.. | ||
auth.go | ||
AUTHORS | ||
change.go | ||
client.go | ||
client_unix.go | ||
client_windows.go | ||
container.go | ||
distribution.go | ||
DOCKER-LICENSE | ||
env.go | ||
event.go | ||
exec.go | ||
go.mod | ||
go.sum | ||
image.go | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile | ||
misc.go | ||
network.go | ||
plugin.go | ||
README.md | ||
registry_auth.go | ||
signal.go | ||
swarm.go | ||
swarm_configs.go | ||
swarm_node.go | ||
swarm_secrets.go | ||
swarm_service.go | ||
swarm_task.go | ||
system.go | ||
tar.go | ||
tls.go | ||
volume.go |
go-dockerclient
This package presents a client for the Docker remote API. It also provides support for the extensions in the Swarm API.
This package also provides support for docker's network API, which is a simple passthrough to the libnetwork remote API.
For more details, check the remote API documentation.
Difference between go-dockerclient and the official SDK
Link for the official SDK: https://docs.docker.com/develop/sdk/
go-dockerclient was created before Docker had an official Go SDK and is still maintained and active because it's still used out there. New features in the Docker API do not get automatically implemented here: it's based on demand, if someone wants it, they can file an issue or a PR and the feature may get implemented/merged.
For new projects, using the official SDK is probably more appropriate as go-dockerclient lags behind the official SDK.
When using the official SDK, keep in mind that because of how the its dependencies are organized, you may need some extra steps in order to be able to import it in your projects (see #784 and moby/moby#28269).
Example
package main
import (
"fmt"
docker "github.com/fsouza/go-dockerclient"
)
func main() {
client, err := docker.NewClientFromEnv()
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
imgs, err := client.ListImages(docker.ListImagesOptions{All: false})
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
for _, img := range imgs {
fmt.Println("ID: ", img.ID)
fmt.Println("RepoTags: ", img.RepoTags)
fmt.Println("Created: ", img.Created)
fmt.Println("Size: ", img.Size)
fmt.Println("VirtualSize: ", img.VirtualSize)
fmt.Println("ParentId: ", img.ParentID)
}
}
Using with TLS
In order to instantiate the client for a TLS-enabled daemon, you should use NewTLSClient, passing the endpoint and path for key and certificates as parameters.
package main
import (
"fmt"
docker "github.com/fsouza/go-dockerclient"
)
func main() {
const endpoint = "tcp://[ip]:[port]"
path := os.Getenv("DOCKER_CERT_PATH")
ca := fmt.Sprintf("%s/ca.pem", path)
cert := fmt.Sprintf("%s/cert.pem", path)
key := fmt.Sprintf("%s/key.pem", path)
client, _ := docker.NewTLSClient(endpoint, cert, key, ca)
// use client
}
If using docker-machine, or another
application that exports environment variables DOCKER_HOST
,
DOCKER_TLS_VERIFY
, DOCKER_CERT_PATH
, DOCKER_API_VERSION
, you can use
NewClientFromEnv.
package main
import (
"fmt"
docker "github.com/fsouza/go-dockerclient"
)
func main() {
client, err := docker.NewClientFromEnv()
if err != nil {
// handle err
}
// use client
}
See the documentation for more details.
Developing
All development commands can be seen in the Makefile.
Commited code must pass:
Running make test
will run all checks, as well as install any required
dependencies.
Modules
go-dockerclient supports Go modules.
If you're using dep, you can check the releases page for the latest release fully compatible with dep.
With other vendoring tools, users need to specify go-dockerclient's dependencies manually.
Using with Docker 1.9 and Go 1.4
There's a tag for using go-dockerclient with Docker 1.9 (which requires
compiling go-dockerclient with Go 1.4), the tag name is docker-1.9/go-1.4
.
The instructions below can be used to get a version of go-dockerclient that compiles with Go 1.4:
% git clone -b docker-1.9/go-1.4 https://github.com/fsouza/go-dockerclient.git $GOPATH/src/github.com/fsouza/go-dockerclient
% git clone -b v1.9.1 https://github.com/docker/docker.git $GOPATH/src/github.com/docker/docker
% go get github.com/fsouza/go-dockerclient