Files
docker-docs/engine/installation/linux/linux-postinstall.md
Misty Stanley-Jones 3108d86b6d Docker 17.03 release (#2050)
* First pass of tabs-based organization

* Improvements

* Second pass at tabs org

* Move tab highlighting to Liquid instead of JS

* Adding forwarding links for in-product TOCs

* Move to pre-rendered left-navs instead of post-load JS for TOC sync

* Optimizations and nosync-ing the Reference section

* Optimizations, fix Cloud YAML

* Make a "Sample applications" node

* Update index.md

* Tabs CSS fixes and 12-factor reposition

* Theme Start (#1709)

* Hooking up nav to real TOC data, formatting fixes

* Fixing JS error

* Layout updates, dark themes, tons o stuff (#1971)

* Add cookie saving for day/night mode

* Newsite tabs (#2004)

* Layout updates, dark themes, tons o stuff

* Update themes

Theme updates + scaffolding

* Update style.css

* Update style-alt.css

* Missing font fixes

* Import Open Sans from Google

* Font fix, archive removal in TOC, favicon, Feedback img fix

* Oops, returning -webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased;

* Add old favicon.ico

* Make archives a non-tiered link

* Reorder docs archive to newest-first, add local instructions

* Commenting out day/night switch for now

* Fix 'rate this page'

* Rate this page fixes

* Autocomplete and Docker Cloud fixes

* Open tree to current page

* Adding indentation for nav collapse in

* Ensure left nav visibly displays the current topic

* Update flex layout

- adjust rescale
- code block styles

* add focus to search

- force code block color (for now)
- increase section max-width

* increase content padding

- add padding to toc for wrapping long strings.

* grid adjustment

- grid
- content and wrapper adjustments for mobile

* left/right sidebar adjustments

- refine position on scroll for toc on landing

- add default height to compensate for upcoming position absolute
onScroll

* side bar overflow

- hidden on X-scroll

* fix version button

- override bstrap defaults

* tabs + buttons

* update landing svgs

* fix sidebar height

set to 100% on landing pre-affix

* Update blurb about engine/editions on front page

* add side menu to mobile collapse menu

* update classnames

* overall mobile tweaks

* Right-nav highlighting and auto-scroll

* Slightly slower right-nav highlighting, correct version

* add toggle menus for small devices

* Fixing JS error/Docker 1.13>17.03

* header updates

* re-add fan to header

* update transition time

* Add first 20 words to Twitter card

* fixed width of components

- lockdown elements on rescale (wil need more TLC)

* set max-width of content

* Left and right nav resizing w/footer scroll and window resize

* update links on landing page

* Fix for overzealous resizing, JS redundancies

* Fix for JS error on homepage

* JS error fixes

* toggle adjustments

- wrap toggle button

* add tab width

* version button type

* version button both headers

* tabs - fix typo

* landing page grid

* components

* Share images, JS fixes, Marketo removal

* Anchor links fix

* Fix for black space on mobile

* Restore hamburger (partial)

* Update run.md

Minor grammar cleanup.

* Update apparmor.md

I'm a little confused about which one is better to be used here, a period (.) or a colon (:),  as a command is given below. Or both are OK, and we only have to keep consistency in a single page.

* Update apparmor.md

Fixed the indentation for the codeblock (indented by 4 spaces). Thank you for your careful review.

* Replacing service with secret

* Update networking.md

fix typo with triple "m" for command word

* Update run.md

Address PR feedback.

* Update install instructions to latest version

* Added "related topics" section

* Add documentation for mem_swappiness

* Update to new Docker version scheme (#1926)

* mem_swappiness for current version and v1

* merge other changes, fix typo

* There is no OpenSuSE and there never was

though we had SuSE and S.u.S.E.

* Add release notes for 1.12.6-cs9 (#2028)

Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>

* need sudo to access key cache (#1931)

* need sudo to access key cache

* List other keyservers to try for cs-engine install (#2033)

* List other keyservers to try for cs-engine install

Sometimes ha.pool.sks-keyservers.net goes down, so let's provide some
other keyservers to try in such cases.

Signed-off-by: Brian Goff <cpuguy83@gmail.com>

* Update work_issue.md (#2030)

Change "re-start" to "restart". Though not included in "Prefered usages" in the documentation guide, but I think "restart" is better and used more frequently. Besides, some other docs here, such as "Keep containers alive during daemon downtime" of "Admin Guide", also use "restart".

* Update create_pr.md (#2015)

* Update work_issue.md (#2013)

Change "id" to "ID" except for those in code.

* Update set_up_dev.md (#2011)

Add periods (.) in some steps.

* Update set_up_dev.md (#2010)

Apply Oxford Comma as described in the documentation guide.

* Update create_pr.md (#2014)

Delete an extra space.

* Update trust_key_mng.md (#1883)

* Update trust_key_mng.md

* Update trust_key_mng.md

I don‘t know how the whitespace appears, and it seems that it appears because something happened related to its original format (right-aligned pipe characters) and my change. Still unknown. 

Now I've deleted some redundant whitespace.

* Update 

I don‘t know how the whitespace appears, and it seems that it appears because something happened related to its original format (right-aligned pipe characters) and my change. Still unknown. 

Now I've deleted some redundant whitespace.

* Update content_trust.md (#1912)

* Update content_trust.md

* update deprecation policy

Signed-off-by: Victor Vieux <victorvieux@gmail.com>

* Update info about how to check whether Docker is running

* Updated docs to reflect edge channel

Signed-off-by: French Ben <frenchben@docker.com>

* Updated wording for SP creation

Signed-off-by: French Ben <frenchben@docker.com>

* beta to edge, cloud features first draft

added cloud images

Signed-off-by: Victoria Bialas <victoria.bialas@docker.com>

* Distinguish between cloud stack file and stack file

* Added EE links

Signed-off-by: French Ben <frenchben@docker.com>

* Use variables

Signed-off-by: French Ben <frenchben@docker.com>

* Replace deprecated MAINTAINER with LABEL (#1445)

Replace MAINTAINER instruction with LABEL as MAINTAINER was deprecated in https://github.com/docker/docker/pull/25466

* Updates for Docker CE and Docker EE

* Updated DDC launch button

Signed-off-by: French Ben <frenchben@docker.com>

* added Docker Cloud topics for Mac and Windows

Signed-off-by: Victoria Bialas <victoria.bialas@docker.com>

* d4mac, d4win stable and beta release notes for 17.03.0

Signed-off-by: Victoria Bialas <victoria.bialas@docker.com>
2017-03-02 05:54:49 -08:00

12 KiB

description, keywords, title
description keywords title
Optional post-installation steps for Linux Docker, Docker documentation, requirements, apt, installation, ubuntu, install, uninstall, upgrade, update Post-installation steps for Linux

This section contains optional procedures for configuring Linux hosts to work better with Docker.

Manage Docker as a non-root user

The docker daemon binds to a Unix socket instead of a TCP port. By default that Unix socket is owned by the user root and other users can only access it using sudo. The docker daemon always runs as the root user.

If you don't want to use sudo when you use the docker command, create a Unix group called docker and add users to it. When the docker daemon starts, it makes the ownership of the Unix socket read/writable by the docker group.

Warning

: The docker group grants privileges equivalent to the root user. For details on how this impacts security in your system, see Docker Daemon Attack Surface.

To create the docker group and add your user:

  1. Create the docker group.

    $ sudo groupadd docker
    
  2. Add your user to the docker group.

    $ sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
    
  3. Log out and log back in so that your group membership is re-evaluated.

  4. Verify that you can docker commands without sudo.

    $ docker run hello-world
    

    This command downloads a test image and runs it in a container. When the container runs, it prints an informational message and exits.

Configure Docker to start on boot

Most current Linux distributions (RHEL, CentOS, Fedora, Ubuntu 16.04 and higher) use systemd to manage which services start when the system boots. Ubuntu 14.10 and below use upstart.

systemd

$ sudo systemctl enable docker

To disable this behavior, use disable instead.

$ sudo systemctl disable docker

If you need to add an HTTP Proxy, set a different directory or partition for the Docker runtime files, or make other customizations, see customize your systemd Docker daemon options.

upstart

Docker is automatically configured to start on boot using upstart. To disable this behavior, use the following command:

$ echo manual | sudo tee /etc/init/docker.override

chkconfig

$ sudo chkconfig docker on

Use a different storage engine

For information about the different storage engines, see Storage drivers. The default storage engine and the list of supported storage engines depend on your host's Linux distribution and available kernel drivers.

Troubleshooting

Cannot connect to the Docker daemon

If you see an error such as the following, your Docker client may be configured to connect to a Docker daemon on a different host, and that host may not be reachable.

Cannot connect to the Docker daemon. Is 'docker daemon' running on this host?

To see which host your client is configured to connect to, check the value of the DOCKER_HOST variable in your environment.

$ env | grep DOCKER_HOST

If this command returns a value, the Docker client is set to connect to a Docker daemon running on that host. If it is unset, the Docker client is set to connect to the Docker daemon running on the local host. If it is set in error, use the following command to unset it:

$ unset DOCKER_HOST

You may need to edit your environment in files such as ~/.bashrc or ~/.profile to prevent the DOCKER_HOST variable from being set erroneously.

If DOCKER_HOST is set as intended, verify that the Docker daemon is running on the remote host and that a firewall or network outage is not preventing you from connecting.

IP forwarding problems

If you manually configure your network using systemd-network with systemd version 219 or higher, Docker containers may be unable to access your network. Beginning with systemd version 220, the forwarding setting for a given network (net.ipv4.conf.<interface>.forwarding) defaults to off. This setting prevents IP forwarding. It also conflicts with Docker's behavior of enabling the net.ipv4.conf.all.forwarding setting within containers.

To work around this on RHEL, CentOS, or Fedora, edit the <interface>.network file in /usr/lib/systemd/network/ on your Docker host (ex: /usr/lib/systemd/network/80-container-host0.network) and add the following block within the [Network] section.

[Network]
...
IPForward=kernel
# OR
IPForward=true
...

This configuration allows IP forwarding from the container as expected.

DNS resolver found in resolv.conf and containers can't use it

Linux systems which use a GUI often have a network manager running, which uses a dnsmasq instance running on a loopback address such as 127.0.0.1 or 127.0.1.1 to cache DNS requests, and adds this entry to /etc/resolv.conf. The dnsmasq service speeds up DNS look-ups and also provides DHCP services. This configuration will not work within a Docker container which has its own network namespace, because the Docker container resolves loopback addresses such as 127.0.0.1 to itself, and it is very unlikely to be running a DNS server on its own loopback address.

If Docker detects that no DNS server referenced in /etc/resolv.conf is a fully functional DNS server, the following warning occurs and Docker uses the public DNS servers provided by Google at 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 for DNS resolution.

WARNING: Local (127.0.0.1) DNS resolver found in resolv.conf and containers
can't use it. Using default external servers : [8.8.8.8 8.8.4.4]

If you see this warning, first check to see if you use dnsmasq:

$ ps aux |grep dnsmasq

If your container needs to resolve hosts which are internal to your network, the public nameservers will not be adequate. You have two choices:

  • You can specify a DNS server for Docker to use, or
  • You can disable dnsmasq in NetworkManager. If you do this, NetworkManager will add your true DNS nameserver to /etc/resolv.conf, but you will lose the possible benefits of dnsmasq.

You only need to use one of these methods.

Specify DNS servers for Docker

The default location of the configuration file is /etc/docker/daemon.json. You can change the location of the configuration file using the --config-file daemon flag. The documentation below assumes the configuration file is located at /etc/docker/daemon.json.

  1. . Create or edit the Docker daemon configuration file, which defaults to /etc/docker/daemon.json file, which controls the Docker daemon configuration.

    sudo nano /etc/docker/daemon.json
    
  2. Add a dns key with one or more IP addresses as values. If the file has existing contents, you only need to add or edit the dns line.

    {
    	"dns": ["8.8.8.8", "8.8.4.4"]
    }
    

    If your internal DNS server cannot resolve public IP addresses, include at least one DNS server which can, so that you can connect to Docker Hub and so that your containers can resolve internet domain names.

    Save and close the file.

  3. Restart the Docker daemon.

    $ sudo service docker restart
    
  4. Verify that Docker can resolve external IP addresses by trying to pull an image:

    $ docker pull hello-world
    
  5. If necessary, verify that Docker containers can resolve an internal hostname by pinging it.

    $ docker run --rm -it alpine ping -c4 <my_internal_host>
    
    PING google.com (192.168.1.2): 56 data bytes
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.2: seq=0 ttl=41 time=7.597 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.2: seq=1 ttl=41 time=7.635 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.2: seq=2 ttl=41 time=7.660 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.2: seq=3 ttl=41 time=7.677 ms
    

Disable dnsmasq

Ubuntu

If you prefer not to change the Docker daemon's configuration to use a specific IP address, follow these instructions to disable dnsmasq in NetworkManager.

  1. Edit the /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf file.

  2. Comment out the dns=dnsmasq line by adding a # character to the beginning of the line.

    # dns=dnsmasq
    

    Save and close the file.

  3. Restart both NetworkManager and Docker. As an alternative, you can reboot your system.

    $ sudo restart network-manager
    $ sudo restart docker
    
RHEL, CentOS, or Fedora

To disable dnsmasq on RHEL, CentOS, or Fedora:

  1. Disable the dnsmasq service:

    $ sudo service dnsmasq stop
    
    $ sudo systemctl disable dnsmasq
    
  2. Configure the DNS servers manually using the Red Hat documentation{: target="blank" class=""}.

Allow access to the remote API through a firewall

If you run a firewall on the same host as you run Docker and you want to access the Docker Remote API from another host and remote access is enabled, you need to configure your firewall to allow incoming connections on the Docker port, which defaults to 2376 if TLS encrypted transport is enabled or 2375 otherwise.

Specific instructions for UFW

UFW (Uncomplicated Firewall) drops all forwarding traffic and all incoming traffic by default. If you want to access the Docker Remote API from another host and you have enabled remote access, you need to configure UFW to allow incoming connections on the Docker port, which defaults to 2376 if TLS encrypted transport is enabled or 2375 otherwise. By default, Docker runs without TLS enabled. If you do not use TLS, you are strongly discouraged from allowing access to the Docker Remote API from remote hosts, to prevent remote privilege-escalation attacks.

To configure UFW and allow incoming connections on the Docker port:

  1. Verify that UFW is enabled.

    $ sudo ufw status
    

    If ufw is not enabled, the remaining steps will not be helpful.

  2. Edit the UFW configuration file, which is usually /etc/default/ufw or /etc/sysconfig/ufw. Set the DEFAULT_FORWARD_POLICY policy to ACCEPT.

    DEFAULT_FORWARD_POLICY="ACCEPT"
    

    Save and close the file.

  3. If you need to enable access to the Docker Remote API from external hosts and understand the security implications (see the section before this procedure), then configure UFW to allow incoming connections on the Docker port, which is 2375 if you do not use TLS, and 2376 if you do.

    $ sudo ufw allow 2376/tcp
    
  4. Reload UFW.

    $ sudo ufw reload
    

Your kernel does not support cgroup swap limit capabilities

You may see messages similar to the following when working with an image:

WARNING: Your kernel does not support swap limit capabilities. Limitation discarded.

If you don't need these capabilities, you can ignore the warning. You can enable these capabilities in your kernel by following these instructions. Memory and swap accounting incur an overhead of about 1% of the total available memory and a 10% overall performance degradation, even if Docker is not running.

  1. Log into Ubuntu as a user with sudo privileges.

  2. Edit the /etc/default/grub file.

  3. Add or edit the GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX line to add the following two key-value pairs:

    GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="cgroup_enable=memory swapaccount=1"
    

    Save and close the file.

  4. Update GRUB.

    $ sudo update-grub
    

    If your GRUB configuration file has incorrect syntax, an error will occur. In this case, steps 3 and 4.

  5. Reboot your system. Memory and swap accounting are enabled and the warning does not occur.

Next steps