docker-container-manager
Essential Docker commands and workflows for container management, image operations, and debugging.
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SKILL.md
Essential Docker commands for container and image management.
Container Lifecycle
Running containers
# Run container from image
docker run nginx
# Run in background (detached)
docker run -d nginx
# Run with name
docker run --name my-nginx -d nginx
# Run with port mapping
docker run -p 8080:80 -d nginx
# Run with environment variables
docker run -e MY_VAR=value -d app
# Run with volume mount
docker run -v /host/path:/container/path -d app
# Run with auto-remove on exit
docker run --rm alpine echo "Hello"
# Interactive terminal
docker run -it ubuntu bash
Managing containers
# List running containers
docker ps
# List all containers (including stopped)
docker ps -a
# Stop container
docker stop container_name
# Start stopped container
docker start container_name
# Restart container
docker restart container_name
# Remove container
docker rm container_name
# Force remove running container
docker rm -f container_name
# Remove all stopped containers
docker container prune
Container Inspection & Debugging
Viewing logs
# Show logs
docker logs container_name
# Follow logs (like tail -f)
docker logs -f container_name
# Last 100 lines
docker logs --tail 100 container_name
# Logs with timestamps
docker logs -t container_name
Executing commands
# Execute command in running container
docker exec container_name ls -la
# Interactive shell
docker exec -it container_name bash
# Execute as specific user
docker exec -u root -it container_name bash
# Execute with environment variable
docker exec -e VAR=value container_name env
Inspection
# Inspect container details
docker inspect container_name
# Get specific field (JSON path)
docker inspect -f '{{.NetworkSettings.IPAddress}}' container_name
# View container stats
docker stats
# View specific container stats
docker stats container_name
# View processes in container
docker top container_name
Image Management
Building images
# Build from Dockerfile
docker build -t myapp:1.0 .
# Build with custom Dockerfile
docker build -f Dockerfile.dev -t myapp:dev .
# Build with build args
docker build --build-arg VERSION=1.0 -t myapp .
# Build without cache
docker build --no-cache -t myapp .
Managing images
# List images
docker images
# Pull image from registry
docker pull nginx:latest
# Tag image
docker tag myapp:1.0 myapp:latest
# Push to registry
docker push myrepo/myapp:1.0
# Remove image
docker rmi image_name
# Remove unused images
docker image prune
# Remove all unused images
docker image prune -a
Docker Compose
Basic operations
# Start services
docker-compose up
# Start in background
docker-compose up -d
# Stop services
docker-compose down
# Stop and remove volumes
docker-compose down -v
# View logs
docker-compose logs
# Follow logs for specific service
docker-compose logs -f web
# Scale service
docker-compose up -d --scale web=3
Service management
# List services
docker-compose ps
# Execute command in service
docker-compose exec web bash
# Restart service
docker-compose restart web
# Rebuild service
docker-compose build web
# Rebuild and restart
docker-compose up -d --build
Networking
# List networks
docker network ls
# Create network
docker network create mynetwork
# Connect container to network
docker network connect mynetwork container_name
# Disconnect from network
docker network disconnect mynetwork container_name
# Inspect network
docker network inspect mynetwork
# Remove network
docker network rm mynetwork
Volumes
# List volumes
docker volume ls
# Create volume
docker volume create myvolume
# Inspect volume
docker volume inspect myvolume
# Remove volume
docker volume rm myvolume
# Remove unused volumes
docker volume prune
# Run with volume
docker run -v myvolume:/data -d app
System Management
# View disk usage
docker system df
# Clean up everything unused
docker system prune
# Clean up including unused images
docker system prune -a
# Clean up including volumes
docker system prune --volumes
# Show Docker info
docker info
# Show Docker version
docker version
Common Workflows
Development container:
docker run -it --rm \
-v $(pwd):/app \
-w /app \
-p 3000:3000 \
node:18 \
npm run dev
Database container:
docker run -d \
--name postgres \
-e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=secret \
-e POSTGRES_DB=mydb \
-v postgres-data:/var/lib/postgresql/data \
-p 5432:5432 \
postgres:15
Quick debugging:
# Shell into running container
docker exec -it container_name sh
# Copy file from container
docker cp container_name:/path/to/file ./local/path
# Copy file to container
docker cp ./local/file container_name:/path/in/container
Multi-stage build:
# Dockerfile
FROM node:18 AS builder
WORKDIR /app
COPY package*.json ./
RUN npm install
COPY . .
RUN npm run build
FROM nginx:alpine
COPY --from=builder /app/dist /usr/share/nginx/html
Useful Flags
docker run flags:
-d: Detached mode (background)-it: Interactive terminal-p: Port mapping (host:container)-v: Volume mount-e: Environment variable--name: Container name--rm: Auto-remove on exit--network: Connect to network
docker exec flags:
-it: Interactive terminal-u: User-w: Working directory
Tips
- Use
.dockerignoreto exclude files from build context - Combine
RUNcommands in Dockerfile to reduce layers - Use multi-stage builds to reduce image size
- Always tag your images with versions
- Use
--rmfor one-off containers - Use
docker-composefor multi-container apps - Clean up regularly with
docker system prune
Documentation
Official docs: https://docs.docker.com/ Dockerfile reference: https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/ Compose file reference: https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/
Why You Need docker-container-manager
Docker is essential for modern development, but its CLI has hundreds of commands and flags that are hard to remember. Building images, managing containers, debugging networking issues, cleaning up dangling resources — each task requires looking up the right incantation.
Docker Container Manager puts the entire Docker workflow into natural language. Describe what you want — "run a PostgreSQL container with persistent storage on port 5433" — and get the correct docker command executed immediately. It handles container lifecycle, image management, volume mounts, network configuration, and multi-container setups.
Whether you are spinning up a development database, debugging a container that won't start, or cleaning up disk space from old images, this skill eliminates the Docker CLI friction.
Common Use Cases
- Start and manage development databases (PostgreSQL, MySQL, Redis) with correct volume mounts
- Build Docker images with optimized multi-stage Dockerfiles for smaller image sizes
- Debug container issues by inspecting logs, networking, and resource usage
- Clean up unused images, stopped containers, and dangling volumes to free disk space
- Set up Docker Compose stacks for multi-service local development environments
Frequently Asked Questions
Does it require Docker Desktop?
It requires the Docker CLI (docker command) to be available. This works with Docker Desktop, Docker Engine, OrbStack, Colima, or any Docker-compatible runtime.
Can it write Dockerfiles?
Yes. It can generate optimized Dockerfiles with multi-stage builds, proper layer caching, and security best practices like non-root users.
Does it support Docker Compose?
Yes. It can create and manage docker-compose.yml files, start/stop services, and debug multi-container setups.