aliases | description | keywords | |
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|
Deprecated Features. |
docker, documentation, about, technology, deprecate |
This page provides an overview of features that are deprecated in Engine. Changes in packaging, and supported (Linux) distributions are not included. To learn about end of support for Linux distributions, refer to the release notes.
As changes are made to Docker there may be times when existing features need to be removed or replaced with newer features. Before an existing feature is removed it is labeled as "deprecated" within the documentation and remains in Docker for at least one stable release unless specified explicitly otherwise. After that time it may be removed.
Users are expected to take note of the list of deprecated features each release and plan their migration away from those features, and (if applicable) towards the replacement features as soon as possible.
The table below provides an overview of the current status of deprecated features:
- Deprecated: the feature is marked "deprecated" and should no longer be used. The feature may be removed, disabled, or change behavior in a future release. The "Deprecated" column contains the release in which the feature was marked deprecated, whereas the "Remove" column contains a tentative release in which the feature is to be removed. If no release is included in the "Remove" column, the release is yet to be decided on.
- Removed: the feature was removed, disabled, or hidden. Refer to the linked section for details. Some features are "soft" deprecated, which means that they remain functional for backward compatibility, and to allow users to migrate to alternatives. In such cases, a warning may be printed, and users should not rely on this feature.
Deprecated in Release: v27.0 Target For Removal In Release: v28.0
The Config
field returned shown in docker image inspect
(and as returned by
the GET /images/{name}/json
API endpoint) returns additional fields that are
not part of the image's configuration and not part of the Docker Image Spec
and [OCI Image Specification].
These fields are never set (and always return the default value for the type), but are not omitted in the response when left empty. As these fields were not intended to be part of the image configuration response, they are deprecated, and will be removed from the API in thee next release.
The following fields are currently included in the API response, but are not part of the underlying image's Config, and deprecated:
Hostname
Domainname
AttachStdin
AttachStdout
AttachStderr
Tty
OpenStdin
StdinOnce
Image
NetworkDisabled
(already omitted unless set)MacAddress
(already omitted unless set)StopTimeout
(already omitted unless set)
Deprecated in Release: v27.0 Disabled by default in Release: v27.0 Target For Removal In Release: v28.0
Graphdriver plugins are an experimental feature that allow extending the Docker Engine with custom storage drivers for storing images and containers. This feature was not maintained since its inception, and will no longer be supported in upcoming releases.
Support for graphdriver plugins is disabled by default in v27.0, and will be
removed v28.0. An DOCKERD_DEPRECATED_GRAPHDRIVER_PLUGINS
environment variable
is provided in v27.0 to re-enable the feature. This environment variable must
be set to a non-empty value in the daemon's environment.
The DOCKERD_DEPRECATED_GRAPHDRIVER_PLUGINS
environment variable, along with
support for graphdriver plugins, will be removed in v28.0. Users of this feature
are recommended to instead configure the Docker Engine to use the containerd image store
and a custom snapshotter
Deprecated in Release: v27.0 Target For Removal In Release: v28.0
The api-cors-header
configuration option for the Docker daemon is insecure,
and is therefore deprecated and scheduled for removal.
Incorrectly setting this option could leave a window of opportunity
for unauthenticated cross-origin requests to be accepted by the daemon.
Starting in Docker Engine v27.0, this flag can still be set,
but it has no effect unless the environment variable
DOCKERD_DEPRECATED_CORS_HEADER
is also set to a non-empty value.
This flag will be removed altogether in v28.0.
This is a breaking change for authorization plugins and other programs that depend on this option for accessing the Docker API from a browser. If you need to access the API through a browser, use a reverse proxy.
Deprecated in Release: v26.0 Target For Removal In Release: v28.0
Configuring the Docker daemon to listen on a TCP address will require mandatory
TLS verification. This change aims to ensure secure communication by preventing
unauthorized access to the Docker daemon over potentially insecure networks.
This mandatory TLS requirement applies to all TCP addresses except tcp://localhost
.
In version 27.0 and later, specifying --tls=false
or --tlsverify=false
CLI flags
causes the daemon to fail to start if it's also configured to accept remote connections over TCP.
This also applies to the equivalent configuration options in daemon.json
.
To facilitate remote access to the Docker daemon over TCP, you'll need to implement TLS verification. This secures the connection by encrypting data in transit and providing a mechanism for mutual authentication.
For environments remote daemon access isn't required, we recommend binding the Docker daemon to a Unix socket. For daemon's where remote access is required and where TLS encryption is not feasible, you may want to consider using SSH as an alternative solution.
For further information, assistance, and step-by-step instructions on configuring TLS (or SSH) for the Docker daemon, refer to Protect the Docker daemon socket.
Deprecated in Release: v25.0 Target For Removal In Release: v26.0
The Container
and ContainerConfig
fields returned by docker inspect
are
mostly an implementation detail of the classic (non-BuildKit) image builder.
These fields are not portable and are empty when using the
BuildKit-based builder (enabled by default since v23.0).
These fields are deprecated in v25.0 and will be omitted starting from v26.0.
If image configuration of an image is needed, you can obtain it from the
Config
field.
Deprecated in Release: v25.0 Target For Removal In Release: v26.0
The Docker daemon provides a versioned API for backward compatibility with old clients. Docker clients can perform API-version negotiation to select the most recent API version supported by the daemon (downgrading to and older version of the API when necessary). API version negotiation was introduced in Docker v1.12.0 (API 1.24), and clients before that used a fixed API version.
Docker Engine versions through v25.0 provide support for all API versions included in stable releases for a given platform. For Docker daemons on Linux, the earliest supported API version is 1.12 (corresponding with Docker Engine v1.0.0), whereas for Docker daemons on Windows, the earliest supported API version is 1.24 (corresponding with Docker Engine v1.12.0).
Support for legacy API versions (providing old API versions on current versions of the Docker Engine) is primarily intended to provide compatibility with recent, but still supported versions of the client, which is a common scenario (the Docker daemon may be updated to the latest release, but not all clients may be up-to-date or vice versa). Support for API versions before that (API versions provided by EOL versions of the Docker Daemon) is provided on a "best effort" basis.
Use of old API versions is very rare, and support for legacy API versions involves significant complexity (Docker 1.0.0 having been released 10 years ago). Because of this, we'll start deprecating support for legacy API versions.
Docker Engine v25.0 by default disables API version older than 1.24 (aligning the minimum supported API version between Linux and Windows daemons). When connecting with a client that uses an API version version older than 1.24, the daemon returns an error. The following example configures the docker CLI to use API version 1.23, which produces an error:
DOCKER_API_VERSION=1.23 docker version
Error response from daemon: client version 1.23 is too old. Minimum supported API version is 1.24,
upgrade your client to a newer version
An environment variable (DOCKER_MIN_API_VERSION
) is introduced that allows
re-enabling older API versions in the daemon. This environment variable must
be set in the daemon's environment (for example, through a systemd override
file), and the specified
API version must be supported by the daemon (1.12
or higher on Linux, or
1.24
or higher on Windows).
Support for API versions lower than 1.24
will be permanently removed in Docker
Engine v26, and the minimum supported API version will be incrementally raised
in releases following that.
We do not recommend depending on the DOCKER_MIN_API_VERSION
environment
variable other than for exceptional cases where it's not possible to update
old clients, and those clients must be supported.
Deprecated in Release: v25.0 Removed In Release: v26.0
The Aliases
field returned by docker inspect
contains the container short
ID once the container is started. This behavior is deprecated in v25.0 but
kept until the next release, v26.0. Starting with that version, the Aliases
field will only contain the aliases set through the docker container create
and docker run
flag --network-alias
.
A new field DNSNames
containing the container name (if one was specified),
the hostname, the network aliases, as well as the container short ID, has been
introduced in v25.0 and should be used instead of the Aliases
field.
Deprecated in Release: v25.0 Target For Removal In Release: v26.0
The "is_automated" field has been deprecated by Docker Hub's search API.
Consequently, the IsAutomated
field in image search will always be set
to false
in future, and searching for "is-automated=true" will yield no
results.
The AUTOMATED
column has been removed from the default docker search
and docker image search
output in v25.0, and the corresponding IsAutomated
templating option will be removed in v26.0.
Deprecated in Release: v24.0 Removed in Release: v25.0
The logentries service SaaS was shut down on November 15, 2022, rendering this logging driver non-functional. Users should no longer use this logging driver, and the driver has been removed in Docker 25.0. Existing containers using this logging-driver are migrated to use the "local" logging driver after upgrading.
Deprecated in Release: v24.0 Removed in Release: v25.0
The oom-score-adjust
option was added to prevent the daemon from being
OOM-killed before other processes. This option was mostly added as a
convenience, as running the daemon as a systemd unit was not yet common.
Having the daemon set its own limits is not best-practice, and something better handled by the process-manager starting the daemon.
Docker v20.10 and newer no longer adjust the daemon's OOM score by default, instead setting the OOM-score to the systemd unit (OOMScoreAdjust) that's shipped with the packages.
Users currently depending on this feature are recommended to adjust the daemon's OOM score using systemd or through other means, when starting the daemon.
Deprecated in Release: v23.0 Removed in Release: v24.0
Build information structures have been introduced in BuildKit v0.10.0 and are generated with build metadata that allows you to see all the sources (images, git repositories) that were used by the build with their exact versions and also the configuration that was passed to the build. This information is also embedded into the image configuration if one is generated.
Deprecated in Release: v23.0
Docker v23.0 now uses BuildKit by default to build Linux images, and uses the
Buildx CLI component for
docker build
. With this change, docker build
now exposes all advanced features
that BuildKit provides and which were previously only available through the
docker buildx
subcommands.
The Buildx component is installed automatically when installing the docker
CLI
using our .deb
or .rpm
packages, and statically linked binaries are provided
both on download.docker.com
, and through the docker/buildx-bin
image
on Docker Hub. Refer the Buildx section for
detailed instructions on installing the Buildx component.
This release marks the beginning of the deprecation cycle of the classic ("legacy") builder for Linux images. No active development will happen on the classic builder (except for bugfixes). BuildKit development started five Years ago, left the "experimental" phase since Docker 18.09, and is already the default builder for Docker Desktop. While we're comfortable that BuildKit is stable for general use, there may be some changes in behavior. If you encounter issues with BuildKit, we encourage you to report issues in the BuildKit issue tracker on GitHub{:target="blank" rel="noopener" class=""}
Classic builder for building Windows images
BuildKit does not (yet) provide support for building Windows images, and
docker build
continues to use the classic builder to build native Windows images on Windows daemons.
Deprecated in Release: v23.0
Docker v23.0 now uses BuildKit by default to build Linux images, which requires the Buildx component to build images with BuildKit. There may be situations where the Buildx component is not available, and BuildKit cannot be used.
To provide a smooth transition to BuildKit as the default builder, Docker v23.0 has an automatic fallback for some situations, or produces an error to assist users to resolve the problem.
In situations where the user did not explicitly opt-in to use BuildKit (i.e.,
DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1
is not set), the CLI automatically falls back to the classic
builder, but prints a deprecation warning:
DEPRECATED: The legacy builder is deprecated and will be removed in a future release.
Install the buildx component to build images with BuildKit:
https://docs.docker.com/go/buildx/
This situation may occur if the docker
CLI is installed using the static binaries,
and the Buildx component is not installed or not installed correctly. This fallback
will be removed in a future release, therefore we recommend to install the Buildx component
and use BuildKit for your builds, or opt-out of using BuildKit with DOCKER_BUILDKIT=0
.
If you opted-in to use BuildKit (DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1
), but the Buildx component
is missing, an error is printed instead, and the docker build
command fails:
ERROR: BuildKit is enabled but the buildx component is missing or broken.
Install the buildx component to build images with BuildKit:
https://docs.docker.com/go/buildx/
We recommend to install the Buildx component
to continue using BuildKit for your builds, but alternatively, users can either
unset the DOCKER_BUILDKIT
environment variable to fall back to the legacy builder,
or opt-out of using BuildKit with DOCKER_BUILDKIT=0
.
Be aware that the classic builder is deprecated so both the automatic fallback and opting-out of using BuildKit will no longer be possible in a future release.
Removed in Release: v23.0
The btrfs
storage driver on CentOS and RHEL was provided as a technology preview
by CentOS and RHEL, but has been deprecated since the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.4 release,
and removed in CentOS 8 and RHEL 8. Users of the btrfs
storage driver on CentOS
are recommended to migrate to a different storage driver, such as overlay2
, which
is now the default storage driver. Docker 23.0 continues to provide the btrfs
storage driver to allow users to migrate to an alternative driver. The next release
of Docker will no longer provide this driver.
Deprecated in Release: v20.10
Removed in Release: v23.0
Use of encrypted TLS private keys has been deprecated, and has been removed. Golang has deprecated support for legacy PEM encryption (as specified in RFC 1423), as it is insecure by design (see https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/264159).
This feature allowed using an encrypted private key with a supplied password, but did not provide additional security as the encryption is known to be broken, and the key is sitting next to the password in the filesystem. Users are recommended to decrypt the private key, and store it un-encrypted to continue using it.
Deprecated in Release: v20.10 Removed in Release: v23.0
Following the deprecation of Compose on Kubernetes,
support for Kubernetes in the stack
and context
commands has been removed from
the cli, and options related to this functionality are now either ignored, or may
produce an error.
The following command-line flags are removed from the docker context
subcommands:
--default-stack-orchestrator
- swarm is now the only (and default) orchestrator for stacks.--kubernetes
- the kubernetes endpoint can no longer be stored indocker context
.--kubeconfig
- exporting a context as a kubeconfig file is no longer supported.
The output produced by the docker context inspect
subcommand no longer contains
information about StackOrchestrator
and Kubernetes
endpoints for new contexts.
The following command-line flags are removed from the docker stack
subcommands:
--kubeconfig
- using a kubeconfig file as context is no longer supported.--namespace
- configuring the kubernetes namespace for stacks is no longer supported.--orchestrator
- swarm is now the only (and default) orchestrator for stacks.
The DOCKER_STACK_ORCHESTRATOR
, DOCKER_ORCHESTRATOR
, and KUBECONFIG
environment
variables, as well as the stackOrchestrator
option in the ~/.docker/config.json
cli configuration file are no longer used, and ignored.
Deprecated in Release: v20.10
Docker Engine v20.10 and up includes optimizations to verify if images in the local image cache need updating before pulling, preventing the Docker Engine from making unnecessary API requests. These optimizations require the container image registry to conform to the Open Container Initiative Distribution Specification.
While most registries conform to the specification, we encountered some registries
to be non-compliant, resulting in docker pull
to fail.
As a temporary solution, Docker Engine v20.10 includes a fallback mechanism to
allow docker pull
to be functional when using a non-compliant registry. A
warning message is printed in this situation:
WARNING Failed to pull manifest by the resolved digest. This registry does not
appear to conform to the distribution registry specification; falling back to
pull by tag. This fallback is DEPRECATED, and will be removed in a future
release.
The fallback is added to allow users to either migrate their images to a compliant registry, or for these registries to become compliant.
Note that this fallback only addresses failures on docker pull
. Other commands,
such as docker stack deploy
, or pulling images with containerd
will continue
to fail.
Given that other functionality is still broken with these registries, we consider this fallback a temporary solution, and will remove the fallback in an upcoming major release.
Deprecated in Release: v20.10 Removed in Release: v23.0
The experimental feature to run Linux containers on Windows (LCOW) was introduced as a technical preview in Docker 17.09. While many enhancements were made after its introduction, the feature never reached completeness, and development has now stopped in favor of running docker natively on Linux in WSL2.
Developers who want to run Linux workloads on a Windows host are encouraged to use Docker Desktop with WSL2 instead.
Deprecated in Release: v20.10
Specifying blkio weight (docker run --blkio-weight
and docker run --blkio-weight-device
)
is now marked as deprecated when using cgroups v1 because the corresponding features
were removed in Linux kernel v5.0 and up.
When using cgroups v2, the --blkio-weight
options are implemented using
`io.weight.
Deprecated in Release: v20.10 Removed in Release: v23.0
Specifying kernel memory limit (docker run --kernel-memory
) is no longer supported
because the Linux kernel deprecated kmem.limit_in_bytes
in v5.4.
The OCI runtime specification now marks this option (as well as --kernel-memory-tcp
)
as "NOT RECOMMENDED",
and OCI runtimes such as runc
no longer support this option.
Docker API v1.42 and up now ignores this option when set. Older versions of the API continue to accept the option, but depending on the OCI runtime used, may take no effect.
Note
While not deprecated (yet) in Docker, the OCI runtime specification also deprecated the
memory.kmem.tcp.limit_in_bytes
option. When usingrunc
as runtime, this option takes no effect. The linux kernel did not explicitly deprecate this feature, and there is a tracking ticket in therunc
issue tracker to determine if this option should be reinstated or if this was an oversight of the Linux kernel maintainers (see opencontainers/runc#3174).The
memory.kmem.tcp.limit_in_bytes
option is only supported with cgroups v1, and not available on installations running with cgroups v2. This option is only supported by the API, and not exposed on thedocker
command-line.
Deprecated in Release: v20.10 Removed in Release: v23.0
Standalone ("classic") Swarm has been deprecated, and with that the use of overlay
networks using an external key/value store. The corresponding--cluster-advertise
,
--cluster-store
, and --cluster-store-opt
daemon options have been removed.
Deprecated in Release: v20.10 Removed in Release: v23.0
The docker CLI up until v1.7.0 used the ~/.dockercfg
file to store credentials
after authenticating to a registry (docker login
). Docker v1.7.0 replaced this
file with a new CLI configuration file, located in ~/.docker/config.json
. When
implementing the new configuration file, the old file (and file-format) was kept
as a fall-back, to assist existing users with migrating to the new file.
Given that the old file format encourages insecure storage of credentials (credentials are stored unencrypted), and that no version of the CLI since Docker v1.7.0 has created this file, support for this file, and its format has been removed.
Deprecated in Release: v19.03
Removed in Release: v23.0
The DOCKER_CLI_EXPERIMENTAL
environment variable and the corresponding experimental
field in the CLI configuration file are deprecated. Experimental features are
enabled by default, and these configuration options are no longer functional.
Starting with v23.0, the Docker CLI no longer prints Experimental
for the client
in the output of docker version
, and the field has been removed from the JSON
format.
Deprecated in Release: v20.10
CLI Plugin API is now marked as deprecated.
Deprecated in Release: v20.10
The Dockerfile ENV
instruction allows values to be set using either ENV name=value
or ENV name value
. The latter (ENV name value
) form can be ambiguous, for example,
the following defines a single env-variable (ONE
) with value "TWO= THREE=world"
,
but may have intended to be setting three env-vars:
ENV ONE TWO= THREE=world
This format also does not allow setting multiple environment-variables in a single
ENV
line in the Dockerfile.
Use of the ENV name value
syntax is discouraged, and may be removed in a future
release. Users are encouraged to update their Dockerfiles to use the ENV name=value
syntax, for example:
ENV ONE="" TWO="" THREE="world"
Deprecated in Release: v20.10 Removed in Release: v20.10
Docker v17.07 introduced an experimental --stream
flag on docker build
which
allowed the build-context to be incrementally sent to the daemon, instead of
unconditionally sending the whole build-context.
This functionality has been reimplemented as part of BuildKit, which uses streaming
by default and the --stream
option will be ignored when using the classic builder,
printing a deprecation warning instead.
Users that want to use this feature are encouraged to enable BuildKit by setting
the DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1
environment variable or through the daemon or CLI configuration
files.
Deprecated in Release: v20.10
The --log-opt fluentd-async-connect
option for the fluentd logging driver is
deprecated in favor of --log-opt fluentd-async
.
A deprecation message is logged in the daemon logs if the old option is used:
fluent#New: AsyncConnect is now deprecated, use Async instead
Users are encouraged to use the fluentd-async
option going forward, as support
for the old option will be removed in a future release.
Deprecated in Release: v19.03
Disabled by default in Release: v26.0
Target For Removal In Release: v27.0
The image manifest v2 schema 1 and "Docker Image v1" formats were deprecated in favor of the v2 schema 2 and OCI image spec formats.
These legacy formats should no longer be used, and users are recommended to update images to use current formats, or to upgrade to more current images. Starting with Docker v26.0, pulling these images is disabled by default, and produces an error when attempting to pull the image:
$ docker pull ubuntu:10.04
Error response from daemon:
[DEPRECATION NOTICE] Docker Image Format v1 and Docker Image manifest version 2, schema 1 support is disabled by default and will be removed in an upcoming release.
Suggest the author of docker.io/library/ubuntu:10.04 to upgrade the image to the OCI Format or Docker Image manifest v2, schema 2.
More information at https://docs.docker.com/go/deprecated-image-specs/
An environment variable (DOCKER_ENABLE_DEPRECATED_PULL_SCHEMA_1_IMAGE
) is
added in Docker v26.0 that allows re-enabling support for these image formats
in the daemon. This environment variable must be set to a non-empty value in
the daemon's environment (for example, through a systemd override file).
Support for the DOCKER_ENABLE_DEPRECATED_PULL_SCHEMA_1_IMAGE
environment variable
will be removed in Docker v27.0 after which this functionality is removed permanently.
Deprecated in Release: v19.03
Removed in Release: v20.10
The docker engine activate
, docker engine check
, and docker engine update
provided an alternative installation method to upgrade Docker Community engines
to Docker Enterprise, using an image-based distribution of the Docker Engine.
This feature was only available on Linux, and only when executed on a local node.
Given the limitations of this feature, and the feature not getting widely adopted,
the docker engine
subcommands will be removed, in favor of installation through
standard package managers.
Deprecated in Release: v19.03
Removed in Release: v20.10
The top-level docker deploy
command (using the "Docker Application Bundle"
(.dab) file format was introduced as an experimental feature in Docker 1.13 /
17.03, but superseded by support for Docker Compose files using the docker stack deploy
subcommand.
Deprecated in Release: v19.03
Removed in Release: v20.10
With no development being done on this feature, and no active use of the file
format, support for the DAB file format and the top-level docker deploy command
(hidden by default in 19.03), will be removed, in favour of docker stack deploy
using compose files.
Deprecated in Release: v19.03 Removed in Release: v24.0
This daemon configuration option disabled the Linux kernel version check used to detect if the kernel supported OverlayFS with multiple lower dirs, which is required for the overlay2 storage driver. Starting with Docker v19.03.7, the detection was improved to no longer depend on the kernel version, so this option was no longer used.
Deprecated in Release: v19.03 Removed in Release: v24.0
The aufs
storage driver is deprecated in favor of overlay2
, and has been
removed in a Docker Engine v24.0. Users of the aufs
storage driver must
migrate to a different storage driver, such as overlay2
, before upgrading
to Docker Engine v24.0.
The aufs
storage driver facilitated running Docker on distros that have no
support for OverlayFS, such as Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, which originally shipped with
a 3.14 kernel.
Now that Ubuntu 14.04 is no longer a supported distro for Docker, and overlay2
is available to all supported distros (as they are either on kernel 4.x, or have
support for multiple lowerdirs backported), there is no reason to continue
maintenance of the aufs
storage driver.
Deprecated in Release: v18.09 Removed in Release: v24.0
The overlay
storage driver is deprecated in favor of the overlay2
storage
driver, which has all the benefits of overlay
, without its limitations (excessive
inode consumption). The legacy overlay
storage driver has been removed in
Docker Engine v24.0. Users of the overlay
storage driver should migrate to the
overlay2
storage driver before upgrading to Docker Engine v24.0.
The legacy overlay
storage driver allowed using overlayFS-backed filesystems
on pre 4.x kernels. Now that all supported distributions are able to run overlay2
(as they are either on kernel 4.x, or have support for multiple lowerdirs
backported), there is no reason to keep maintaining the overlay
storage driver.
Deprecated in Release: v18.09 Disabled by default in Release: v23.0 Removed in Release: v25.0
The devicemapper
storage driver is deprecated in favor of overlay2
, and has
been removed in Docker Engine v25.0. Users of the devicemapper
storage driver
must migrate to a different storage driver, such as overlay2
, before upgrading
to Docker Engine v25.0.
The devicemapper
storage driver facilitates running Docker on older (3.x) kernels
that have no support for other storage drivers (such as overlay2, or btrfs).
Now that support for overlay2
is added to all supported distros (as they are
either on kernel 4.x, or have support for multiple lowerdirs backported), there
is no reason to continue maintenance of the devicemapper
storage driver.
Deprecated in Release: v18.06
Removed In Release: v20.10
The namespaces com.docker.*
, io.docker.*
, and org.dockerproject.*
in engine labels
were always documented to be reserved, but there was never any enforcement.
Usage of these namespaces will now cause a warning in the engine logs to discourage their use, and will error instead in v20.10 and above.
Disabled In Release: v17.12
Removed In Release: v19.03
The --disable-legacy-registry
flag was disabled in Docker 17.12 and will print
an error when used. For this error to be printed, the flag itself is still present,
but hidden. The flag has been removed in Docker 19.03.
Disabled By Default In Release: v17.06
Removed In Release: v17.12
Version 1.8.3 added a flag (--disable-legacy-registry=false
) which prevents the
docker daemon from pull
, push
, and login
operations against v1
registries. Though enabled by default, this signals the intent to deprecate
the v1 protocol.
Support for the v1 protocol to the public registry was removed in 1.13. Any mirror configurations using v1 should be updated to use a v2 registry mirror.
Starting with Docker 17.12, support for V1 registries has been removed, and the
--disable-legacy-registry
flag can no longer be used, and dockerd
will fail to
start when set.
Deprecated In Release: v17.05
Disabled by default in release: v17.10
Docker 17.05 added an optional --detach=false
option to make the
docker service create
and docker service update
work synchronously. This
option will be enabled by default in Docker 17.10, at which point the --detach
flag can be used to use the previous (asynchronous) behavior.
The default for this option will also be changed accordingly for docker service rollback
and docker service scale
in Docker 17.10.
Deprecated In Release: v17.05
Removed In Release: v23.0
The -g
or --graph
flag for the dockerd
or docker daemon
command was
used to indicate the directory in which to store persistent data and resource
configuration and has been replaced with the more descriptive --data-root
flag. These flags were deprecated and hidden in v17.05, and removed in v23.0.
Deprecated In Release: v1.13.0
Target For Removal In Release: v17.12
When inspecting a container, NetworkSettings
contains top-level information
about the default ("bridge") network;
EndpointID
, Gateway
, GlobalIPv6Address
, GlobalIPv6PrefixLen
, IPAddress
,
IPPrefixLen
, IPv6Gateway
, and MacAddress
.
These properties are deprecated in favor of per-network properties in
NetworkSettings.Networks
. These properties were already "deprecated" in
docker 1.9, but kept around for backward compatibility.
Refer to #17538 for further information.
Deprecated In Release: v1.13.0
Removed In Release: v20.10
The filter
param to filter the list of image by reference (name or name:tag)
is now implemented as a regular filter, named reference
.
Deprecated In Release: v1.13.0
Removed In Release: v17.12
The repository:shortid
syntax for referencing images is very little used,
collides with tag references, and can be confused with digest references.
Support for the repository:shortid
notation to reference images was removed
in Docker 17.12.
Deprecated In Release: v1.13.0
Removed In Release: v17.12
The daemon is moved to a separate binary (dockerd
), and should be used instead.
Deprecated In Release: v1.13.0
Removed In Release: v17.12
When setting duplicate keys with conflicting values, an error will be produced, and the daemon will fail to start.
Deprecated In Release: v1.13.0
MAINTAINER
was an early very limited form of LABEL
which should be used instead.
Deprecated In Release: v1.13.0
Target For Removal In Release: v17.12
API versions should be supplied to all API calls to ensure compatibility with
future Engine versions. Instead of just requesting, for example, the URL
/containers/json
, you must now request /v1.25/containers/json
.
Deprecated In Release: v1.13.0
Removed In Release: v17.12
The overlay and overlay2 storage driver does not work as expected if the backing
filesystem does not support d_type
. For example, XFS does not support d_type
if it is formatted with the ftype=0
option.
Support for these setups has been removed, and Docker v23.0 and up now fails to
start when attempting to use the overlay2
or overlay
storage driver on a
backing filesystem without d_type
support.
Refer to #27358 for details.
Deprecated in Release: v1.12.0
Removed In Release: v20.10
The docker search --automated
and docker search --stars
options are deprecated.
Use docker search --filter=is-automated=<true|false>
and docker search --filter=stars=...
instead.
Deprecated In Release: v1.12.0
Target For Removal In Release: v17.09
The shorthand (-h
) is less common than --help
on Linux and cannot be used
on all subcommands (due to it conflicting with, e.g. -h
/ --hostname
on
docker create
). For this reason, the -h
shorthand was not printed in the
"usage" output of subcommands, nor documented, and is now marked "deprecated".
Deprecated In Release: v1.11.0
Removed In Release: v17.06
The docker login command is removing the ability to automatically register for an account with the target registry if the given username doesn't exist. Due to this change, the email flag is no longer required, and will be deprecated.
Deprecated In Release: v1.11.0
Target For Removal In Release: v17.06
The flag --security-opt
doesn't use the colon separator (:
) anymore to divide keys and values, it uses the equal symbol (=
) for consistency with other similar flags, like --storage-opt
.
Deprecated In Release: v1.10.0
The fields ID
, Status
and From
in the events API have been deprecated in favor of a more rich structure.
See the events API documentation for the new format.
Deprecated In Release: v1.10.0
Removed In Release: v1.12.0
To make tagging consistent across the various docker
commands, the -f
flag on the docker tag
command is deprecated. It is no longer necessary to specify -f
to move a tag from one image to another. Nor will docker
generate an error if the -f
flag is missing and the specified tag is already in use.
Deprecated In Release: v1.10.0
Removed In Release: v1.12.0
Passing an HostConfig
to POST /containers/{name}/start
is deprecated in favor of
defining it at container creation (POST /containers/create
).
Deprecated In Release: v1.10.0
Removed In Release: v1.12.0
The docker ps --before
and docker ps --since
options are deprecated.
Use docker ps --filter=before=...
and docker ps --filter=since=...
instead.
Deprecated In Release: v1.9.0
Removed In Release: v1.12.0
Log tags are now generated in a standard way across different logging drivers.
Because of which, the driver specific log tag options syslog-tag
, gelf-tag
and
fluentd-tag
have been deprecated in favor of the generic tag
option.
$ docker --log-driver=syslog --log-opt tag="{{.ImageName}}/{{.Name}}/{{.ID}}"
Deprecated In Release: v1.9.0
Removed In Release: v1.12.0
Since 1.9, Docker Content Trust Offline key has been renamed to Root key and the Tagging key has been renamed to Repository key. Due to this renaming, we're also changing the corresponding environment variables
- DOCKER_CONTENT_TRUST_OFFLINE_PASSPHRASE is now named DOCKER_CONTENT_TRUST_ROOT_PASSPHRASE
- DOCKER_CONTENT_TRUST_TAGGING_PASSPHRASE is now named DOCKER_CONTENT_TRUST_REPOSITORY_PASSPHRASE
Deprecated In Release: v1.8.0
Removed In Release: v1.12.0
The endpoint /containers/(id or name)/copy
is deprecated in favor of /containers/(id or name)/archive
.
Deprecated In Release: v1.8.0
Removed In Release: v1.10.0
The built-in LXC execution driver, the lxc-conf flag, and API fields have been removed.
Deprecated In Release: v1.8.0
Removed In Release: v1.10.0
The flags -d
and --daemon
are deprecated in favor of the daemon
subcommand:
docker daemon -H ...
The following single-dash (-opt
) variant of certain command line options
are deprecated and replaced with double-dash options (--opt
):
docker attach -nostdin
docker attach -sig-proxy
docker build -no-cache
docker build -rm
docker commit -author
docker commit -run
docker events -since
docker history -notrunc
docker images -notrunc
docker inspect -format
docker ps -beforeId
docker ps -notrunc
docker ps -sinceId
docker rm -link
docker run -cidfile
docker run -dns
docker run -entrypoint
docker run -expose
docker run -link
docker run -lxc-conf
docker run -n
docker run -privileged
docker run -volumes-from
docker search -notrunc
docker search -stars
docker search -t
docker search -trusted
docker tag -force
The following double-dash options are deprecated and have no replacement:
docker run --cpuset
docker run --networking
docker ps --since-id
docker ps --before-id
docker search --trusted
Deprecated In Release: v1.5.0
Removed In Release: v1.12.0
The single-dash (-help
) was removed, in favor of the double-dash --help
docker -help
docker [COMMAND] -help
Deprecated In Release: v1.6.0
Removed In Release: v17.09
The flag --api-enable-cors
is deprecated since v1.6.0. Use the flag
--api-cors-header
instead.
Deprecated In Release: v0.10.0
Removed In Release: v1.13.0
The flag --run
of the docker commit (and its short version -run
) were deprecated in favor
of the --changes
flag that allows to pass Dockerfile
commands.
Deprecated In Release: v0.6.7
Removed In Release: v1.12.0
The docker import
command format file|URL|- [REPOSITORY [TAG]]
is deprecated since November 2013. It's no more supported.