github.com/portworx/docker@v1.12.1/image/spec/v1.1.md (about) 1 # Docker Image Specification v1.1.0 2 3 An *Image* is an ordered collection of root filesystem changes and the 4 corresponding execution parameters for use within a container runtime. This 5 specification outlines the format of these filesystem changes and corresponding 6 parameters and describes how to create and use them for use with a container 7 runtime and execution tool. 8 9 This version of the image specification was adopted starting in Docker 1.10. 10 11 ## Terminology 12 13 This specification uses the following terms: 14 15 <dl> 16 <dt> 17 Layer 18 </dt> 19 <dd> 20 Images are composed of <i>layers</i>. Each layer is a set of filesystem 21 changes. Layers do not have configuration metadata such as environment 22 variables or default arguments - these are properties of the image as a 23 whole rather than any particular layer. 24 </dd> 25 <dt> 26 Image JSON 27 </dt> 28 <dd> 29 Each image has an associated JSON structure which describes some 30 basic information about the image such as date created, author, and the 31 ID of its parent image as well as execution/runtime configuration like 32 its entry point, default arguments, CPU/memory shares, networking, and 33 volumes. The JSON structure also references a cryptographic hash of 34 each layer used by the image, and provides history information for 35 those layers. This JSON is considered to be immutable, because changing 36 it would change the computed ImageID. Changing it means creating a new 37 derived image, instead of changing the existing image. 38 </dd> 39 <dt> 40 Image Filesystem Changeset 41 </dt> 42 <dd> 43 Each layer has an archive of the files which have been added, changed, 44 or deleted relative to its parent layer. Using a layer-based or union 45 filesystem such as AUFS, or by computing the diff from filesystem 46 snapshots, the filesystem changeset can be used to present a series of 47 image layers as if they were one cohesive filesystem. 48 </dd> 49 <dt> 50 Layer DiffID 51 </dt> 52 <dd> 53 Layers are referenced by cryptographic hashes of their serialized 54 representation. This is a SHA256 digest over the tar archive used to 55 transport the layer, represented as a hexadecimal encoding of 256 bits, e.g., 56 <code>sha256:a9561eb1b190625c9adb5a9513e72c4dedafc1cb2d4c5236c9a6957ec7dfd5a9</code>. 57 Layers must be packed and unpacked reproducibly to avoid changing the 58 layer ID, for example by using tar-split to save the tar headers. Note 59 that the digest used as the layer ID is taken over an uncompressed 60 version of the tar. 61 </dd> 62 <dt> 63 Layer ChainID 64 </dt> 65 <dd> 66 For convenience, it is sometimes useful to refer to a stack of layers 67 with a single identifier. This is called a <code>ChainID</code>. For a 68 single layer (or the layer at the bottom of a stack), the 69 <code>ChainID</code> is equal to the layer's <code>DiffID</code>. 70 Otherwise the <code>ChainID</code> is given by the formula: 71 <code>ChainID(layerN) = SHA256hex(ChainID(layerN-1) + " " + DiffID(layerN))</code>. 72 </dd> 73 <dt> 74 ImageID <a name="id_desc"></a> 75 </dt> 76 <dd> 77 Each image's ID is given by the SHA256 hash of its configuration JSON. It is 78 represented as a hexadecimal encoding of 256 bits, e.g., 79 <code>sha256:a9561eb1b190625c9adb5a9513e72c4dedafc1cb2d4c5236c9a6957ec7dfd5a9</code>. 80 Since the configuration JSON that gets hashed references hashes of each 81 layer in the image, this formulation of the ImageID makes images 82 content-addresable. 83 </dd> 84 <dt> 85 Tag 86 </dt> 87 <dd> 88 A tag serves to map a descriptive, user-given name to any single image 89 ID. Tag values are limited to the set of characters 90 <code>[a-zA-Z0-9_.-]</code>, except they may not start with a <code>.</code> 91 or <code>-</code> character. Tags are limited to 127 characters. 92 </dd> 93 <dt> 94 Repository 95 </dt> 96 <dd> 97 A collection of tags grouped under a common prefix (the name component 98 before <code>:</code>). For example, in an image tagged with the name 99 <code>my-app:3.1.4</code>, <code>my-app</code> is the <i>Repository</i> 100 component of the name. A repository name is made up of slash-separated 101 name components, optionally prefixed by a DNS hostname. The hostname 102 must follow comply with standard DNS rules, but may not contain 103 <code>_</code> characters. If a hostname is present, it may optionally 104 be followed by a port number in the format <code>:8080</code>. 105 Name components may contain lowercase characters, digits, and 106 separators. A separator is defined as a period, one or two underscores, 107 or one or more dashes. A name component may not start or end with 108 a separator. 109 </dd> 110 </dl> 111 112 ## Image JSON Description 113 114 Here is an example image JSON file: 115 116 ``` 117 { 118 "created": "2015-10-31T22:22:56.015925234Z", 119 "author": "Alyssa P. Hacker <alyspdev@example.com>", 120 "architecture": "amd64", 121 "os": "linux", 122 "config": { 123 "User": "alice", 124 "Memory": 2048, 125 "MemorySwap": 4096, 126 "CpuShares": 8, 127 "ExposedPorts": { 128 "8080/tcp": {} 129 }, 130 "Env": [ 131 "PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin", 132 "FOO=docker_is_a_really", 133 "BAR=great_tool_you_know" 134 ], 135 "Entrypoint": [ 136 "/bin/my-app-binary" 137 ], 138 "Cmd": [ 139 "--foreground", 140 "--config", 141 "/etc/my-app.d/default.cfg" 142 ], 143 "Volumes": { 144 "/var/job-result-data": {}, 145 "/var/log/my-app-logs": {}, 146 }, 147 "WorkingDir": "/home/alice", 148 }, 149 "rootfs": { 150 "diff_ids": [ 151 "sha256:c6f988f4874bb0add23a778f753c65efe992244e148a1d2ec2a8b664fb66bbd1", 152 "sha256:5f70bf18a086007016e948b04aed3b82103a36bea41755b6cddfaf10ace3c6ef" 153 ], 154 "type": "layers" 155 }, 156 "history": [ 157 { 158 "created": "2015-10-31T22:22:54.690851953Z", 159 "created_by": "/bin/sh -c #(nop) ADD file:a3bc1e842b69636f9df5256c49c5374fb4eef1e281fe3f282c65fb853ee171c5 in /" 160 }, 161 { 162 "created": "2015-10-31T22:22:55.613815829Z", 163 "created_by": "/bin/sh -c #(nop) CMD [\"sh\"]", 164 "empty_layer": true 165 } 166 ] 167 } 168 ``` 169 170 Note that image JSON files produced by Docker don't contain formatting 171 whitespace. It has been added to this example for clarity. 172 173 ### Image JSON Field Descriptions 174 175 <dl> 176 <dt> 177 created <code>string</code> 178 </dt> 179 <dd> 180 ISO-8601 formatted combined date and time at which the image was 181 created. 182 </dd> 183 <dt> 184 author <code>string</code> 185 </dt> 186 <dd> 187 Gives the name and/or email address of the person or entity which 188 created and is responsible for maintaining the image. 189 </dd> 190 <dt> 191 architecture <code>string</code> 192 </dt> 193 <dd> 194 The CPU architecture which the binaries in this image are built to run 195 on. Possible values include: 196 <ul> 197 <li>386</li> 198 <li>amd64</li> 199 <li>arm</li> 200 </ul> 201 More values may be supported in the future and any of these may or may 202 not be supported by a given container runtime implementation. 203 </dd> 204 <dt> 205 os <code>string</code> 206 </dt> 207 <dd> 208 The name of the operating system which the image is built to run on. 209 Possible values include: 210 <ul> 211 <li>darwin</li> 212 <li>freebsd</li> 213 <li>linux</li> 214 </ul> 215 More values may be supported in the future and any of these may or may 216 not be supported by a given container runtime implementation. 217 </dd> 218 <dt> 219 config <code>struct</code> 220 </dt> 221 <dd> 222 The execution parameters which should be used as a base when running a 223 container using the image. This field can be <code>null</code>, in 224 which case any execution parameters should be specified at creation of 225 the container. 226 227 <h4>Container RunConfig Field Descriptions</h4> 228 229 <dl> 230 <dt> 231 User <code>string</code> 232 </dt> 233 <dd> 234 <p>The username or UID which the process in the container should 235 run as. This acts as a default value to use when the value is 236 not specified when creating a container.</p> 237 238 <p>All of the following are valid:</p> 239 240 <ul> 241 <li><code>user</code></li> 242 <li><code>uid</code></li> 243 <li><code>user:group</code></li> 244 <li><code>uid:gid</code></li> 245 <li><code>uid:group</code></li> 246 <li><code>user:gid</code></li> 247 </ul> 248 249 <p>If <code>group</code>/<code>gid</code> is not specified, the 250 default group and supplementary groups of the given 251 <code>user</code>/<code>uid</code> in <code>/etc/passwd</code> 252 from the container are applied.</p> 253 </dd> 254 <dt> 255 Memory <code>integer</code> 256 </dt> 257 <dd> 258 Memory limit (in bytes). This acts as a default value to use 259 when the value is not specified when creating a container. 260 </dd> 261 <dt> 262 MemorySwap <code>integer</code> 263 </dt> 264 <dd> 265 Total memory usage (memory + swap); set to <code>-1</code> to 266 disable swap. This acts as a default value to use when the 267 value is not specified when creating a container. 268 </dd> 269 <dt> 270 CpuShares <code>integer</code> 271 </dt> 272 <dd> 273 CPU shares (relative weight vs. other containers). This acts as 274 a default value to use when the value is not specified when 275 creating a container. 276 </dd> 277 <dt> 278 ExposedPorts <code>struct</code> 279 </dt> 280 <dd> 281 A set of ports to expose from a container running this image. 282 This JSON structure value is unusual because it is a direct 283 JSON serialization of the Go type 284 <code>map[string]struct{}</code> and is represented in JSON as 285 an object mapping its keys to an empty object. Here is an 286 example: 287 288 <pre>{ 289 "8080": {}, 290 "53/udp": {}, 291 "2356/tcp": {} 292 }</pre> 293 294 Its keys can be in the format of: 295 <ul> 296 <li> 297 <code>"port/tcp"</code> 298 </li> 299 <li> 300 <code>"port/udp"</code> 301 </li> 302 <li> 303 <code>"port"</code> 304 </li> 305 </ul> 306 with the default protocol being <code>"tcp"</code> if not 307 specified. 308 309 These values act as defaults and are merged with any specified 310 when creating a container. 311 </dd> 312 <dt> 313 Env <code>array of strings</code> 314 </dt> 315 <dd> 316 Entries are in the format of <code>VARNAME="var value"</code>. 317 These values act as defaults and are merged with any specified 318 when creating a container. 319 </dd> 320 <dt> 321 Entrypoint <code>array of strings</code> 322 </dt> 323 <dd> 324 A list of arguments to use as the command to execute when the 325 container starts. This value acts as a default and is replaced 326 by an entrypoint specified when creating a container. 327 </dd> 328 <dt> 329 Cmd <code>array of strings</code> 330 </dt> 331 <dd> 332 Default arguments to the entry point of the container. These 333 values act as defaults and are replaced with any specified when 334 creating a container. If an <code>Entrypoint</code> value is 335 not specified, then the first entry of the <code>Cmd</code> 336 array should be interpreted as the executable to run. 337 </dd> 338 <dt> 339 Volumes <code>struct</code> 340 </dt> 341 <dd> 342 A set of directories which should be created as data volumes in 343 a container running this image. This JSON structure value is 344 unusual because it is a direct JSON serialization of the Go 345 type <code>map[string]struct{}</code> and is represented in 346 JSON as an object mapping its keys to an empty object. Here is 347 an example: 348 <pre>{ 349 "/var/my-app-data/": {}, 350 "/etc/some-config.d/": {}, 351 }</pre> 352 </dd> 353 <dt> 354 WorkingDir <code>string</code> 355 </dt> 356 <dd> 357 Sets the current working directory of the entry point process 358 in the container. This value acts as a default and is replaced 359 by a working directory specified when creating a container. 360 </dd> 361 </dl> 362 </dd> 363 <dt> 364 rootfs <code>struct</code> 365 </dt> 366 <dd> 367 The rootfs key references the layer content addresses used by the 368 image. This makes the image config hash depend on the filesystem hash. 369 rootfs has two subkeys: 370 371 <ul> 372 <li> 373 <code>type</code> is usually set to <code>layers</code>. There is 374 also a Windows-specific value <code>layers+base</code> that allows 375 a base layer to be specified in a field of <code>rootfs</code> 376 called <code>base_layer</code>. 377 </li> 378 <li> 379 <code>diff_ids</code> is an array of layer content hashes (<code>DiffIDs</code>), in order from bottom-most to top-most. 380 </li> 381 </ul> 382 383 384 Here is an example rootfs section: 385 386 <pre>"rootfs": { 387 "diff_ids": [ 388 "sha256:c6f988f4874bb0add23a778f753c65efe992244e148a1d2ec2a8b664fb66bbd1", 389 "sha256:5f70bf18a086007016e948b04aed3b82103a36bea41755b6cddfaf10ace3c6ef", 390 "sha256:13f53e08df5a220ab6d13c58b2bf83a59cbdc2e04d0a3f041ddf4b0ba4112d49" 391 ], 392 "type": "layers" 393 }</pre> 394 </dd> 395 <dt> 396 history <code>struct</code> 397 </dt> 398 <dd> 399 <code>history</code> is an array of objects describing the history of 400 each layer. The array is ordered from bottom-most layer to top-most 401 layer. The object has the following fields. 402 403 <ul> 404 <li> 405 <code>created</code>: Creation time, expressed as a ISO-8601 formatted 406 combined date and time 407 </li> 408 <li> 409 <code>author</code>: The author of the build point 410 </li> 411 <li> 412 <code>created_by</code>: The command which created the layer 413 </li> 414 <li> 415 <code>comment</code>: A custom message set when creating the layer 416 </li> 417 <li> 418 <code>empty_layer</code>: This field is used to mark if the history 419 item created a filesystem diff. It is set to true if this history 420 item doesn't correspond to an actual layer in the rootfs section 421 (for example, a command like ENV which results in no change to the 422 filesystem). 423 </li> 424 </ul> 425 426 Here is an example history section: 427 428 <pre>"history": [ 429 { 430 "created": "2015-10-31T22:22:54.690851953Z", 431 "created_by": "/bin/sh -c #(nop) ADD file:a3bc1e842b69636f9df5256c49c5374fb4eef1e281fe3f282c65fb853ee171c5 in /" 432 }, 433 { 434 "created": "2015-10-31T22:22:55.613815829Z", 435 "created_by": "/bin/sh -c #(nop) CMD [\"sh\"]", 436 "empty_layer": true 437 } 438 ]</pre> 439 </dd> 440 </dl> 441 442 Any extra fields in the Image JSON struct are considered implementation 443 specific and should be ignored by any implementations which are unable to 444 interpret them. 445 446 ## Creating an Image Filesystem Changeset 447 448 An example of creating an Image Filesystem Changeset follows. 449 450 An image root filesystem is first created as an empty directory. Here is the 451 initial empty directory structure for the a changeset using the 452 randomly-generated directory name `c3167915dc9d` ([actual layer DiffIDs are 453 generated based on the content](#id_desc)). 454 455 ``` 456 c3167915dc9d/ 457 ``` 458 459 Files and directories are then created: 460 461 ``` 462 c3167915dc9d/ 463 etc/ 464 my-app-config 465 bin/ 466 my-app-binary 467 my-app-tools 468 ``` 469 470 The `c3167915dc9d` directory is then committed as a plain Tar archive with 471 entries for the following files: 472 473 ``` 474 etc/my-app-config 475 bin/my-app-binary 476 bin/my-app-tools 477 ``` 478 479 To make changes to the filesystem of this container image, create a new 480 directory, such as `f60c56784b83`, and initialize it with a snapshot of the 481 parent image's root filesystem, so that the directory is identical to that 482 of `c3167915dc9d`. NOTE: a copy-on-write or union filesystem can make this very 483 efficient: 484 485 ``` 486 f60c56784b83/ 487 etc/ 488 my-app-config 489 bin/ 490 my-app-binary 491 my-app-tools 492 ``` 493 494 This example change is going add a configuration directory at `/etc/my-app.d` 495 which contains a default config file. There's also a change to the 496 `my-app-tools` binary to handle the config layout change. The `f60c56784b83` 497 directory then looks like this: 498 499 ``` 500 f60c56784b83/ 501 etc/ 502 my-app.d/ 503 default.cfg 504 bin/ 505 my-app-binary 506 my-app-tools 507 ``` 508 509 This reflects the removal of `/etc/my-app-config` and creation of a file and 510 directory at `/etc/my-app.d/default.cfg`. `/bin/my-app-tools` has also been 511 replaced with an updated version. Before committing this directory to a 512 changeset, because it has a parent image, it is first compared with the 513 directory tree of the parent snapshot, `f60c56784b83`, looking for files and 514 directories that have been added, modified, or removed. The following changeset 515 is found: 516 517 ``` 518 Added: /etc/my-app.d/default.cfg 519 Modified: /bin/my-app-tools 520 Deleted: /etc/my-app-config 521 ``` 522 523 A Tar Archive is then created which contains *only* this changeset: The added 524 and modified files and directories in their entirety, and for each deleted item 525 an entry for an empty file at the same location but with the basename of the 526 deleted file or directory prefixed with `.wh.`. The filenames prefixed with 527 `.wh.` are known as "whiteout" files. NOTE: For this reason, it is not possible 528 to create an image root filesystem which contains a file or directory with a 529 name beginning with `.wh.`. The resulting Tar archive for `f60c56784b83` has 530 the following entries: 531 532 ``` 533 /etc/my-app.d/default.cfg 534 /bin/my-app-tools 535 /etc/.wh.my-app-config 536 ``` 537 538 Any given image is likely to be composed of several of these Image Filesystem 539 Changeset tar archives. 540 541 ## Combined Image JSON + Filesystem Changeset Format 542 543 There is also a format for a single archive which contains complete information 544 about an image, including: 545 546 - repository names/tags 547 - image configuration JSON file 548 - all tar archives of each layer filesystem changesets 549 550 For example, here's what the full archive of `library/busybox` is (displayed in 551 `tree` format): 552 553 ``` 554 . 555 ├── 47bcc53f74dc94b1920f0b34f6036096526296767650f223433fe65c35f149eb.json 556 ├── 5f29f704785248ddb9d06b90a11b5ea36c534865e9035e4022bb2e71d4ecbb9a 557 │ ├── VERSION 558 │ ├── json 559 │ └── layer.tar 560 ├── a65da33792c5187473faa80fa3e1b975acba06712852d1dea860692ccddf3198 561 │ ├── VERSION 562 │ ├── json 563 │ └── layer.tar 564 ├── manifest.json 565 └── repositories 566 ``` 567 568 There is a directory for each layer in the image. Each directory is named with 569 a 64 character hex name that is deterministically generated from the layer 570 information. These names are not necessarily layer DiffIDs or ChainIDs. Each of 571 these directories contains 3 files: 572 573 * `VERSION` - The schema version of the `json` file 574 * `json` - The legacy JSON metadata for an image layer. In this version of 575 the image specification, layers don't have JSON metadata, but in 576 [version 1](v1.md), they did. A file is created for each layer in the 577 v1 format for backward compatibility. 578 * `layer.tar` - The Tar archive of the filesystem changeset for an image 579 layer. 580 581 Note that this directory layout is only important for backward compatibility. 582 Current implementations use the paths specified in `manifest.json`. 583 584 The content of the `VERSION` files is simply the semantic version of the JSON 585 metadata schema: 586 587 ``` 588 1.0 589 ``` 590 591 The `repositories` file is another JSON file which describes names/tags: 592 593 ``` 594 { 595 "busybox":{ 596 "latest":"5f29f704785248ddb9d06b90a11b5ea36c534865e9035e4022bb2e71d4ecbb9a" 597 } 598 } 599 ``` 600 601 Every key in this object is the name of a repository, and maps to a collection 602 of tag suffixes. Each tag maps to the ID of the image represented by that tag. 603 This file is only used for backwards compatibility. Current implementations use 604 the `manifest.json` file instead. 605 606 The `manifest.json` file provides the image JSON for the top-level image, and 607 optionally for parent images that this image was derived from. It consists of 608 an array of metadata entries: 609 610 ``` 611 [ 612 { 613 "Config": "47bcc53f74dc94b1920f0b34f6036096526296767650f223433fe65c35f149eb.json", 614 "RepoTags": ["busybox:latest"], 615 "Layers": [ 616 "a65da33792c5187473faa80fa3e1b975acba06712852d1dea860692ccddf3198/layer.tar", 617 "5f29f704785248ddb9d06b90a11b5ea36c534865e9035e4022bb2e71d4ecbb9a/layer.tar" 618 ] 619 } 620 ] 621 ``` 622 623 There is an entry in the array for each image. 624 625 The `Config` field references another file in the tar which includes the image 626 JSON for this image. 627 628 The `RepoTags` field lists references pointing to this image. 629 630 The `Layers` field points to the filesystem changeset tars. 631 632 An optional `Parent` field references the imageID of the parent image. This 633 parent must be part of the same `manifest.json` file. 634 635 This file shouldn't be confused with the distribution manifest, used to push 636 and pull images. 637 638 Generally, implementations that support this version of the spec will use 639 the `manifest.json` file if available, and older implementations will use the 640 legacy `*/json` files and `repositories`.