Create a context
Docker endpoint config:
NAME DESCRIPTION from Copy named context's Docker endpoint configuration host Docker endpoint on which to connect ca Trust certs signed only by this CA cert Path to TLS certificate file key Path to TLS key file skip-tls-verify Skip TLS certificate validation
Example:
$ docker context create my-context --description “some description” --docker “host=tcp://myserver:2376,ca=/ca-file,cert=/cert-file,key=~/key-file”
| Name | Type | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
--description | string | Description of the context | |
--docker | stringToString | set the docker endpoint | |
--from | string | create context from a named context |
Creates a new context. This lets you switch the daemon your docker CLI connects to.
Use the --docker flag to create a context with a custom endpoint. The following example creates a context named my-context with a docker endpoint of /var/run/docker.sock:
$ docker context create \ --docker host=unix:///var/run/docker.sock \ my-context
Use the --from=<context-name> option to create a new context from an existing context. The example below creates a new context named my-context from the existing context existing-context:
$ docker context create --from existing-context my-context
If the --from option isn't set, the context is created from the current context:
$ docker context create my-context
This can be used to create a context out of an existing DOCKER_HOST based script:
$ source my-setup-script.sh $ docker context create my-context
To source the docker endpoint configuration from an existing context use the --docker from=<context-name> option. The example below creates a new context named my-context using the docker endpoint configuration from the existing context existing-context:
$ docker context create \ --docker from=existing-context \ my-context
Docker endpoints configurations, as well as the description can be modified with docker context update.
Refer to the docker context update reference for details.