Why is docker image eating up my disk space that is not used by docker

93,971

Solution 1

It's a kernel problem with devicemapper, which affects the RedHat family of OS (RedHat, Fedora, CentOS, and Amazon Linux). Deleted containers don't free up mapped disk space. This means that on the affected OSs you'll slowly run out of space as you start and restart containers.

The Docker project is aware of this, and the kernel is supposedly fixed in upstream (https://github.com/docker/docker/issues/3182).

A work-around of sorts is to give Docker its own volume to write to ("When Docker eats up you disk space"). This doesn't actually stop it from eating space, just from taking down other parts of your system after it does.

My solution was to uninstall docker, then delete all its files, then reinstall:

sudo yum remove docker
sudo rm -rf /var/lib/docker
sudo yum install docker

This got my space back, but it's not much different than just launching a replacement instance. I have not found a nicer solution.

Solution 2

Deleting my entire /var/lib/docker is not ok for me. These are a safer ways:

Solution 1:

The following commands from the issue clear up space for me and it's a lot safer than deleting /var/lib/docker or for Windows check your disk image location here.

Before:

docker info

Example output:

Metadata file: 
Data Space Used: 53.38 GB
Data Space Total: 53.39 GB
Data Space Available: 8.389 MB
Metadata Space Used: 6.234 MB
Metadata Space Total: 54.53 MB
Metadata Space Available: 48.29 MB

Command in newer versions of Docker e.g. 17.x +

docker system prune -a

It will show you a warning that it will remove all the stopped containers,networks, images and build cache. Generally it's safe to remove this. (Next time you run a container it may pull from the Docker registry)

Example output:

Total reclaimed space: 1.243GB

You can then run docker info again to see what has been cleaned up

docker info

Solution 2:

Along with this, make sure your programs inside the docker container are not writing many/huge files to the file system.

Check your running docker process's space usage size

docker ps -s #may take minutes to return

or for all containers, even exited

docker ps -as #may take minutes to return

You can then delete the offending container/s

docker rm <CONTAINER ID>

Find the possible culprit which may be using gigs of space

docker exec -it <CONTAINER ID> "/bin/sh"
du -h

In my case the program was writing gigs of temp files.

(Nathaniel Waisbrot mentioned in the accepted answer this issue and I got some info from the issue)


OR

Commands in older versions of Docker e.g. 1.13.x (run as root not sudo):

# Delete 'exited' containers
docker rm -v $(docker ps -a -q -f status=exited)

# Delete 'dangling' images (If there are no images you will get a docker: "rmi" requires a minimum of 1 argument)
docker rmi $(docker images -f "dangling=true" -q)

# Delete 'dangling' volumes (If there are no images you will get a docker: "volume rm" requires a minimum of 1 argument)
docker volume rm $(docker volume ls -qf dangling=true)

After :

> docker info
Metadata file: 
Data Space Used: 1.43 GB
Data Space Total: 53.39 GB
Data Space Available: 51.96 GB
Metadata Space Used: 577.5 kB
Metadata Space Total: 54.53 MB
Metadata Space Available: 53.95 MB

Solution 3

Move the /var/lib/docker directory.

Assuming the /data directory has enough room, if not, substitute for one that does,

sudo systemctl stop docker

sudo mv /var/lib/docker /data


sudo ln -s /data/docker /var/lib/docker

sudo systemctl start docker

This way, you don't have to reconfigure docker.

Solution 4

Had the same problem. In my scenario my vbox was running out of storage space. After an investigation found out that my docker local volumes were eating up 30gb. Ubuntu 16.04 host.

To find out yours.

docker system df

TYPE                TOTAL               ACTIVE              SIZE                RECLAIMABLE
Images              3                   0                   1.361GB             1.361GB (100%)
Containers          0                   0                   0B                  0B
Local Volumes       7                   0                   9.413GB             9.413GB (100%)
Build Cache                                                 0B                  0B



docker system prune --volumes


  WARNING! This will remove:
        - all stopped containers
        - all networks not used by at least one container
        - all volumes not used by at least one container
        - all dangling images
        - all build cache
Are you sure you want to continue? [y/N]

This frees up disk space of not used local volumes. At my scenario freed 20 GB of storage space. Make sure that containers which you want to keep are running before doing this if you want to keep them since this removes all stopped containers.

Solution 5

I had a similar problem and I think this happens when you don't have enough space in the disk for all your docker images. I had 6GB reserved for docker images which it turned out not to be enough in my case. Anyway, I had removed every image and container and still disk looked full. Most of the space was being used by /var/lib/docker/devicemapper and /var/lib/docker/tmp.

This command didn't work for me:

# docker ps -qa | xargs docker inspect --format='{{ .State.Pid }}' | xargs -IZ fstrim /proc/Z/root/

First, I stopped docker service:

sudo service docker stop

Then I deleted /var/lib/docker:

Then I did what somebody suggested here in https://github.com/docker/docker/issues/18867#issuecomment-232301073

  • Remove existing instance of docker metadata rm -rf /var/lib/docker

    sudo rm -rf /var/lib/docker

  • Pass following options to docker daemon: -s devicemapper --storage-opt dm.fs=xfs --storage-opt dm.mountopt=discard

  • Start docker daemon.

For last two steps, I run:

sudo dockerd -s devicemapper --storage-opt dm.fs=xfs --storage-opt dm.mountopt=discard
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ming.kernel
Author by

ming.kernel

I am a programmer from China.

Updated on July 08, 2022

Comments

  • ming.kernel
    ming.kernel almost 2 years

    I have setup docker and I have used completely different block device to store docker's system data:

    [root@blink1 /]# cat /etc/sysconfig/docker
    # /etc/sysconfig/docker
    
    other_args="-H tcp://0.0.0.0:9367 -H unix:///var/run/docker.sock -g /disk1/docker"
    

    Note that /disk/1 is using a completely different hard drive /dev/xvdi

    Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
    /dev/xvda1      7.8G  5.1G  2.6G  67% /
    devtmpfs        1.9G  108K  1.9G   1% /dev
    tmpfs           1.9G     0  1.9G   0% /dev/shm
    /dev/xvdi        20G  5.3G   15G  27% /disk1
    /dev/dm-1       9.8G  1.7G  7.6G  18% /disk1/docker/devicemapper/mnt/bb6c540bae25aaf01aedf56ff61ffed8c6ae41aa9bd06122d440c6053e3486bf
    /dev/dm-2       9.8G  1.7G  7.7G  18% /disk1/docker/devicemapper/mnt/c85f756c59a5e1d260c3cdb473f3f4d9e55ac568967abe190eeaf9c4087afeac
    

    The problem is that when I continue download docker images and run docker containers, it seems that the other hard drive /dev/xvda1 is also used up.

    I can verify this problem by remove some docker images. After I removed some docker images, /dev/xvda1 has some more extra space now.

    Am I missing something?

    My docker version:

    [root@blink1 /]# docker info
    Containers: 2
    Images: 42
    Storage Driver: devicemapper
     Pool Name: docker-202:1-275421-pool
     Pool Blocksize: 64 Kb
     Data file: /disk1/docker/devicemapper/devicemapper/data
     Metadata file: /disk1/docker/devicemapper/devicemapper/metadata
     Data Space Used: 3054.4 Mb
     Data Space Total: 102400.0 Mb
     Metadata Space Used: 4.7 Mb
     Metadata Space Total: 2048.0 Mb
    Execution Driver: native-0.2
    Kernel Version: 3.14.20-20.44.amzn1.x86_64
    Operating System: Amazon Linux AMI 2014.09