Fetching latest headlines…
Docker – Port Mapping, Logs, Container Management, and Image Removal
NORTH AMERICA
🇺🇸 United StatesJune 27, 2026

Docker – Port Mapping, Logs, Container Management, and Image Removal

0 views0 likes0 comments
Originally published byDev.to

Docker – Logs, Remove, and Port Mapping

Port Mapping

When we run an application inside a container, we define the port on which the application will run. The container runs the application on that port.

It is not possible to access an application running inside Docker from outside the container unless port mapping is configured.

Port mapping is specified using the -p option.

Syntax:

docker run -p <host_port>:<container_port>

Example:

docker run -p 8888:8080

Here:

  • 8888 is the host (machine) port used to access the application from outside the container.
  • 8080 is the port defined in the application and exposed inside the container.

If the host port is already in use, Docker displays an error message.

How to Check Which Ports Are Being Used by Docker Containers

docker ps --format "table {{.ID}}\t{{.Names}}\t{{.Ports}}"

Detached Mode

To run a container in detached mode, use the -d option.

docker run -d -p 2000:2001

Detached mode means the container runs in the background.

Docker Logs

Logs contain information about the activities happening inside a container.

View Logs of a Specific Container

docker logs <container_id>

Follow Logs Continuously

docker logs -f <container_id>

-f stands for follow.

View Logs from a Specific Time Range

Seconds (s): docker logs --since 30s <container_id>
Minutes (m): docker logs --since 5m <container_id>
Hours (h): docker logs --since 2h <container_id>

Docker supports seconds (s), minutes (m), and hours (h) for relative time.

For days, weeks, months, or years, use an ISO 8601 date or timestamp.

Weeks:  docker logs --since 2026-06-14 <container_id>
Months: docker logs --since 2026-05-21 <container_id>
Years:  docker logs --since 2025-06-21 <container_id>

Combined Time Units

docker logs --since 1h30m <container_id>

Displays logs from 1 hour and 30 minutes ago.

Exact Time

docker logs --since "2026-06-21T17:30:00" <container_id>

Displays logs generated since the specified date and time.

Docker Inspect

docker inspect is used to view detailed information about a container, image, network, or volume.

docker inspect <container_id>

Access a Running or Exited Container

To open a shell inside a running container:

docker exec -it <container_id> sh
  • -i = Interactive mode
  • -t = Allocate a terminal

Docker Remove

Delete an Exited Container

docker rm <container_id>

Delete a Running Container

docker rm -f <container_id>

-f forcefully stops and removes the container.

Alternative Method

First stop the container:

docker stop <container_id>

Then remove it:

docker rm <container_id>

Delete Multiple Containers

docker rm -f <container_id1> <container_id2> <container_id3>

Alternative Method (Windows)

FOR /F "tokens=*" %i IN ('docker ps -aq') DO docker rm -f %i

This command removes all containers.

Listing Containers

View Running Containers

docker ps

ps stands for Process Status.

This command lists only running containers.

View All Containers

docker ps -a

This command lists all containers, including exited containers.

-a stands for all.

View Only Container IDs

docker ps -aq

This command lists all container IDs.

Delete Images

docker rmi -f <image_id>

This command forcefully removes an image.

Naming a Container

To assign a name to a container:

docker run -d --name anyname busybox:1.36

Example:

docker run -d --name my-container busybox:1.36

This creates a container with the name my-container.

Comments (0)

Sign in to join the discussion

Be the first to comment!