I recently started using Docker and never realized that I should use docker-compose down
instead of ctrl-c
or docker-compose stop
to get rid of my experiments. I now have a large number of unneeded docker images locally.
Is there a flag I can run to delete all the local docker images & containers?
Something like docker rmi --all --force
--all flag does not exist but I am looking for something with similar idea.
docker images purge
--> will remove all your docker images
docker image ls -q | xargs -I {} docker image rm -f {}
docker image prune
(image is singular and it's prune instead of purge).
docker image prune --all --force
Unix
To delete all containers including its volumes use,
docker rm -vf $(docker ps -aq)
To delete all the images,
docker rmi -f $(docker images -aq)
Remember, you should remove all the containers before removing all the images from which those containers were created.
Windows - Powershell
docker images -a -q | % { docker image rm $_ -f }
Windows - Command Line
for /F %i in ('docker images -a -q') do docker rmi -f %i
Use this to delete everything:
docker system prune -a --volumes
Remove all unused containers, volumes, networks and images
WARNING! This will remove:
- all stopped containers
- all networks not used by at least one container
- all volumes not used by at least one container
- all images without at least one container associated to them
- all build cache
https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/system_prune/#extended-description
Here is short and quick solution I used
Docker provides a single command that will clean up any resources — images, containers, volumes, and networks — that are dangling (not associated with a container):
docker system prune
To additionally remove any stopped containers and all unused images (not just dangling images), add the -a flag to the command:
docker system prune -a
For more details visit link
docker image prune -a
Remove all unused images, not just dangling ones. Add -f option to force.
Local docker version: 17.09.0-ce, Git commit: afdb6d4, OS/Arch: darwin/amd64
$ docker image prune -h
Flag shorthand -h has been deprecated, please use --help
Usage: docker image prune [OPTIONS]
Remove unused images
Options:
-a, --all Remove all unused images, not just dangling ones
--filter filter Provide filter values (e.g. 'until=<timestamp>')
-f, --force Do not prompt for confirmation
--help Print usage
Easy and handy commands
To delete all images
docker rmi $(docker images -a)
To delete containers which are in exited state
docker rm $(docker ps -a -f status=exited -q)
To delete containers which are in created state
docker rm $(docker ps -a -f status=created -q)
NOTE: Remove all the containers then remove the images
If you need to delete without invoking docker:
rm -rf /var/lib/docker
This directly removes all docker images/containers/volumes from the filesystem.
/etc/docker
are not affected
ERROR: failed to update bridge store for object type *bridge.networkConfiguration: open /var/lib/docker/network/files/local-kv.db: no such file or directory
systemctl stop docker
There is a bug in Windows where disk space is not reclaimed after removing the images. Rebooting Docker / Windows did not work.
In case you are using Docker Desktop, the following worked for me. Go to Troubleshoot -> Clean / purge data. This can save you a lot of disk space, maybe more than you wanted.
https://i.stack.imgur.com/IdHxm.png
Please note: this removes everything, so think twice before doing this!
List images
docker image ls
Remove unused images
docker image prune --all
To additionally remove any stopped containers and all unused images
docker system prune -a
For Linux Ubuntu user, below worked for me. Word of Caution- It will remove all by the way.
For removing containers along with volumes associated with it, use below:
sudo docker rm -vf $(sudo docker ps -a -q)
For Removing images use below:
sudo docker rmi -f $(sudo docker images -a -q)
To delete all images:
docker rmi -f $(docker images -a | awk {'print $3'})
Explanation:
docker images -a | awk {'print $3'}
This command will return all image id's and then used to delete image using its id.
-q
also only prints the ids
To delete all images :
docker rmi $(docker images -a -q)
where -a is all, and -q is return only image ids
To remove unused images, and containers :
docker system prune
beware as if you are using docker swarm, and your local machine is joining remote swarm (as manager/worker), your local will be the deployed repo. executing this thus removes the deployed images.
docker rmi $(docker images -q) --force
You can try like this:
docker system prune
sudo docker images / docker images // list of images with id sudo docker rm image
Another way with xargs
(Unix only)
docker image ls -q | xargs -I {} docker image rm -f {}
docker image rm -f $(docker image ls -a -q)
Adding to techtabu's accepted answer, If you're using docker on windows, you can use the following command
for /F "delims=" %A in ('docker ps -a -q') do docker rm %A
here, the command docker ps -a -q
lists all the images and this list is passed to docker rm
one by one
see this for more details on how this type of command format works in windows cmd.
To delete all Docker local Docker images follow 2 steps ::
step 1 : docker images ( list all docker images with ids )
example :
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
pradip564/my latest 31e522c6cfe4 3 months ago 915MB
step 2 : docker image rm 31e522c6cfe4 ( IMAGE ID)
OUTPUT : image deleted
Here is the command I used and put it in a batch file to remove everything:
echo "Removing containers :" && if [ -n "$(docker container ls -aq)" ]; then docker container stop $(docker container ls -aq); docker container rm $(docker container ls -aq); fi; echo "Removing images :" && if [ -n "$(docker images -aq)" ]; then docker rmi -f $(docker images -aq); fi; echo "Removing volumes :" && if [ -n "$(docker volume ls -q)" ]; then docker volume rm $(docker volume ls -q); fi; echo "Removing networks :" && if [ -n "$(docker network ls | awk '{print $1" "$2}' | grep -v 'ID|bridge|host|none' | awk '{print $1}')" ]; then docker network rm $(docker network ls | awk '{print $1" "$2}' | grep -v 'ID|bridge|host|none' | awk '{print $1}'); fi;
The other answers don't seem to provide an easy way to delete just the containers with "auto-generated" names. This is my most frequent intent, so I wrote a Powershell script for it:
$containers = (docker container list -a).Split("`n") | % { [regex]::split($_, "\s+") | Select -Last 1 }
$containersToRemove = $containers | Where { ([regex]"^[a-z]+_[a-z]+$").IsMatch($_) }
# it's recommended to delete in batches, as too many at once can cause issues
$containersToRemove = $containersToRemove | Select-Object -First 30
foreach ($container in $containersToRemove) {
# sync/wait-based version (slow)
# docker container rm $container
# async/background-process version (fast)
Start-Process -FilePath docker -ArgumentList "container rm $container" -NoNewWindow
}
Take caution of course, as this script is just using a regular-expression: ^[a-z]+_[a-z]+$
So only use it if you know that the containers you care about do not use the same format (of lowercase-word, underscore, lowercase-word); or at least only run the first two lines, run echo $containersToRemove
, and check the list before actually executing the deletions.
docker rmi -f $(docker images -q)
docker images -f dangling=true
docker image prune
Success story sharing
unknown shorthand flag: 'a' in -a
when runningdocker rmi -f $(docker images -a -q)
docker images -a -q | % { docker image rm $_ -f }