title: Docker Engine managed plugin system linkTitle: Docker Engine plugins description: Develop and use a plugin with the managed plugin system keywords: “API, Usage, plugins, documentation, developer” aliases:
Docker Engine's plugin system lets you install, start, stop, and remove plugins using Docker Engine.
For information about legacy (non-managed) plugins, refer to Understand legacy Docker Engine plugins.
[!NOTE] Docker Engine managed plugins are currently not supported on Windows daemons.
Plugins are distributed as Docker images and can be hosted on Docker Hub or on a private registry.
To install a plugin, use the docker plugin install command, which pulls the plugin from Docker Hub or your private registry, prompts you to grant permissions or capabilities if necessary, and enables the plugin.
To check the status of installed plugins, use the docker plugin ls command. Plugins that start successfully are listed as enabled in the output.
After a plugin is installed, you can use it as an option for another Docker operation, such as creating a volume.
In the following example, you install the sshfs plugin, verify that it is enabled, and use it to create a volume.
[!NOTE] This example is intended for instructional purposes only. Once the volume is created, your SSH password to the remote host is exposed as plaintext when inspecting the volume. Delete the volume as soon as you are done with the example.
Install the sshfs plugin.
$ docker plugin install vieux/sshfs Plugin "vieux/sshfs" is requesting the following privileges: - network: [host] - capabilities: [CAP_SYS_ADMIN] Do you grant the above permissions? [y/N] y vieux/sshfs
The plugin requests 2 privileges:
host network.CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability, which allows the plugin to run the mount command.Check that the plugin is enabled in the output of docker plugin ls.
$ docker plugin ls ID NAME TAG DESCRIPTION ENABLED 69553ca1d789 vieux/sshfs latest the `sshfs` plugin true
Create a volume using the plugin. This example mounts the /remote directory on host 1.2.3.4 into a volume named sshvolume.
This volume can now be mounted into containers.
$ docker volume create \ -d vieux/sshfs \ --name sshvolume \ -o sshcmd=user@1.2.3.4:/remote \ -o password=$(cat file_containing_password_for_remote_host) sshvolume
Verify that the volume was created successfully.
$ docker volume ls DRIVER NAME vieux/sshfs sshvolume
Start a container that uses the volume sshvolume.
$ docker run --rm -v sshvolume:/data busybox ls /data <content of /remote on machine 1.2.3.4>
Remove the volume sshvolume
$ docker volume rm sshvolume
sshvolume
To disable a plugin, use the docker plugin disable command. To completely remove it, use the docker plugin remove command. For other available commands and options, see the command line reference.
The rootfs directory represents the root filesystem of the plugin. In this example, it was created from a Dockerfile:
[!NOTE] The
/run/docker/pluginsdirectory is mandatory inside of the plugin's filesystem for Docker to communicate with the plugin.
$ git clone https://github.com/vieux/docker-volume-sshfs $ cd docker-volume-sshfs $ docker build -t rootfsimage . $ id=$(docker create rootfsimage true) # id was cd851ce43a403 when the image was created $ sudo mkdir -p myplugin/rootfs $ sudo docker export "$id" | sudo tar -x -C myplugin/rootfs $ docker rm -vf "$id" $ docker rmi rootfsimage
The config.json file describes the plugin. See the plugins config reference.
Consider the following config.json file.
{ "description": "sshFS plugin for Docker", "documentation": "https://docs.docker.com/engine/extend/plugins/", "entrypoint": ["/docker-volume-sshfs"], "network": { "type": "host" }, "interface": { "types": ["docker.volumedriver/1.0"], "socket": "sshfs.sock" }, "linux": { "capabilities": ["CAP_SYS_ADMIN"] } }
This plugin is a volume driver. It requires a host network and the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability. It depends upon the /docker-volume-sshfs entrypoint and uses the /run/docker/plugins/sshfs.sock socket to communicate with Docker Engine. This plugin has no runtime parameters.
A new plugin can be created by running docker plugin create <plugin-name> ./path/to/plugin/data where the plugin data contains a plugin configuration file config.json and a root filesystem in subdirectory rootfs.
After that the plugin <plugin-name> will show up in docker plugin ls. Plugins can be pushed to remote registries with docker plugin push <plugin-name>.
Stdout of a plugin is redirected to dockerd logs. Such entries have a plugin=<ID> suffix. Here are a few examples of commands for pluginID f52a3df433b9aceee436eaada0752f5797aab1de47e5485f1690a073b860ff62 and their corresponding log entries in the docker daemon logs.
$ docker plugin install tiborvass/sample-volume-plugin INFO[0036] Starting... Found 0 volumes on startup plugin=f52a3df433b9aceee436eaada0752f5797aab1de47e5485f1690a073b860ff62
$ docker volume create -d tiborvass/sample-volume-plugin samplevol INFO[0193] Create Called... Ensuring directory /data/samplevol exists on host... plugin=f52a3df433b9aceee436eaada0752f5797aab1de47e5485f1690a073b860ff62 INFO[0193] open /var/lib/docker/plugin-data/local-persist.json: no such file or directory plugin=f52a3df433b9aceee436eaada0752f5797aab1de47e5485f1690a073b860ff62 INFO[0193] Created volume samplevol with mountpoint /data/samplevol plugin=f52a3df433b9aceee436eaada0752f5797aab1de47e5485f1690a073b860ff62 INFO[0193] Path Called... Returned path /data/samplevol plugin=f52a3df433b9aceee436eaada0752f5797aab1de47e5485f1690a073b860ff62
$ docker run -v samplevol:/tmp busybox sh INFO[0421] Get Called... Found samplevol plugin=f52a3df433b9aceee436eaada0752f5797aab1de47e5485f1690a073b860ff62 INFO[0421] Mount Called... Mounted samplevol plugin=f52a3df433b9aceee436eaada0752f5797aab1de47e5485f1690a073b860ff62 INFO[0421] Path Called... Returned path /data/samplevol plugin=f52a3df433b9aceee436eaada0752f5797aab1de47e5485f1690a073b860ff62 INFO[0421] Unmount Called... Unmounted samplevol plugin=f52a3df433b9aceee436eaada0752f5797aab1de47e5485f1690a073b860ff62
Use runc, the default docker container runtime, for debugging plugins by collecting plugin logs redirected to a file.
$ sudo runc --root /run/docker/runtime-runc/plugins.moby list ID PID STATUS BUNDLE CREATED OWNER 93f1e7dbfe11c938782c2993628c895cf28e2274072c4a346a6002446c949b25 15806 running /run/docker/containerd/daemon/io.containerd.runtime.v1.linux/moby-plugins/93f1e7dbfe11c938782c2993628c895cf28e2274072c4a346a6002446c949b25 2018-02-08T21:40:08.621358213Z root 9b4606d84e06b56df84fadf054a21374b247941c94ce405b0a261499d689d9c9 14992 running /run/docker/containerd/daemon/io.containerd.runtime.v1.linux/moby-plugins/9b4606d84e06b56df84fadf054a21374b247941c94ce405b0a261499d689d9c9 2018-02-08T21:35:12.321325872Z root c5bb4b90941efcaccca999439ed06d6a6affdde7081bb34dc84126b57b3e793d 14984 running /run/docker/containerd/daemon/io.containerd.runtime.v1.linux/moby-plugins/c5bb4b90941efcaccca999439ed06d6a6affdde7081bb34dc84126b57b3e793d 2018-02-08T21:35:12.321288966Z root
$ sudo runc --root /run/docker/runtime-runc/plugins.moby exec 93f1e7dbfe11c938782c2993628c895cf28e2274072c4a346a6002446c949b25 cat /var/log/plugin.log
If the plugin has a built-in shell, then exec into the plugin can be done as follows:
$ sudo runc --root /run/docker/runtime-runc/plugins.moby exec -t 93f1e7dbfe11c938782c2993628c895cf28e2274072c4a346a6002446c949b25 sh
To verify if the plugin API socket that the docker daemon communicates with is responsive, use curl. In this example, we will make API calls from the docker host to volume and network plugins using curl 7.47.0 to ensure that the plugin is listening on the said socket. For a well functioning plugin, these basic requests should work. Note that plugin sockets are available on the host under /var/run/docker/plugins/<pluginID>
$ curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -XPOST -d '{}' --unix-socket /var/run/docker/plugins/e8a37ba56fc879c991f7d7921901723c64df6b42b87e6a0b055771ecf8477a6d/plugin.sock http:/VolumeDriver.List {"Mountpoint":"","Err":"","Volumes":[{"Name":"myvol1","Mountpoint":"/data/myvol1"},{"Name":"myvol2","Mountpoint":"/data/myvol2"}],"Volume":null}
$ curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -XPOST -d '{}' --unix-socket /var/run/docker/plugins/45e00a7ce6185d6e365904c8bcf62eb724b1fe307e0d4e7ecc9f6c1eb7bcdb70/plugin.sock http:/NetworkDriver.GetCapabilities {"Scope":"local"}
When using curl 7.5 and above, the URL should be of the form http://hostname/APICall, where hostname is the valid hostname where the plugin is installed and APICall is the call to the plugin API.
For example, http://localhost/VolumeDriver.List