Docker

Table of contents

Docker objects

listContainers(options?): Promise<unknown>

To get the list of containers:

const containers = await ddClient.docker.listContainers();

listImages(options?): Promise<unknown>

To get the list of local container images:

const images = await ddClient.docker.listImages();

See the Docker API reference for details about these methods.

Deprecated access to Docker objects

The methods below are deprecated and will be removed in a future version. Use the methods specified above.

const containers = await window.ddClient.listContainers();

const images = await window.ddClient.listImages();

Docker commands

Extensions can also directly execute the docker command line.

exec(cmd, args): Promise< ExecResult>

const result = await ddClient.docker.cli.exec("info", [
  "--format",
  '"{{ json . }}"',
]);

The result contains both the standard output and the standard error of the executed command:

{
  "stderr": "...",
  "stdout": "..."
}

In this example, the command output is JSON. For convenience, the command result object also has methods to easily parse it:

  • result.lines(): string[] splits output lines.
  • result.parseJsonObject(): any parses a well-formed json output.
  • result.parseJsonLines(): any[] parses each output line as a json object.

exec(cmd, args, options): void

The command above streams the output as a result of the execution of a Docker command. This is useful if you need to get the output as a stream or the output of the command is too long.

await ddClient.docker.cli.exec("logs", ["-f", "..."], {
  stream: {
    onOutput(data) {
      if (data.stdout) {
        console.error(data.stdout);
      } else {
        console.log(data.stderr);
      }
    },
    onError(error) {
      console.error(error);
    },
    onClose(exitCode) {
      console.log("onClose with exit code " + exitCode);
    },
    splitOutputLines: true,
  },
});

The child process created by the extension is killed (SIGTERM) automatically when you close the dashboard in Docker Desktop or when you exit the extension UI. If needed, you can also use the result of the exec(streamOptions) call in order to kill (SIGTERM) the process.

const logListener = await ddClient.docker.cli.exec("logs", ["-f", "..."], {
  stream: {
    // ...
  },
});

// when done listening to logs or before starting a new one, kill the process
logListener.close();

This exec(streamOptions) API can also be used to listen to docker events:

await ddClient.docker.cli.exec(
  "events",
  ["--format", "{{ json . }}", "--filter", "container=my-container"],
  {
    stream: {
      onOutput(data) {
        if (data.stdout) {
          const event = JSON.parse(data.stdout);
          console.log(event);
        } else {
          console.log(data.stderr);
        }
      },
      onClose(exitCode) {
        console.log("onClose with exit code " + exitCode);
      },
      splitOutputLines: true,
    },
  }
);

Note

You cannot use this to chain commands in a single exec() invocation (like docker kill $(docker ps -q) or using pipe between commands).

You need to invoke exec() for each command and parse results to pass parameters to the next command if needed.

See the Exec API reference for details about these methods.

Deprecated execution of Docker commands

This method is deprecated and will be removed in a future version. Use the one specified just below.

const output = await window.ddClient.execDockerCmd(
  "info",
  "--format",
  '"{{ json . }}"'
);

window.ddClient.spawnDockerCmd("logs", ["-f", "..."], (data, error) => {
  console.log(data.stdout);
});