Added daemon.json Windows example

Signed-off-by: Neil Peterson <neilpeterson@outlook.com>
master
Neil Peterson 2016-06-16 21:41:58 -07:00 committed by Tibor Vass
parent 94b45e398f
commit 32054251c7
1 changed files with 52 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@ -975,19 +975,23 @@ the `--cgroup-parent` option on the daemon.
The `--config-file` option allows you to set any configuration option
for the daemon in a JSON format. This file uses the same flag names as keys,
except for flags that allow several entries, where it uses the plural
of the flag name, e.g., `labels` for the `label` flag. By default,
docker tries to load a configuration file from `/etc/docker/daemon.json`
on Linux and `%programdata%\docker\config\daemon.json` on Windows.
of the flag name, e.g., `labels` for the `label` flag.
The options set in the configuration file must not conflict with options set
via flags. The docker daemon fails to start if an option is duplicated between
the file and the flags, regardless their value. We do this to avoid
silently ignore changes introduced in configuration reloads.
For example, the daemon fails to start if you set daemon labels
in the configuration file and also set daemon labels via the `--label` flag.
in the configuration file and also set daemon labels via the `--label` flag.
Options that are not present in the file are ignored when the daemon starts.
This is a full example of the allowed configuration options in the file:
### Linux configuration file
The default location of the configuration file on Linux is
`/etc/docker/daemon.json`. The `--config-file` flag can be used to specify a
non-default location.
This is a full example of the allowed configuration options on Linux:
```json
{
@ -1056,6 +1060,48 @@ This is a full example of the allowed configuration options in the file:
}
```
### Windows configuration file
The default location of the configuration file on Windows is
`%programdata%\docker\config\daemon.json`. The `--config-file` flag can be
used to specify a non-default location.
This is a full example of the allowed configuration options on Windows:
```json
{
"authorization-plugins": [],
"dns": [],
"dns-opts": [],
"dns-search": [],
"exec-opts": [],
"storage-driver": "",
"storage-opts": [],
"labels": [],
"log-driver": "",
"mtu": 0,
"pidfile": "",
"graph": "",
"cluster-store": "",
"cluster-advertise": "",
"debug": true,
"hosts": [],
"log-level": "",
"tlsverify": true,
"tlscacert": "",
"tlscert": "",
"tlskey": "",
"group": "",
"default-ulimits": {},
"bridge": "",
"fixed-cidr": "",
"raw-logs": false,
"registry-mirrors": [],
"insecure-registries": [],
"disable-legacy-registry": false
}
```
### Configuration reloading
Some options can be reconfigured when the daemon is running without requiring