1462

This question is related to Should I be concerned about excess, non-running, Docker containers?.

I'm wondering how to remove old containers. The docker rm 3e552code34a lets you remove a single one, but I have lots already. docker rm --help doesn't give a selection option (like all, or by image name).

Maybe there is a directory in which these containers are stored where I can delete them easily manually?

7
  • 23
    You should also consider cleaning orphaned docker volumes. I often find that they consume much more space than old containers and old images. Good script for removing orphaned docker volumes is available at: github.com/chadoe/docker-cleanup-volumes. Dec 1, 2015 at 18:06
  • Maybe github.com/chadoe/docker-cleanup-volumes can help you.
    – Mihai8
    Sep 13, 2016 at 19:34
  • You can also use docker runwith the --rm flag which would make the container ephemeral, removing all container files after the run.
    – Gordon
    Sep 21, 2016 at 5:51
  • 14
    With docker 1.13 (Q4 2016), you can also consider the new docker system prune command. See my answer below.
    – VonC
    Oct 4, 2016 at 19:52
  • 1
    Use the docker management tool Portainer We can manageall the old containers, non using volumes and images by using this tool Its a simple management UI for dockers Please refer my update below on how to deploy the application Nov 22, 2018 at 4:47

67 Answers 67

1781

Since Docker 1.13.x you can use Docker container prune:

docker container prune

This will remove all stopped containers and should work on all platforms the same way.

There is also a Docker system prune:

docker system prune

which will clean up all unused containers, networks, images (both dangling and unreferenced), and optionally, volumes, in one command.


For older Docker versions, you can string Docker commands together with other Unix commands to get what you need. Here is an example on how to clean up old containers that are weeks old:

$ docker ps --filter "status=exited" | grep 'weeks ago' | awk '{print $1}' | xargs --no-run-if-empty docker rm

To give credit, where it is due, this example is from https://twitter.com/jpetazzo/status/347431091415703552.

22
  • 100
    Similar command to remove all untagged images: docker images | grep "<none>" | awk '{print $3}' | xargs docker rmi
    – Mohan Raj
    Sep 20, 2013 at 21:29
  • 7
    @MichelMüller when building an image from a dockerfile you can specify the -rm option to remove intermediate containers after a successful build. Nov 13, 2013 at 20:30
  • 4
    @MichelMüller the images are what are used for caching, so removing the containers won't effect that. Nov 13, 2013 at 21:34
  • 8
    If you want to use awk for this consider this command if you want do rm all stopped containers (without a error because of the first line): docker ps -a | awk 'NR > 1 {print $1}' | xargs docker rm
    – omni
    Jun 15, 2014 at 14:45
  • 4
    This should be the updated command for removing untagged images docker rmi $(docker images -q -f dangling=true)
    – Ghjnut
    Nov 17, 2015 at 17:19
652

Another method, which I got from Guillaume J. Charmes (credit where it is due):

docker rm `docker ps --no-trunc -aq`

will remove all containers in an elegant way.

And by Bartosz Bilicki, for Windows:

FOR /f "tokens=*" %i IN ('docker ps -a -q') DO docker rm %i

For PowerShell:

docker rm @(docker ps -aq)

An update with Docker 1.13 (Q4 2016), credit to VonC (later in this thread):

docker system prune will delete ALL unused data (i.e., in order: containers stopped, volumes without containers and images with no containers).

See PR 26108 and commit 86de7c0, which are introducing a few new commands to help facilitate visualizing how much space the Docker daemon data is taking on disk and allowing for easily cleaning up "unneeded" excess.

docker system prune

WARNING! This will remove:
    - all stopped containers
    - all volumes not used by at least one container
    - all images without at least one container associated to them
Are you sure you want to continue? [y/N] y
19
  • 11
    this somehow doesnt work for me, but docker ps -a -q | xargs docker rm works, (sudo may be needed)
    – FUD
    Jan 9, 2014 at 9:29
  • 88
    what about docker rm $(docker ps -a -q) ?
    – qkrijger
    Jan 9, 2014 at 20:48
  • 9
    @qkrijger, this doesn't change anything from your original answer, except for adding bashism. The problem is with command line overflow. xargs variant deals with it in a nice way. I would also add --no-trunk to docker ps to avoid (unlikely) id clashes. Feb 7, 2014 at 22:32
  • 9
    be aware if you use data-only container, it will remove them also Mar 26, 2014 at 12:08
  • 4
    I don't see the point with --no-trunc since docker rm doesn't need full IDs anyway.
    – Pithikos
    Aug 8, 2014 at 9:44
425

Updated Answer Use docker system prune or docker container prune now. See VonC's updated answer.

Previous Answer Composing several different hints above, the most elegant way to remove all non-running containers seems to be:

docker rm $(docker ps -q -f status=exited)

  • -q prints just the container ids (without column headers)
  • -f allows you to filter your list of printed containers (in this case we are filtering to only show exited containers)
6
  • 7
    This should be the correct answer because it relies on docker to tell you which containers are no longer used, rather than assuming the text output format of $(docker images) will not change. Bonus points for spawning only one extra process instead of two.
    – Ch4ni
    Aug 26, 2015 at 11:43
  • 20
    You might want to add -v to avoid dangling volumes: docker rm -v $(docker ps -q -f status=exited). See docs.docker.com/userguide/dockervolumes/… for details about dangling volumes.
    – rluba
    Oct 16, 2015 at 13:19
  • @rluba apparently in Docker 1.9 there will be a separate volume api for handling that problem. github.com/docker/docker/pull/14242
    – Ryan Walls
    Oct 16, 2015 at 16:47
  • an alias might be handy: alias docker-gc="docker rm -v \$(docker ps -q -f status=exited)" Jul 15, 2016 at 9:36
  • Unlike the answer marked correct, @RyanWalls answer works on OSX as well as being more concise.
    – Ray
    Feb 24, 2017 at 16:31
261

The official way is:

docker rm `docker ps -aq`

The Docker maintainers have indicated there will be no command for this - and you compose the commands like that:

We have discussed this before and prefer users to use the above line without having to add additional code to Docker.

3
  • 7
    This is a bad solution though, because it'll also delete storage containers.
    – Sobrique
    Jan 10, 2016 at 16:39
  • 9
    What do you mean "storage containers"? If you mean data-only containers which once upon a time were used to keep references to data volumes, those are no longer necessary because of the availability of docker volume subcommand, and named volumes.
    – L0j1k
    Apr 1, 2016 at 23:52
  • Note that this won't work inside Windows Powershell. For that, this is a better solution: stackoverflow.com/a/23674294/1150683 Jan 30, 2018 at 9:53
133

With Docker 1.13 (Q4 2016), you now have:

docker system prune -a will delete ALL unused data (i.e., in order: containers stopped, volumes without containers and images with no containers).

docker system prune without -a will remove (for images) only dangling images, or images without a tag, as commented by smilebomb.

See PR 26108 and commit 86de7c0, which are introducing a few new commands to help facilitate visualizing how much space the Docker daemon data is taking on disk and allowing for easily cleaning up "unneeded" excess.

docker system prune -a

WARNING! This will remove:
    - all stopped containers
    - all volumes not used by at least one container
    - all images without at least one container associated to them
Are you sure you want to continue? [y/N] y

As wjv comments,

There is also docker {container,image,volume,network} prune, which may be used to remove unused instances of just one type of object.

Introduced in commit 913e5cb, only for Docker 1.13+.

docker container prune

2023: Taiger points out in the comments:

The correct answer for modern versions of Docker: "Prune unused Docker objects".

6
  • Thanks for sharing - for this to become visible, I'm quoting you in the answer high up in the thread
    – qkrijger
    Oct 6, 2016 at 18:43
  • As usual, add the -f flag to force the cleanup with no questions asked.
    – Dirk
    Feb 3, 2017 at 11:21
  • 3
    should be marked as the nowdays correct answer, most of the above were right back in time, but are nodays overcomplicated Jun 25, 2017 at 10:59
  • Agreed, so much easier lately, up up you go!
    – Maxim
    Jul 14, 2017 at 6:44
  • This is the correct answer for modern versions of Docker. docs.docker.com/config/pruning
    – Taiger
    Nov 4, 2023 at 18:17
127

UPDATED 2021 (NEWEST)

docker container prune

This - 2017 (OLD) way

To remove ALL STOPPED CONTAINERS

docker rm $(docker ps -a -q)

To remove ALL CONTAINERS (STOPPED AND NON STOPPED)

docker rm  -f $(docker ps -a -q)
4
  • 5
    downvoted, since this is for sure not the way you do that in 2017 - whis would be docker volume/container/image prune, see stackoverflow.com/a/39860665/3625317 Jun 25, 2017 at 11:00
  • 12
    upvoted to counter the downvote because a) this answer was from 2016, and b) plenty of folks dont run the bleeding edge.
    – keen
    Oct 2, 2017 at 20:58
  • unknown shorthand flag: 'a' in -a (Windows10)
    – GML-VS
    Jun 17, 2021 at 15:10
  • we can simply use this to remove containers by using filter option NOTE: until=24h means 24 hours old, you can change it accordingly. >> docker container prune --filter "until=24h" Jul 15, 2022 at 5:18
110

It is now possible to use filtering with docker ps:

docker rm $(docker ps -q -f status=exited)

And for images:

docker rmi $(docker images -q -f "dangling=true")

However, any of those will cause docker rm or docker rmi to throw an error when there are no matching containers. The older docker rm $(docker ps -aq) trick was even worse as it tried to remove any running container, failing at each one.

Here's a cleaner script to add in your ~/.bashrc or ~/.profile :

# Use `docker-cleanup --dry-run` to see what would be deleted.

function docker-cleanup {
  EXITED=$(docker ps -q -f status=exited)
  DANGLING=$(docker images -q -f "dangling=true")

  if [ "$1" == "--dry-run" ]; then
    echo "==> Would stop containers:"
    echo $EXITED
    echo "==> And images:"
    echo $DANGLING
  else
    if [ -n "$EXITED" ]; then
      docker rm $EXITED
    else
      echo "No containers to remove."
    fi
    if [ -n "$DANGLING" ]; then
      docker rmi $DANGLING
    else
      echo "No images to remove."
    fi
  fi
}

Edit: As noted below, original answer was for removing images, not containers. Updated to answer both, including new links to documentation. Thanks to Adrian (and Ryan's answer) for mentioning the new ps filtering.

2
  • 2
    Note the real avantage of this - you don't accidentally kill off storage conatiners.
    – Sobrique
    Jan 10, 2016 at 16:41
  • 3
    You can also use status=created to get ones that are not running and have never run.
    – enderland
    Feb 17, 2016 at 15:41
50

Remove all stopped containers:

docker rm $(docker ps -a | grep Exited | awk '{print $1}')

From the comment by pauk960:

Since version 1.3.0 you can use filters with docker ps, instead of grep Exited use docker ps -a -f status=exited. And if you use -q with it you can get container IDs only instead of full output, no need to use awk for that.

0
38

If you do not like to remove all containers, you can select all containers created before or after a specific container with docker ps -f before=<container-ID> or with docker ps -f since=<container-ID>

Let's say you have developed your system, and now it is working, but there are a number of containers left. You want to remove containers created before that working version. Determine the ID of the working container with docker ps.

Remove containers created before an other container

docker rm $(docker ps -f before=9c49c11c8d21 -q)

Another example. You have your database already running on a Docker container. You have developed your application to run on another container and now you have a number of unneeded containers.

Remove containers created after a certain container

docker rm $(docker ps -f since=a6ca4661ec7f -q)

Docker stores containers in /var/lib/docker/containers in Ubuntu. I think extra containers do no other harm, but take up disk space.

0
33

Update: As of Docker version 1.13 (released January 2017), you can issue the following command to clean up stopped containers, unused volumes, dangling images and unused networks:

docker system prune

If you want to insure that you're only deleting containers which have an exited status, use this:

docker ps -aq -f status=exited | xargs docker rm

Similarly, if you're cleaning up docker stuff, you can get rid of untagged, unnamed images in this way:

docker images -q --no-trunc -f dangling=true | xargs docker rmi
23

Here is my docker-cleanup script, which removes untagged containers and images. Please check the source for any updates.

#!/bin/sh
# Cleanup docker files: untagged containers and images.
#
# Use `docker-cleanup -n` for a dry run to see what would be deleted.

untagged_containers() {
  # Print containers using untagged images: $1 is used with awk's print: 0=line, 1=column 1.
  docker ps -a | awk '$2 ~ "[0-9a-f]{12}" {print $'$1'}'
}

untagged_images() {
  # Print untagged images: $1 is used with awk's print: 0=line, 3=column 3.
  # NOTE: intermediate images (via -a) seem to only cause
  # "Error: Conflict, foobarid wasn't deleted" messages.
  # Might be useful sometimes when Docker messed things up?!
  # docker images -a | awk '$1 == "<none>" {print $'$1'}'
  docker images | tail -n +2 | awk '$1 == "<none>" {print $'$1'}'
}

# Dry-run.
if [ "$1" = "-n" ]; then
  echo "=== Containers with uncommitted images: ==="
  untagged_containers 0
  echo

  echo "=== Uncommitted images: ==="
  untagged_images 0

  exit
fi

# Remove containers with untagged images.
echo "Removing containers:" >&2
untagged_containers 1 | xargs --no-run-if-empty docker rm --volumes=true

# Remove untagged images
echo "Removing images:" >&2
untagged_images 3 | xargs --no-run-if-empty docker rmi

Source: https://github.com/blueyed/dotfiles/blob/master/usr/bin/docker-cleanup

2
15

First, stop running containers before attempting to remove them

Remove running containers

docker rm $(docker stop -t=1 $(docker ps -q))

You could use kill instead of stop. In my case I prefer stop since I tend to rerun them vs. creating a new one every time so I try to shut them down nicely.

Note: Trying to stop a container will give you an error:

Error: Impossible to remove a running container, please stop it first

Remove all containers

docker rm $(docker ps -a -q)
0
12

Removing all containers from Windows shell:

FOR /f "tokens=*" %i IN ('docker ps -a -q') DO docker rm %i
2
  • I'll include this in my answer since that is first page. Thanks
    – qkrijger
    Apr 17, 2016 at 10:58
  • "from Windows shell"? Do you mean "using the Windows shell (CMD)"? Jul 23, 2018 at 17:39
11

https://github.com/HardySimpson/docker-cleanup

Docker cleanup

A tiny all-in-one shell, which removes:

  • Containers that not running more than one day ago
  • Images that don't belong to any remaining container

Intend to run as a crontab job

Feature

  • It will remove all <none>:<none> images
  • If the image has multiple repo:tag references to it, it will remove all repo:tag except with running a container. Actually it is a nature of "docker rmi".
  • Many error message will be show on screen, and you can decide to 2>/dev/null or not
  • Learn something from docker-gc, and fix its problem (it can not remove image that has mutliple repo:tag)
10

So, personally I recommend doing this as part of your deploy script for both images and containers, keeping only the most recent n containers and images. I tag my Docker images with the same versioning schema I use with git tag as well as always tagging the latest Docker image with "latest." This means that without cleaning up anything, my Docker images wind up looking like:

REPOSITORY              TAG       IMAGE ID        CREATED         VIRTUAL SIZE
some_repo/some_image    0.0.5     8f1a7c7ba93c    23 hours ago    925.4 MB
some_repo/some_image    latest    8f1a7c7ba93c    23 hours ago    925.4 MB
some_repo/some_image    0.0.4     0beabfa514ea    45 hours ago    925.4 MB
some_repo/some_image    0.0.3     54302cd10bf2    6 days ago      978.5 MB
some_repo/some_image    0.0.2     0078b30f3d9a    7 days ago      978.5 MB
some_repo/some_image    0.0.1     sdfgdf0f3d9a    8 days ago      938.5 MB

Now, of course I don't want to keep all my images (or containers) going back to perpetuity on all my production boxes. I just want the last 3 or 4 for rollbacks and to get rid of everything else. Unix's tail is your best friend here. Since docker images and docker ps both order by date, we can just use tail to select all but the top three and remove them:

docker rmi $(docker images -q | tail -n +4)

Run that along with your deploy scripts (or locally) to always keep just enough images to comfortably roll back without taking up too much room or cluttering stuff up with old images.

Personally, I only keep one container on my production box at any time, but you can do the same sort of thing with containers if you want more:

docker rm $(docker ps -aq | tail -n +4)

Finally, in my simplified example we're only dealing with one repository at a time, but if you had more, you can just get a bit more sophisticated with the same idea. Say I just want to keep the last three images from some_repo/some_image. I can just mix in grep and awk and be on my way:

docker rmi $(docker images -a | grep 'some_repo/some_image' | awk '{print $3}' | tail -n +4)

Again, the same idea applies to containers, but you get it by this point so I'll stop giving examples.

9

See all the existing images:

docker images -a

See all the existing containers:

docker ps -a

Delete single image:

docker images -a
docker rmi <IMAGE_ID>

Stop single container:

docker ps -a
docker stop <CONTAINER_ID>

Stop multiple containers:

docker ps -a
docker stop <CONTAINER_ID1> <CONTAINER_ID2>

Delete single container:

docker ps -a
docker rm <CONTAINER_ID>

Delete multiple images:

docker images -a
docker rmi <IMAGE_ID1> <IMAGE_ID2>

Delete multiple stopped containers:

docker ps -a
docker rm <CONTAINER_ID1> <CONTAINER_ID2>

Delete images only in a single command:

docker rmi -f $(docker images -a -q)

Delete both containers and images in a single command:

docker rm $(docker ps -a -q) && docker rmi -f $(docker images -a -q)

To prune all containers:

docker container prune
1
  • docker rm $(docker ps -a -q) || true && docker rmi -f $(docker images -a -q), by adding || true you will continue removing images even if there are no containers for removing
    – machin
    May 5, 2022 at 10:37
8

Use:

docker rm -f $(docker ps -a -q)

It forcefully stops and removes all containers present locally.

4
  • Please edit with more information. Code-only and "try this" answers are discouraged, because they contain no searchable content, and don't explain why someone should "try this". We make an effort here to be a resource for knowledge. Sep 7, 2016 at 14:25
  • In ubuntu 16.04, docker requires sudo, so you have to write sudo docker rm -f $(sudo docker ps -a -q).
    – Elliott
    Sep 21, 2016 at 15:47
  • as a plus, this also works in Windows under powershell! Oct 21, 2016 at 14:34
  • @Elliott I think sudo is required everywhere unless you add your user to the 'docker' group. I use ubuntu 16.10 without sudo by adding my user to the docker group.
    – emory
    Mar 26, 2017 at 11:38
7

Remove 5 oldest containers:

docker rm `docker ps -aq | tail -n 5`

See how many containers there are left:

docker ps -aq | wc -l
1
  • Nice Job @Pithikos. I have added the answer that removes all the old containers. Sep 23, 2019 at 18:41
7

Remove all stopped containers.

sudo docker rm $(sudo docker ps -a -q)

This will remove all stopped containers by getting a list of all containers with docker ps -a -q and passing their ids to docker rm. This should not remove any running containers, and it will tell you it can’t remove a running image.

Remove all untagged images

Now you want to clean up old images to save some space.

sudo docker rmi $(sudo docker images -q --filter "dangling=true")

3
  • Don't forget to delete docker volumes by specifying the -v option (sudo docker rm -v $(sudo docker ps -a -q))
    – vcarel
    Nov 9, 2015 at 10:30
  • Didn't look this up, but I guess the same as: docker ps -aq | xargs docker rm -v
    – quine
    Mar 23, 2018 at 20:24
  • This only works on Linux, not Windows... But docker rm -f $(docker ps -a -q) works in PowerShell / Docker for Windows. Jul 24, 2018 at 7:58
7

I wanted to add this simple answer as I didn't see it, and the question is specifically "old" not "all".

sudo docker container prune --filter "until=24h"

Adjust the 24h for whatever time span you want to remove containers that are older than.

6

New way: spotify/docker-gc play the trick.

 docker run --rm -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -v /etc:/etc spotify/docker-gc
  • Containers that exited more than an hour ago are removed.
  • Images that don't belong to any remaining container after that are removed

It has supported environmental settings

Forcing deletion of images that have multiple tags

 FORCE_IMAGE_REMOVAL=1

Forcing deletion of containers

 FORCE_CONTAINER_REMOVAL=1 

Excluding Recently Exited Containers and Images From Garbage Collection

 GRACE_PERIOD_SECONDS=86400

This setting also prevents the removal of images that have been created less than GRACE_PERIOD_SECONDS seconds ago.

Dry run

 DRY_RUN=1

Cleaning up orphaned container volumes CLEAN_UP_VOLUMES=1

Reference: docker-gc

Old way to do:

delete old, non-running containers

 docker ps -a -q -f status=exited | xargs --no-run-if-empty docker rm
             OR 
 docker rm $(docker ps -a -q)

delete all images associated with non-running docker containers

 docker images -q | xargs --no-run-if-empty docker rmi

cleanup orphaned docker volumes for docker version 1.10.x and above

 docker volume ls -qf dangling=true | xargs -r docker volume rm

Based on time period

 docker ps -a | grep "weeks ago" | awk "{print $1}" | xargs --no-run-if-empty docker rm
 docker ps -a | grep "days ago" | awk "{print $1}" | xargs --no-run-if-empty docker rm
 docker ps -a | grep "hours ago" | awk "{print $1}" | xargs --no-run-if-empty docker rm
0
6
  1. Remove all docker processes:

    docker rm $(docker ps -a -q)
    
  2. Remove specific container:

    $ docker ps -a (lists all old containers)
    
    $ docker rm container-Id
    
0
5

You can use the following command to remove the exited containers:

docker rm $(sudo docker ps -a | grep Exit | cut -d ' ' -f 1)

Here is the full gist to also remove the old images on docker: Gist to remove old Docker containers and images.

0
4
#!/bin/bash
# docker-gc --- Remove stopped docker containers

RUNNING=$(docker ps -q)
ALL=$(docker ps -a -q)

for container in $ALL ; do
    [[ "$RUNNING" =~ "$container" ]] && continue
    echo Removing container: $(docker rm $container)
done
2
4

You can remove only stopped containers. Stop all of them in the beginning

docker stop $(docker ps -a -q)

Then you can remove

docker rm $(docker ps -a -q)

4

Try this command to clean containers and dangling images.

docker system prune -a
1
  • This is an amazing pro-tip!
    – b01
    Jun 15, 2018 at 18:05
3

I always use docker rmi $(docker ps -a -q) to remove all images.

You can remove directory /var/lib/docker/graph when docker rmi failed.

2
  • Thanks for adding the /var/lib/docker/graph info Mar 5, 2015 at 15:26
  • The questions was how to remove containers, not images.
    – pauk960
    Mar 16, 2015 at 19:34
3

The basic steps to stop/remove all containers and images

  1. List all the containers

    docker ps -aq

  2. Stop all running containers

    docker stop $(docker ps -aq)

  3. Remove all containers

    docker rm $(docker ps -aq)

  4. Remove all images

    docker rmi $(docker images -q)

Note: First you have to stop all the running containers before you remove them. Also before removing an image, you have to stop and remove its dependent container(s).

3

I am using following commands to delete Exited and Restarting docker containers

docker stop --force $(docker ps -a|grep Exited| awk '{print $1}')
docker rm --force $(docker ps -a|grep Exited| awk '{print $1}')
docker stop --force $(docker ps -a|grep Restarting| awk '{print $1}')
docker rm --force $(docker ps -a|grep Restarting| awk '{print $1}')

Using below command to remove images named as none

docker image rm --force $(docker image ls  |grep none |awk '{print $3}')
3

To remove ALL stopped docker containers, run:-

$ docker container prune

You'll have to be careful with this command since it removes all stopped containers indiscriminately so make sure there's no stopped/currently unused container that you may still have use of.

A more precise alternative is to remove the container by ID. You'll have to first list the stopped containers using this command:-

docker ps --filter "status=exited"

You'll then copy the ID of the container you want to remove. Thereafter, execute the following command that removes a single container,

docker container rm <container ID>

or the one below to remove multiple containers at once by running:-

docker container rm <container ID 1> <container ID 2> <container ID n>

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