line is not supported. For an example configuration for a runc drop-in replacment, see -[Alternative container runtimes > youki](https://docs.docker.com/engine/alternative-runtimes/#youki) +[Alternative container runtimes > youki](https://docs.docker.com/engine/daemon/alternative-runtimes/#youki) ##### Configure the default container runtime @@ -783,7 +783,7 @@ Docker host's configuration: This only adds the proxy and authentication to the Docker daemon's requests. To use the proxy when building images and running containers, see -[Configure Docker to use a proxy server](https://docs.docker.com/network/proxy/) +[Configure Docker to use a proxy server](https://docs.docker.com/engine/cli/proxy/) ### Default `ulimit` settings @@ -952,7 +952,7 @@ to avoid collisions with other Prometheus exporters and services. If you are running a Prometheus server you can add this address to your scrape configs to have Prometheus collect metrics on Docker. For more information, see -[Collect Docker metrics with Prometheus](https://docs.docker.com/config/daemon/prometheus/). +[Collect Docker metrics with Prometheus](https://docs.docker.com/engine/daemon/prometheus/). #### Node generic resources @@ -1151,7 +1151,7 @@ The following is a full example of the allowed configuration options on Linux: > daemon startup as a flag. > On systems that use systemd to start the Docker daemon, `-H` is already set, so > you can't use the `hosts` key in `daemon.json` to add listening addresses. -> See [custom Docker daemon options](https://docs.docker.com/config/daemon/systemd/#custom-docker-daemon-options) +> See [custom Docker daemon options](https://docs.docker.com/engine/daemon/proxy/#systemd-unit-file) > for an example on how to configure the daemon using systemd drop-in files. ##### On Windows @@ -1234,7 +1234,7 @@ The list of feature options include: - `containerd-snapshotter`: when set to `true`, the daemon uses containerd snapshotters instead of the classic storage drivers for storing image and container data. For more information, see - [containerd storage](https://docs.docker.com/storage/containerd/). + [containerd storage](https://docs.docker.com/engine/storage/containerd/). - `windows-dns-proxy`: when set to `true`, the daemon's internal DNS resolver will forward requests to external servers. Without this, most applications running in the container will still be able to use secondary DNS servers @@ -1260,7 +1260,7 @@ The list of currently supported options that can be reconfigured is this: | ---------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `debug` | Toggles debug mode of the daemon. | | `labels` | Replaces the daemon labels with a new set of labels. | -| `live-restore` | Toggles [live restore](https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/live-restore/). | +| `live-restore` | Toggles [live restore](https://docs.docker.com/engine/containers/live-restore/). | | `max-concurrent-downloads` | Configures the max concurrent downloads for each pull. | | `max-concurrent-uploads` | Configures the max concurrent uploads for each push. | | `max-download-attempts` | Configures the max download attempts for each pull. | @@ -1362,7 +1362,7 @@ using the `daemon.json` file. ``` This example uses the `bridge` network driver. Refer to the -[bridge network driver page](https://docs.docker.com/network/drivers/bridge/#options) +[bridge network driver page](https://docs.docker.com/engine/network/drivers/bridge/#options) for an overview of available driver options. After changing the configuration and restarting the daemon, new networks that diff --git a/content/engine/cli/proxy.md b/content/engine/cli/proxy.md index 423f6ab2f9..2619cae6b7 100644 --- a/content/engine/cli/proxy.md +++ b/content/engine/cli/proxy.md @@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ These settings are used to configure proxy environment variables for containers only, and not used as proxy settings for the Docker CLI or the Docker Engine itself. Refer to the [environment variables](/reference/cli/docker/#environment-variables) -and [configure the Docker daemon to use a proxy server](/engine/daemon/proxy.md#httphttps-proxy) +and [configure the Docker daemon to use a proxy server](/engine/daemon/proxy.md) sections for configuring proxy settings for the CLI and daemon. ### Run containers with a proxy configuration diff --git a/content/engine/release-notes/20.10.md b/content/engine/release-notes/20.10.md index fa378acadc..9630e860d2 100644 --- a/content/engine/release-notes/20.10.md +++ b/content/engine/release-notes/20.10.md @@ -435,7 +435,7 @@ to learn how to use the `docker scan` command to check if images are vulnerable. > longer used for TLS (`https://`) connections. Make sure you also set an `$HTTPS_PROXY` > environment variable for handling requests to `https://` URLs. > -> Refer to the [HTTP/HTTPS proxy section](/engine/daemon/proxy.md#httphttps-proxy) +> Refer to the [HTTP/HTTPS proxy section](/engine/daemon/proxy.md) > to learn how to configure the Docker Daemon to use a proxy server. { .important } @@ -476,7 +476,7 @@ well as updated versions of the containerd.io package. > longer used for TLS (`https://`) connections. Make sure you also set an `$HTTPS_PROXY` > environment variable for handling requests to `https://` URLs. > -> Refer to the [HTTP/HTTPS proxy section](/engine/daemon/proxy.md#httphttps-proxy) +> Refer to the [HTTP/HTTPS proxy section](/engine/daemon/proxy.md) > to learn how to configure the Docker Daemon to use a proxy server. { .important } @@ -521,7 +521,7 @@ well as updated versions of the containerd.io package. > longer used for TLS (`https://`) connections. Make sure you also set an `$HTTPS_PROXY` > environment variable for handling requests to `https://` URLs. > -> Refer to the [HTTP/HTTPS proxy section](/engine/daemon/proxy.md#httphttps-proxy) +> Refer to the [HTTP/HTTPS proxy section](/engine/daemon/proxy.md) > to learn how to configure the Docker Daemon to use a proxy server. { .important } diff --git a/data/engine-cli/docker.yaml b/data/engine-cli/docker.yaml index e748afd6d9..4f2c69e592 100644 --- a/data/engine-cli/docker.yaml +++ b/data/engine-cli/docker.yaml @@ -236,8 +236,8 @@ long: |- These settings are used to configure proxy settings for containers only, and not used as proxy settings for the `docker` CLI or the `dockerd` daemon. Refer to the - [environment variables](#environment-variables) and [HTTP/HTTPS proxy](/config/daemon/proxy.md#httphttps-proxy) - sections for configuring proxy settings for the cli and daemon. + [environment variables](#environment-variables) and [HTTP/HTTPS proxy](/engine/daemon/proxy/#httphttps-proxy) + sections for configuring proxy settings for the CLI and daemon. > **Warning** > diff --git a/data/engine-cli/docker_container_attach.yaml b/data/engine-cli/docker_container_attach.yaml index 28fa871505..30dd9d7478 100644 --- a/data/engine-cli/docker_container_attach.yaml +++ b/data/engine-cli/docker_container_attach.yaml @@ -123,7 +123,7 @@ examples: |- Repeating the example above, but this time with the `-i` and `-t` options set; ```console - $ docker run -dit --name topdemo2 ubuntu:22.04 /usr/bin/top -b + $ docker run -dit --name topdemo2 alpine /usr/bin/top -b ``` Now, when attaching to the container, and pressing the `CTRL-p CTRL-q` ("read diff --git a/data/engine-cli/docker_container_commit.yaml b/data/engine-cli/docker_container_commit.yaml index 64ca93e957..0f93971877 100644 --- a/data/engine-cli/docker_container_commit.yaml +++ b/data/engine-cli/docker_container_commit.yaml @@ -80,8 +80,8 @@ examples: |- $ docker ps CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES - c3f279d17e0a ubuntu:22.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours desperate_dubinsky - 197387f1b436 ubuntu:22.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours focused_hamilton + c3f279d17e0a ubuntu:24.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours desperate_dubinsky + 197387f1b436 ubuntu:24.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours focused_hamilton $ docker commit c3f279d17e0a svendowideit/testimage:version3 @@ -99,8 +99,8 @@ examples: |- $ docker ps CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES - c3f279d17e0a ubuntu:22.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours desperate_dubinsky - 197387f1b436 ubuntu:22.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours focused_hamilton + c3f279d17e0a ubuntu:24.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours desperate_dubinsky + 197387f1b436 ubuntu:24.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours focused_hamilton $ docker inspect -f "{{ .Config.Env }}" c3f279d17e0a @@ -121,8 +121,8 @@ examples: |- $ docker ps CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES - c3f279d17e0a ubuntu:22.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours desperate_dubinsky - 197387f1b436 ubuntu:22.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours focused_hamilton + c3f279d17e0a ubuntu:24.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours desperate_dubinsky + 197387f1b436 ubuntu:24.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours focused_hamilton $ docker commit --change='CMD ["apachectl", "-DFOREGROUND"]' -c "EXPOSE 80" c3f279d17e0a svendowideit/testimage:version4 @@ -136,8 +136,8 @@ examples: |- CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES 89373736e2e7 testimage:version4 "apachectl -DFOREGROU" 3 seconds ago Up 2 seconds 80/tcp distracted_fermat - c3f279d17e0a ubuntu:22.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours desperate_dubinsky - 197387f1b436 ubuntu:22.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours focused_hamilton + c3f279d17e0a ubuntu:24.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours desperate_dubinsky + 197387f1b436 ubuntu:24.04 /bin/bash 7 days ago Up 25 hours focused_hamilton ``` deprecated: false hidden: false diff --git a/data/engine-cli/docker_container_export.yaml b/data/engine-cli/docker_container_export.yaml index 4df94c7dfc..b83b91bbf0 100644 --- a/data/engine-cli/docker_container_export.yaml +++ b/data/engine-cli/docker_container_export.yaml @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ long: |- the container, `docker export` exports the contents of the underlying directory, not the contents of the volume. - Refer to [Backup, restore, or migrate data volumes](/storage/volumes/#back-up-restore-or-migrate-data-volumes) + Refer to [Backup, restore, or migrate data volumes](/engine/storage/volumes/#back-up-restore-or-migrate-data-volumes) in the user guide for examples on exporting data in a volume. usage: docker container export [OPTIONS] CONTAINER pname: docker container diff --git a/data/engine-cli/docker_container_logs.yaml b/data/engine-cli/docker_container_logs.yaml index 380c50c4c5..a920e72519 100644 --- a/data/engine-cli/docker_container_logs.yaml +++ b/data/engine-cli/docker_container_logs.yaml @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ long: |- The `docker logs` command batch-retrieves logs present at the time of execution. For more information about selecting and configuring logging drivers, refer to - [Configure logging drivers](/config/containers/logging/configure/). + [Configure logging drivers](/engine/logging/configure/). The `docker logs --follow` command will continue streaming the new output from the container's `STDOUT` and `STDERR`. diff --git a/data/engine-cli/docker_container_ls.yaml b/data/engine-cli/docker_container_ls.yaml index 6505ea2326..e61f3fd395 100644 --- a/data/engine-cli/docker_container_ls.yaml +++ b/data/engine-cli/docker_container_ls.yaml @@ -121,7 +121,7 @@ examples: |- $ docker ps --no-trunc CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES - ca5534a51dd04bbcebe9b23ba05f389466cf0c190f1f8f182d7eea92a9671d00 ubuntu:22.04 bash 17 seconds ago Up 16 seconds 3300-3310/tcp webapp + ca5534a51dd04bbcebe9b23ba05f389466cf0c190f1f8f182d7eea92a9671d00 ubuntu:24.04 bash 17 seconds ago Up 16 seconds 3300-3310/tcp webapp 9ca9747b233100676a48cc7806131586213fa5dab86dd1972d6a8732e3a84a4d crosbymichael/redis:latest /redis-server --dir 33 minutes ago Up 33 minutes 6379/tcp redis,webapp/db ``` @@ -152,7 +152,7 @@ examples: |- * The "size" information shows the amount of data (on disk) that is used for the _writable_ layer of each container * The "virtual size" is the total amount of disk-space used for the read-only _image_ data used by the container and the writable layer. - For more information, refer to the [container size on disk](/storage/storagedriver/#container-size-on-disk) section. + For more information, refer to the [container size on disk](/engine/storage/drivers/#container-size-on-disk) section. ### Filtering (--filter) {#filter} @@ -328,13 +328,13 @@ examples: |- 919e1179bdb8 ubuntu-c1 "top" About a minute ago Up About a minute admiring_lovelace ``` - Match containers based on the `ubuntu` version `22.04` image: + Match containers based on the `ubuntu` version `24.04` image: ```console - $ docker ps --filter ancestor=ubuntu:22.04 + $ docker ps --filter ancestor=ubuntu:24.04 CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES - 82a598284012 ubuntu:22.04 "top" 3 minutes ago Up 3 minutes sleepy_bose + 82a598284012 ubuntu:24.04 "top" 3 minutes ago Up 3 minutes sleepy_bose ``` The following matches containers based on the layer `d0e008c6cf02` or an image @@ -344,7 +344,7 @@ examples: |- $ docker ps --filter ancestor=d0e008c6cf02 CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES - 82a598284012 ubuntu:22.04 "top" 3 minutes ago Up 3 minutes sleepy_bose + 82a598284012 ubuntu:24.04 "top" 3 minutes ago Up 3 minutes sleepy_bose ``` #### Create time diff --git a/data/engine-cli/docker_container_run.yaml b/data/engine-cli/docker_container_run.yaml index 13e2400063..425869c9b8 100644 --- a/data/engine-cli/docker_container_run.yaml +++ b/data/engine-cli/docker_container_run.yaml @@ -1332,7 +1332,7 @@ examples: |- > for example by adding individual kernel capabilities with `--cap-add`. > > For more information, see - > [Runtime privilege and Linux capabilities](/engine/reference/run/#runtime-privilege-and-linux-capabilities) + > [Runtime privilege and Linux capabilities](/engine/containers/run/#runtime-privilege-and-linux-capabilities) { .warning } The following example doesn't work, because by default, Docker drops most @@ -2291,7 +2291,7 @@ examples: |- container's logging driver. To learn about the supported logging drivers and how to use them, refer to - [Configure logging drivers](/config/containers/logging/configure/). + [Configure logging drivers](/engine/logging/configure/). To disable logging for a container, set the `--log-driver` flag to `none`: diff --git a/data/engine-cli/docker_image_pull.yaml b/data/engine-cli/docker_image_pull.yaml index 90893a49b7..e6642ce13c 100644 --- a/data/engine-cli/docker_image_pull.yaml +++ b/data/engine-cli/docker_image_pull.yaml @@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ examples: |- their layers are stored only once and do not consume extra disk space. For more information about images, layers, and the content-addressable store, - refer to [understand images, containers, and storage drivers](/storage/storagedriver/). + refer to [understand images, containers, and storage drivers](/engine/storage/drivers/). ### Pull an image by digest (immutable identifier) @@ -144,8 +144,8 @@ examples: |- So far, you've pulled images by their name (and "tag"). Using names and tags is a convenient way to work with images. When using tags, you can `docker pull` an image again to make sure you have the most up-to-date version of that image. - For example, `docker pull ubuntu:22.04` pulls the latest version of the Ubuntu - 22.04 image. + For example, `docker pull ubuntu:24.04` pulls the latest version of the Ubuntu + 24.04 image. In some cases you don't want images to be updated to newer versions, but prefer to use a fixed version of an image. Docker enables you to pull an image by its @@ -154,23 +154,23 @@ examples: |- and guarantee that the image you're using is always the same. To know the digest of an image, pull the image first. Let's pull the latest - `ubuntu:22.04` image from Docker Hub: + `ubuntu:24.04` image from Docker Hub: ```console - $ docker pull ubuntu:22.04 + $ docker pull ubuntu:24.04 - 22.04: Pulling from library/ubuntu + 24.04: Pulling from library/ubuntu 125a6e411906: Pull complete - Digest: sha256:26c68657ccce2cb0a31b330cb0be2b5e108d467f641c62e13ab40cbec258c68d - Status: Downloaded newer image for ubuntu:22.04 - docker.io/library/ubuntu:22.04 + Digest: sha256:2e863c44b718727c860746568e1d54afd13b2fa71b160f5cd9058fc436217b30 + Status: Downloaded newer image for ubuntu:24.04 + docker.io/library/ubuntu:24.04 ``` Docker prints the digest of the image after the pull has finished. In the example above, the digest of the image is: ```console - sha256:26c68657ccce2cb0a31b330cb0be2b5e108d467f641c62e13ab40cbec258c68d + sha256:2e863c44b718727c860746568e1d54afd13b2fa71b160f5cd9058fc436217b30 ``` Docker also prints the digest of an image when pushing to a registry. This @@ -180,18 +180,18 @@ examples: |- pull the above image by digest, run the following command: ```console - $ docker pull ubuntu@sha256:26c68657ccce2cb0a31b330cb0be2b5e108d467f641c62e13ab40cbec258c68d + $ docker pull ubuntu@sha256:2e863c44b718727c860746568e1d54afd13b2fa71b160f5cd9058fc436217b30 - docker.io/library/ubuntu@sha256:26c68657ccce2cb0a31b330cb0be2b5e108d467f641c62e13ab40cbec258c68d: Pulling from library/ubuntu - Digest: sha256:26c68657ccce2cb0a31b330cb0be2b5e108d467f641c62e13ab40cbec258c68d - Status: Image is up to date for ubuntu@sha256:26c68657ccce2cb0a31b330cb0be2b5e108d467f641c62e13ab40cbec258c68d - docker.io/library/ubuntu@sha256:26c68657ccce2cb0a31b330cb0be2b5e108d467f641c62e13ab40cbec258c68d + docker.io/library/ubuntu@sha256:2e863c44b718727c860746568e1d54afd13b2fa71b160f5cd9058fc436217b30: Pulling from library/ubuntu + Digest: sha256:2e863c44b718727c860746568e1d54afd13b2fa71b160f5cd9058fc436217b30 + Status: Image is up to date for ubuntu@sha256:2e863c44b718727c860746568e1d54afd13b2fa71b160f5cd9058fc436217b30 + docker.io/library/ubuntu@sha256:2e863c44b718727c860746568e1d54afd13b2fa71b160f5cd9058fc436217b30 ``` Digest can also be used in the `FROM` of a Dockerfile, for example: ```dockerfile - FROM ubuntu@sha256:26c68657ccce2cb0a31b330cb0be2b5e108d467f641c62e13ab40cbec258c68d + FROM ubuntu@sha256:2e863c44b718727c860746568e1d54afd13b2fa71b160f5cd9058fc436217b30 LABEL org.opencontainers.image.authors="some maintainer " ``` @@ -252,13 +252,11 @@ examples: |- ```console $ docker image ls --filter reference=ubuntu REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE - ubuntu 18.04 c6ad7e71ba7d 5 weeks ago 63.2MB - ubuntu bionic c6ad7e71ba7d 5 weeks ago 63.2MB - ubuntu 22.04 5ccefbfc0416 2 months ago 78MB - ubuntu focal ff0fea8310f3 2 months ago 72.8MB - ubuntu latest ff0fea8310f3 2 months ago 72.8MB - ubuntu jammy 41ba606c8ab9 3 months ago 79MB - ubuntu 20.04 ba6acccedd29 7 months ago 72.8MB + ubuntu 22.04 8a3cdc4d1ad3 3 weeks ago 77.9MB + ubuntu jammy 8a3cdc4d1ad3 3 weeks ago 77.9MB + ubuntu 24.04 35a88802559d 6 weeks ago 78.1MB + ubuntu latest 35a88802559d 6 weeks ago 78.1MB + ubuntu noble 35a88802559d 6 weeks ago 78.1MB ``` ### Cancel a pull diff --git a/data/engine-cli/docker_service_create.yaml b/data/engine-cli/docker_service_create.yaml index 55e91fec7d..c52b97ec41 100644 --- a/data/engine-cli/docker_service_create.yaml +++ b/data/engine-cli/docker_service_create.yaml @@ -1387,7 +1387,7 @@ examples: |- | `node.platform.os` | Node operating system | `node.platform.os==windows` | | `node.platform.arch` | Node architecture | `node.platform.arch==x86_64` | | `node.labels` | User-defined node labels | `node.labels.security==high` | - | `engine.labels` | Docker Engine's labels | `engine.labels.operatingsystem==ubuntu-22.04` | + | `engine.labels` | Docker Engine's labels | `engine.labels.operatingsystem==ubuntu-24.04` | `engine.labels` apply to Docker Engine labels like operating system, drivers, etc. Swarm administrators add `node.labels` for operational purposes by using @@ -1629,7 +1629,7 @@ examples: |- The swarm extends my-network to each node running the service. Containers on the same network can access each other using - [service discovery](/network/drivers/overlay/#container-discovery). + [service discovery](/engine/network/drivers/overlay/#container-discovery). Long form syntax of `--network` allows to specify list of aliases and driver options: `--network name=my-network,alias=web1,driver-opt=field1=value1` diff --git a/data/engine-cli/docker_service_logs.yaml b/data/engine-cli/docker_service_logs.yaml index 3a4a703f10..b02b03099f 100644 --- a/data/engine-cli/docker_service_logs.yaml +++ b/data/engine-cli/docker_service_logs.yaml @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ long: |- > the `json-file` or `journald` logging driver. For more information about selecting and configuring logging drivers, refer to - [Configure logging drivers](/config/containers/logging/configure/). + [Configure logging drivers](/engine/logging/configure/). The `docker service logs --follow` command will continue streaming the new output from the service's `STDOUT` and `STDERR`. diff --git a/data/engine-cli/docker_system_events.yaml b/data/engine-cli/docker_system_events.yaml index fb8c743c43..0419933544 100644 --- a/data/engine-cli/docker_system_events.yaml +++ b/data/engine-cli/docker_system_events.yaml @@ -374,10 +374,10 @@ examples: |- $ docker events --filter 'container=container_1' --filter 'container=container_2' - 2014-09-03T15:49:29.999999999Z07:00 container die 4386fb97867d (image=ubuntu:22.04) - 2014-05-10T17:42:14.999999999Z07:00 container stop 4386fb97867d (image=ubuntu:22.04) - 2014-05-10T17:42:14.999999999Z07:00 container die 7805c1d35632 (imager=redis:2.8) - 2014-09-03T15:49:29.999999999Z07:00 container stop 7805c1d35632 (image=redis:2.8) + 2014-09-03T15:49:29.999999999Z07:00 container die 4386fb97867d (image=ubuntu:24.04) + 2014-05-10T17:42:14.999999999Z07:00 container stop 4386fb97867d (image=ubuntu:24.04) + 2014-05-10T17:42:14.999999999Z07:00 container die 7805c1d35632 (imager=redis:7.2) + 2014-09-03T15:49:29.999999999Z07:00 container stop 7805c1d35632 (image=redis:7.2) $ docker events --filter 'type=volume'