405

Supposed I have an image that I want to tag as 0.10.24 (in my case it's an image containing Node.js 0.10.24). I built that image using a Dockerfile and executing docker build and by providing a tag using the -t parameter.

I expect that one day I will have additional versions of that image, so I will rerun the process, just with another tag name.

So far, so good. This works great and fine and all is well.

But, and this is where problems start, I also want to always have the newest image tagged ad latest additionally. So I guess I need to give two names to the very same image.

How do I do this? Do I really need to re-run docker build on the exact same version again, but this time use another tag, is is there a better option?

1

8 Answers 8

466

You can have multiple tags when building the image:

$ docker build -t whenry/fedora-jboss:latest -t whenry/fedora-jboss:v2.1 .

Reference: https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/build/#tag-image-t

3
  • 53
    you can also leave off the :latest portion, as that is the default: docker build -t whenry/fedora-jboss -t whenry/fedora-jboss:v2.1 . Mar 20, 2018 at 21:20
  • @TemporalWolf is using :latest a bad practice? I know what (bad things) can happen when you :latest tag. But no where could I find that it says it's a bad practice. Do you have any references? I am not using :latest in prod but just in CICD as we don't use skaffold or anything, one will have to change the tag in cicd file every time there's a change in the dockerfile.
    – Raaka
    Feb 1, 2023 at 13:00
  • 1
    @Raaka One could argue explicit is better than implicit, but it's the default: whether you use it or not has no bearing on the outcome. Personally, I'm of the opinion either way works. Just pick one way and consistently do it that way. Mar 25, 2023 at 5:32
221

Once you have your image, you can use

$ docker tag <image> <newName>/<repoName>:<tagName>
  1. Build and tag the image with creack/node:latest

    $ ID=$(docker build -q -t creack/node .)
    
  2. Add a new tag

    $ docker tag $ID creack/node:0.10.24
    
  3. You can use this and skip the -t part from build

    $ docker tag $ID creack/node:latest
    
8
  • 4
    This doesn't seem to work anymore? The build command doesn't return the image id, ID contains the entire build log Jul 24, 2014 at 11:09
  • 16
    The build logs are supposed to be on stderr, you can open a bugreport on github. Otherwise, when you build with -t, you can use directly the given tag and discard altogether the image id. In my example, the first line produce an image creack/node:latest, you can then tag it with docker tag creack/node:latest creack/node:0.10.24
    – creack
    Jul 24, 2014 at 11:12
  • This works well with something like REV=$(hg identify --num)
    – analytik
    Jun 3, 2015 at 13:41
  • 2
    To make the latest tag work properly, you will probably want to do docker tag -f $ID creack/node:latest in order to force the tagging with latest (in case a previous image was already latest)
    – treaz
    Jun 25, 2015 at 10:45
  • 5
    Use: ID=$(docker build -q -t myrepo/myname:mytag . ) . The "-q" means only the ID is written to stdout. You should always specify a tag, as if you don't the tag 'latest' will be used, even if you are building of an old branch. Feb 10, 2016 at 11:44
70

Here is my bash script

docker build -t ${IMAGE}:${VERSION} .
docker tag ${IMAGE}:${VERSION} ${IMAGE}:latest

You can then remove untagged images if you rebuilt the same version with

docker rmi $(docker images | grep "^<none>" | awk "{print $3}")

link

or

docker rmi $(docker images | grep "^<none>" | tr -s " " | cut -d' ' -f3 | tr '\n' ' ')

or

Clean up commands:

Docker 1.13 introduces clean-up commands. To remove all unused containers, images, networks and volumes:

docker system prune

or individually:

docker container prune
docker image prune
docker network prune
docker volume prune
4
  • On my machine (Ubuntu 14.04) awk '{print $3}' works but not awk "{print $3}" so the command I use is docker rmi $(docker images -a | grep "^<none>" | awk '{print $3}')
    – grim
    Mar 23, 2016 at 22:06
  • 2
    the -f option no longer exists in docker tag. Usage is just docker tag IMAGE[:TAG] IMAGE[:TAG]
    – jwadsack
    Oct 26, 2016 at 0:11
  • 1
    @2Fast2BCn: Assuming you also need to docker push after docker build & docker run, do you push with :latest or ${VERSION}?
    – Idan Adar
    Jun 19, 2017 at 9:11
  • You can push both I guess. It will store it only once anyway.
    – 2Fast2BCn
    Jun 19, 2017 at 9:41
22

ID=$(docker build -t creack/node .) doesn't work for me since ID will contain the output from the build.

SO I'm using this small BASH script:

#!/bin/bash

set -o pipefail

IMAGE=...your image name...
VERSION=...the version...

docker build -t ${IMAGE}:${VERSION} . | tee build.log || exit 1
ID=$(tail -1 build.log | awk '{print $3;}')
docker tag $ID ${IMAGE}:latest

docker images | grep ${IMAGE}

docker run --rm ${IMAGE}:latest /opt/java7/bin/java -version
1
  • 1
    Or you can just pass -q / --quiet to build as mentioned in this answer
    – floer32
    Feb 13, 2017 at 19:22
9

Just grep the ID from docker images:

docker build -t creack/node:latest .
ID="$(docker images | grep 'creak/node' | head -n 1 | awk '{print $3}')"
docker tag "$ID" creack/node:0.10.24
docker tag "$ID" creack/node:latest

Needs no temporary file and gives full build output. You still can redirect it to /dev/null or a log file.

9

To give tag to a docker file during build command:

docker build -t image_name:tag_name .

otherwise it will give latest tag to your docker image automatically.

7

Variation of Aaron's answer. Using sed without temporary files

#!/bin/bash
VERSION=1.0.0
IMAGE=company/image
ID=$(docker build  -t ${IMAGE}  .  | tail -1 | sed 's/.*Successfully built \(.*\)$/\1/')

docker tag ${ID} ${IMAGE}:${VERSION}
docker tag -f ${ID} ${IMAGE}:latest
1

Hye it's very easy you just need to follow the below steps -

So, to create and tagging an image in Docker we can use the following commands

First take out your Docker id by running the below command

docker ps 

Copy -> Names

docker build -t dockerId/Name of your image you want:latest .

For me I use docker build -t condescending_greider/newdoc:latest .

Thanks for your time

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.