What eventually worked for me, after lot's of confusing manuals and confusing tutorials, since Docker is obviously at time of my writing at peek of inflated expectations, is:
- Save the docker image into archive:
docker save image_name > image_name.tar
- copy on another machine
- on that other docker machine, run docker load in a following way:
cat image_name.tar | docker load
Export and import, as proposed in another answers does not export ports and variables, which might be required for your container to run. And you might end up with stuff like "No command specified" etc... When you try to load it on another machine.
So, difference between save and export is that save command saves whole image with history and metadata, while export command exports only files structure (without history or metadata).
Needless to say is that, if you already have those ports taken on the docker hyper-visor you are doing import, by some other docker container, you will end-up in conflict, and you will have to reconfigure exposed ports.
docker save
is for saving images, not containers. docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/save – stmllr Jun 9 '16 at 15:01