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Docker daemon is running fine, but docker just hangs indefinitely with no output when I do docker images, docker ps and so on. This wasn't happening last night and it's driving me nuts.

I reinstalled docker on my AWS Linux AMI with no luck. I have also tried sudo service docker restart and that didn't yield a fix. If anyone has run into this or has any suggestions please share.

Instance Info:

NAME="Amazon Linux AMI"
VERSION="2016.09"
ID="amzn"
ID_LIKE="rhel fedora"
VERSION_ID="2016.09"
PRETTY_NAME="Amazon Linux AMI 2016.09"
ANSI_COLOR="0;33"
CPE_NAME="cpe:/o:amazon:linux:2016.09:ga"
HOME_URL="http://aws.amazon.com/amazon-linux-ami/"
Amazon Linux AMI release 2016.09

Docker version:

Docker version 1.11.2, build b9f10c9/1.11.2
2
  • 3
    most probably it is hanging on a system call, you can use strace -f docker ps and see where it is hanging. This can give an indication on what is going wrong.
    – MIE
    Jan 6, 2017 at 20:12
  • 1
    @MIE what should I look out for when running that command? How can I identify the hang?
    – cwiggo
    Jul 26, 2020 at 10:56

7 Answers 7

11

I know this question is a bit old, but to fix this, try deleting the contents of:

/var/run/docker/libcontainerd
6
  • 1
    Perfect! Saved lot of hours!!
    – Kirity
    May 2, 2017 at 8:11
  • 2
    No, but hopefully you're not still waiting for an answer :)
    – ishaaq
    Jun 27, 2018 at 23:15
  • 2
    on my machine I found /var/run/docker/containerd are both same? May 31, 2019 at 5:39
  • 60
    This answer could be improved by explaining exactly what it is we are deleting.
    – glaux
    Aug 6, 2019 at 14:18
  • 1
    I didn't have that folder (/var/run/docker) (Big Sur, Docker 3.0.1) but temporarily remove the files /var/run/docker-cli.sock and /var/run/docker.sock solved it for me (deleting and undeleting them)
    – flygge
    Dec 16, 2020 at 10:29
5

https://forums.docker.com/t/what-to-do-when-all-docker-commands-hang/28103/4 By korayhk:

You don’t need to reinstall or delete the container image data. Simply do below :

Stop the service first

sudo service docker stop

Clean up some of the files as mentioned in above post from Sam.

sudo rm -rf /var/run/docker
sudo rm /var/run/docker.*"

Start service now

sudo service docker start

Start your docker image

docker start <container-name>

You will receive an error when you run the docker run at first try:

Error response from daemon: invalid header field value "oci runtime error: container with id exists: 7a244b8f5d07081538042ff64aebfe11fac1a36731526e77be53db7d94dca44d\n" Error: failed to start containers:

Try running docker start command again. You will have your container up and running magically without any errors.

2
2

I had the same problem. Tried all advices listed here. Reinstalled docker several times, removed different folders.

The interesting thing is that commands works fine under a root:

sudo docker version

So I decided that it can be related to a local settings of my linux account. Renaming or removing folder ~/.docker helped me.

The folder contained some docker context related settings. Maybe a remote context was set.

2
  • For me it was a remote context that was not reachable without VPN. As soon as the VPN is disconnected not even docker --help works!
    – evod
    Jun 23, 2023 at 21:08
  • .. and I just realized this only happens if the problematic remote context is set as default.
    – evod
    Jun 23, 2023 at 21:16
1

After updating my ubuntu to 5.8.0-34-generic. I had similar issue. after various attempts to resolve it, My final solution was to downgrade docker to the previous working version. Steps as below:

  1. Kill docker
root@LT01:~# killall dockerd
root@LT01:~# ps -aux | grep dockerd
root@LT01:~# kill -9 your docker pid
  1. Remove docker ce, cli and container.io
root@LT01:/home/xyz# apt remove docker-ce docker-ce-cli containerd.io
  1. optional step: my dockerd was constantly restarting so I had to disable ir. If you do the same. you'll need to enable it after new installation:
systemctl disable docker
  1. check previous versions:
root@LT01:/home/xyz# apt-cache madison docker-ce
  1. install older version from the above list, in my case, docker-ce 5:19.03.13~3-0~ubuntu-focal:
root@LT01:/home/xyz# apt install docker-ce=5:19.03.13~3-0~ubuntu-focal
  1. optional: if you need downgrade containerd.io and cli as well then:
apt install docker-ce=5:19.03.13~3-0~ubuntu-focal containerd.io=1.3.9-1 docker-ce-cli=5:19.03.13~3-0~ubuntu-focal
  1. check your installation:
whereis docker

systemctl status docker

Also, marked my docker to not upgrade on apt upgrade command.

1
  • I had the same issue on Fedora with the new update, had to downgrade to docker-ce-3:19.03.13-3.fc32.x86_64 Dec 22, 2020 at 3:10
1

I tried both of the answers by Garreth and steamfood, but didn't want to reinstall docker as Invincible suggested. I hadn't changed anything on my system so figured the problem had to be with my configuration/container setup rather than an installation problem with docker itself.

When running systemctl start docker or anything else to start or stop the docker service, I was getting this in my logs (running systemctl status docker in another terminal):

Loading containers: start.

Container ef06fbb157169332c453f503bb2543ce914daf54600f8fa44699fa5833d9eb90 failed to exit

It would hang after this point.

To fix this, I first killed the process identified in systemctl status docker with sudo kill -9 $PID.

I then deleted everything in /var/lib/docker/containers with sudo rm -rf /var/lib/docker/containers/*.

This cleared out the problematic container and everything worked from then on.

0

In my case it was an issue caused where the child processes are still running or these parent process is monitoring its child process.

  • Check if you have defunct processes -> ps -ef | grep defunct
  • Now those process need to be killed -> kill -9 PID PPID
  • Then refresh or restart the terminal. This solved the issue for me.

Also check -> https://dev.to/jeden/killing-a-defunct-process-7od

1
  • can you fix the typo - grept
    – x4444
    Sep 19, 2022 at 20:42
0

I know this question is rather old, but it was pretty much the only thing showing up for me. It took me quite a while to find what was happening for me.

I was using Loki as the Docker logger. There was a connectivity issue and the logs could no longer be written. This lead to all docker commands hanging and me being unable to even restart the service.

My solution:

pkill docker to kill all docker processes

remove loki from /etc/docker/daemon.json

rm -R /var/lib/docker/

service docker restart

Afterward I recreated my containers. Be aware that just restarting the containers is not sufficient.

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