Book Image

Learning Docker - Second Edition

By : Vinod Singh, Pethuru Raj, Jeeva S. Chelladhurai
Book Image

Learning Docker - Second Edition

By: Vinod Singh, Pethuru Raj, Jeeva S. Chelladhurai

Overview of this book

Docker is an open source containerization engine that offers a simple and faster way for developing and running software. Docker containers wrap software in a complete filesystem that contains everything it needs to run, enabling any application to be run anywhere – this flexibily and portabily means that you can run apps in the cloud, on virtual machines, or on dedicated servers. This book will give you a tour of the new features of Docker and help you get started with Docker by building and deploying a simple application. It will walk you through the commands required to manage Docker images and containers. You’ll be shown how to download new images, run containers, list the containers running on the Docker host, and kill them. You’ll learn how to leverage Docker’s volumes feature to share data between the Docker host and its containers – this data management feature is also useful for persistent data. This book also covers how to orchestrate containers using Docker compose, debug containers, and secure containers using the AppArmor and SELinux security modules.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

The docker logs command

This command fetches the log of a container without logging in to the container. It batch-retrieves logs present at the time of execution. These logs are the output of stdout and stderr. The general usage is shown in docker logs [OPTIONS] CONTAINER.

The -follow option will continue to provide the output till the end, -t will provide the timestamp, and --tail= <number of lines> will show the number of lines of the log messages of your container:

$ sudo docker logs a245253db38b
* Running on http://0.0.0.0:5000/
172.17.42.1 - - [22/Mar/2015 06:04:23] "GET / HTTP/1.1" 200 -
172.17.42.1 - - [24/Mar/2015 13:43:32] "GET / HTTP/1.1" 200 -

$ sudo docker logs -t a245253db38b
2015-03-22T05:03:16.866547111Z * Running on http://0.0.0.0:5000/
2015-03-22T06:04:23.349691099Z 172.17.42.1 - - [22/Mar/2015 06:04:23] "GET / HTTP/1.1" 200 -
2015-03-24T13:43:32.754295010Z 172.17...