import {ArticleLayout} from '@/components/layouts/ArticleLayout'
import {createSlug} from '@/lib/createSlug'
import cargoShipImage from './ian-taylor-jOqJbvo1P9g-unsplash.jpg'
export const meta = {
author: 'Ryan Freeman',
date: '2023-02-11',
title: 'Docker cheat sheet',
description: 'This is a living document of useful commands for maintaining and using Docker, and should function as a handy reference for developers and DevOps engineers.',
This is a living document of useful commands for maintaining and using Docker, and should function as a handy reference for developers and DevOps engineers.
<Image
src={cargoShipImage}
alt="Image of a cargo ship by Ian Taylor on Unsplash"
If you update your Docker container images regularly using something like [watchtower](https://containrrr.dev/watchtower/), you might have dangling images which are out-of-date and no longer associated with some of your running containers.
So why not use `docker image prune` to reclaim that valuable disk space. For example, running this command on my Raspberry Pi shaved off about 9.66Gb of disk usage.
Sometimes you want to restart all your containers at once, such as after you've pulled the latest images for your containers.
To do this, use `docker restart $(docker ps -q)`, this command instructs Docker to restart all containers using the container ids which are returned from `docker ps -q`.