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What is the command to get the Docker container id from the container name?

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  • You should read How to Ask and provide a minimal reproducible example. How does docker --list or similar look like? What is the command to create a new container? etc
    – fedorqui
    Dec 28, 2015 at 16:27
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    There is no such thing as a "container" that I know of in bash. Perhaps you mean docker containers? If so, people watching the "bash" tag might get confused. however you get the container id from the name, I'm sure it is an actual command and has nothing to do with the bash programming language. Dec 28, 2015 at 17:41

13 Answers 13

339

In Linux:

sudo docker ps -aqf "name=containername"

Or in OS X, Windows:

docker ps -aqf "name=containername"

where containername is your container name.

To avoid getting false positives, as @llia Sidorenko notes, you can use regex anchors like so:

docker ps -aqf "name=^containername$"

explanation:

  • -q for quiet. output only the ID
  • -a for all. works even if your container is not running
  • -f for filter.
  • ^ container name must start with this string
  • $ container name must end with this string
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  • 11
    a note to anyone who stumbles upon this: sudo is no longer required on linux if you add yourself to the docker group (highly recommended)
    – code_monk
    Nov 23, 2016 at 4:16
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    Please be careful with this answer, as name=containername is actually a wildcard and it will match anything with name (.*)containername(.*) Dec 23, 2016 at 1:07
  • 6
    @ekkis use the --no-trunc flag. so docker ps --no-trunc -aqf "name=containername"
    – code_monk
    Apr 21, 2017 at 22:15
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    As of 2019-01-07, this did not work for me. I'm using docker v17.06.0. The command docker inspect --format="{{.Id}}" imageName worked for me.
    – PatS
    Jan 7, 2019 at 23:30
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    @code_monk, Thanks for the confirmation. I've added a comment to Rosberg Linhares answer which is where I got the idea from, and suggested his answer be changed to the correct answer.
    – PatS
    Jan 15, 2019 at 0:52
67

You can try this:

docker inspect --format="{{.Id}}" container_name

This approach is OS independent.

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  • 6
    This returns IMAGE ID NOT CONTAINER ID
    – vijay
    Feb 9, 2019 at 8:48
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    @vijay, for me this gives the container ID: https://i.ibb.co/BPwyxDj/Docker-Container-Id.png Feb 9, 2019 at 15:41
  • This also gives me the container ID. The full container ID, not just the truncated first 12 characters.
    – cowlinator
    May 9, 2019 at 0:48
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    Love this one! Thanks. 👍
    – GollyJer
    Feb 19, 2020 at 0:23
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    @vijay @RosbergLinhares if you provide the name of the container (given in the NAMES column with docker ps), it gives the container ID. If the image name (given in the IMAGE column with docker ps) is provided instead, it outputs the image ID instead.
    – Wolfson
    Apr 14, 2020 at 14:46
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You could use the following command to print the container id:

docker container ls  | grep 'container-name' | awk '{print $1}'

As a bonus point, if you want to login to the container with a container name:

docker exec -it $(docker container ls  | grep 'container-name' | awk '{print $1}') /bin/bash
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  1. Get container Ids of running containers ::

    $docker ps -qf "name=IMAGE_NAME"
    
        -f: Filter output based on conditions provided
        -q: Only display numeric container IDs
    
  2. Get container Ids of all containers ::

    $docker ps -aqf "name=IMAGE_NAME"
    
        -a: all containers
    
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  • 2
    docker ps -fq did not work however docker ps -qf did (order of flags)
    – thom_nic
    Feb 1, 2017 at 15:14
14

The following command:

docker ps --format 'CONTAINER ID : {{.ID}} | Name: {{.Names}} | Image:  {{.Image}} |  Ports: {{.Ports}}'

Gives this output:

CONTAINER ID : d8453812a556 | Name: peer0.ORG2.ac.ae | Image:  hyperledger/fabric-peer:1.4 |  Ports: 0.0.0.0:27051->7051/tcp, 0.0.0.0:27053->7053/tcp
CONTAINER ID : d11bdaf8e7a0 | Name: peer0.ORG1.ac.ae | Image:  hyperledger/fabric-peer:1.4 |  Ports: 0.0.0.0:17051->7051/tcp, 0.0.0.0:17053->7053/tcp
CONTAINER ID : b521f48a3cf4 | Name: couchdb1 | Image:  hyperledger/fabric-couchdb:0.4.15 |  Ports: 4369/tcp, 9100/tcp, 0.0.0.0:5985->5984/tcp
CONTAINER ID : 14436927aff7 | Name: ca.ORG1.ac.ae | Image:  hyperledger/fabric-ca:1.4 |  Ports: 0.0.0.0:7054->7054/tcp
CONTAINER ID : 9958e9f860cb | Name: couchdb | Image:  hyperledger/fabric-couchdb:0.4.15 |  Ports: 4369/tcp, 9100/tcp, 0.0.0.0:5984->5984/tcp
CONTAINER ID : 107466b8b1cd | Name: ca.ORG2.ac.ae | Image:  hyperledger/fabric-ca:1.4 |  Ports: 0.0.0.0:7055->7054/tcp
CONTAINER ID : 882aa0101af2 | Name: orderer1.o1.ac.ae | Image:  hyperledger/fabric-orderer:1.4 |  Ports: 0.0.0.0:7050->7050/tcp
6

If you want to get complete ContainerId based on Container name then use following command

 docker ps --no-trunc -aqf name=containername
2

In my case I was running Tensorflow Docker container in Ubuntu 20.04 :Run your docker container in One terminal , I ran it with

docker run -it od

And then started another terminal and ran below docker ps with sudo:

sudo docker ps

I successfully got container id:

CONTAINER ID        IMAGE               COMMAND             CREATED             
STATUS              PORTS               NAMES
e4ca1ad20b84        od                  "/bin/bash"         18 minutes ago      
Up 18 minutes                           unruffled_stonebraker
1

Thanks for the answer of https://stackoverflow.com/a/65513726/889126, it gave me an idea to make a complete bash script as it is

export api_image_id=$(docker inspect --format="{{.Id}}" <image-name> | sed '/^[[:space:]]*$/d')

sudo docker exec -i -t ${api_image_id} /bin/bash

I need a specific container and make a script to extract some info from it in a quick sight.

Hope this would help others.

1

To have container id and image Id -

$ docker container ls -a | awk 'NR>1 {print $1, $2}'
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  • 1
    Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Oct 30, 2021 at 17:32
  • This just gives ids and names list, doesn't answer the question. imagine you have 100 containers running and this will not be helpful
    – cerofrais
    Oct 31, 2021 at 18:02
0

I tried sudo docker container stats, and it will give out Container ID along with details of memory usage and Name, etc. If you want to stop viewing the process, do Ctrl+C. I hope you find it useful.

0

I also need the container name or Id which a script requires to attach to the container. took some tweaking but this works perfectly well for me...

export svr=$(docker ps --format "table {{.ID}}"| sed 's/CONTAINER ID//g' | sed '/^[[:space:]]*$/d')
docker exec -it $svr bash

The sed command is needed to get rid of the fact that the words CONTAINER ID gets printed too ... but I just need the actual id stored in a var.

-2

Docker image inspect ImageName\ImageId --format={{'.ConatinerConfig.Hostname'}}

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  • 1
    Please add an explanation to your answer. Answers that are code only (or in this case command only) are not helpful to new users who might not understand what the command or code actually does. Look up cargo cult programming for why this is bad. Nov 21, 2019 at 11:39
-3

The simplest way I can think of is to parse the output of docker ps

Let's run the latest ubuntu image interactively and connect to it

docker run -it ubuntu /bin/bash

If you run docker ps in another terminal you can see something like

CONTAINER ID        IMAGE               COMMAND             CREATED             STATUS              PORTS               NAMES
8fddbcbb101c        ubuntu:latest       "/bin/bash"         10 minutes ago      Up 10 minutes                           gloomy_pasteur

Unfortunately, parsing this format isn't easy since they uses spaces to manually align stuff

$ sudo docker ps | sed -e 's/ /@/g'
CONTAINER@ID@@@@@@@@IMAGE@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@COMMAND@@@@@@@@@@@@@CREATED@@@@@@@@@@@@@STATUS@@@@@@@@@@@@@@PORTS@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@NAMES
8fddbcbb101c@@@@@@@@ubuntu:latest@@@@@@@"/bin/bash"@@@@@@@@@13@minutes@ago@@@@@@Up@13@minutes@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@gloomy_pasteur@@@@@@

Here is a script that converts the output to JSON.

https://gist.github.com/mminer/a08566f13ef687c17b39

Actually, the output is a bit more convenient to work with than that. Every field is 20 characters wide. [['CONTAINER ID',0],['IMAGE',20],['COMMAND',40],['CREATED',60],['STATUS',80],['PORTS',100],['NAMES',120]]

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