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docker-py

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An API client for docker written in Python

API

docker.Client(base_url='unix://var/run/docker.sock', version="1.4")
Client class. base_url refers to the protocol+hostname+port where the docker server is hosted. Version is the version of the API the client will use.

  • c.build(path=None, tag=None, quiet=False, fileobj=None, nocache=False, rm=False)
    Similar to the docker build command. Either path or fileobj needs to be set. path can be a local path (to a directory containing a Dockerfile) or a remote URL. fileobj must be a readable file-like object to a Dockerfile.

  • c.commit(container, repository=None, tag=None, message=None, author=None, conf=None)
    Identical to the docker commit command.

  • c.containers(quiet=False, all=False, trunc=True, latest=False, since=None,before=None, limit=-1)
    Identical to the docker ps command.

  • c.copy(container, resource)
    Identical to the docker cp command.

  • c.create_container(image, command=None, hostname=None, user=None, detach=False,stdin_open=False, tty=False, mem_limit=0, ports=None, environment=None, dns=None,volumes=None, volumes_from=None, privileged=False)
    Creates a container that can then be started. Parameters are similar to those for the docker run command except it doesn't support the attach options (-a)
    In order to create volumes that can be rebinded at start time, use the following syntax: volumes={"/srv": "" }. The ports parameter is a dictionary whose key is the port to expose and the value is an empty dictionary: ports={"2181/tcp": {}}. Note, this will simply expose the ports in the container, but does not make them available on the host. See start below.

  • c.diff(container)
    Identical to the docker diff command.

  • c.export(container)
    Identical to the docker export command.

  • c.history(image)
    Identical to the docker history command.

  • c.images(name=None, quiet=False, all=False, viz=False)
    Identical to the docker images command.

  • c.import_image(src, repository=None, tag=None)
    Identical to the docker import command. If src is a string or unicode string, it will be treated as a URL to fetch the image from. To import an image from the local machine, src needs to be a file-like object or bytes collection. To import from a tarball use your absolute path to your tarball. To load arbitrary data as tarball use whatever you want as src and your tarball content in data.

  • c.info()
    Identical to the docker info command.

  • c.insert(url, path)
    Identical to the docker insert command.

  • c.inspect_container(container)
    Identical to the docker inspect command, but only for containers.

  • c.inspect_image(image_id)
    Identical to the docker inspect command, but only for images.

  • c.kill(container)
    Kill a container. Similar to the docker kill command.

  • c.login(username, password=None, email=None)
    Identical to the docker login command (but non-interactive, obviously).

  • c.logs(container)
    Identical to the docker logs command.

  • c.port(container, private_port)
    Identical to the docker port command.

  • c.pull(repository, tag=None) Identical to the docker pull command.

  • c.push(repository)
    Identical to the docker push command.

  • c.remove_container(container, v=False)
    Remove a container. Similar to the docker rm command.

  • c.remove_image(image)
    Remove an image. Similar to the docker rmi command.

  • c.restart(container, timeout=10)
    Restart a container. Similar to the docker restart command.

  • c.search(term)
    Identical to the docker search command.

  • c.start(container, binds=None, port_bindings=None, lxc_conf=None) Similar to the docker start command, but doesn't support attach options. Use docker logs to recover stdout/stderr
    binds Allows to bind a directory in the host to the container. Similar to the docker run command with option -v="/host:/mnt". Note that you must declare "blank" volumes at container creation to use binds.
    Example of binds mapping from host to container: {'/mnt/srv/': '/srv'}
    port_bindings Exposes container ports to the host. This is a dictionary whose key is the container's port and the value is a [{'HostIp': '' 'HostPort': ''}] list. Leaving HostIp blank will expose the port on all host interfaces. By leaving the HostPort blank, Docker will automatically assign a port. For example: port_bindings={"2181/tcp": [{'HostIp': '' 'HostPort': ''}]}. lxc_conf allows to pass LXC configuration options using a dictionary in the form of Key Value pairs. For example: lxc_conf=[{"Key":"lxc.cgroup.cpu.shares","Value":"1"}, {"Key": ..., "Value": }].

  • c.stop(container, timeout=10)
    Stops a container. Similar to the docker stop command.

  • c.tag(image, repository, tag=None, force=False)
    Identical to the docker tag command.

  • c.top(container_id)
    Identical to the docker top command.

  • c.version()
    Identical to the docker version command.

  • c.wait(container)
    Wait for a container and return its exit code. Similar to the docker wait command.

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An API client for docker written in Python

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