522

I have applied every solution available on internet but still I cannot run Docker.

I want to use Scrapy Splash on my server.

Here is history of commands I ran.

docker run -p 8050:8050 scrapinghub/splash
sudo docker run -p 8050:8050 scrapinghub/splash
sudo usermod -aG docker $(whoami)
sudo docker run -p 8050:8050 scrapinghub/splash
newgrp docker
sudo docker run -p 8050:8050 scrapinghub/splash
reboot
sudo docker run -p 8050:8050 scrapinghub/splash
docker run -p 8050:8050 scrapinghub/splash

You can see I tried to restart my server as well, but it didnt help.

see output of ps -aux | grep docker

root@mani:/var/www/html# ps aux | grep docker
root      8524  0.0  0.8 127904 13964 ?        Ssl  17:21   0:00 /usr/bin/dockerd --raw-logs
root      8534  0.0  0.3  90588  5012 ?        Ssl  17:21   0:00 docker-containerd -l unix:///var/run/docker/libcontainerd/docker-containerd.sock --metrics-interval=0 --start-timeout 2m --state-dir /var/run/docker/libcontainerd/containerd --shim docker-containerd-shim --runtime docker-runc
root      8543  0.0  0.0   8812   764 pts/1    S+   17:21   0:00 grep --color=auto docker
root     16356  0.0  0.0  17200   964 pts/1    S    17:14   0:00 newgrp docker
root     20080  0.0  0.0  17200   964 pts/1    S    17:06   0:00 newgrp docker
root     30221  0.0  0.0  17200   964 pts/1    S    17:09   0:00 newgrp docker

but it gives the error:

Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at unix:///var/run/docker.sock. Is the docker daemon running?.

pkamb
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Umair Ayub
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44 Answers44

397

You can try out this:

systemctl start docker

It worked fine for me.

P.S.: after if there is commands that you can't do without sudo, try this:

gpasswd -a $USER docker
Waldir Leoncio
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H.Gmz
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    Running first command, I got an error: `Failed to start docker.service: Unit docker.service is masked.` So, I had to run following: `systemctl unmask docker.service` `systemctl unmask docker.socket` `systemctl start docker.service` – Chinh Phan Jul 26 '18 at 03:26
  • If you got docker through snap, do `docker.help` And follow the steps. Refer to https://askubuntu.com/questions/977961/unit-docker-service-could-not-be-found#978012 – Oscar Acevedo Aug 01 '20 at 21:28
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    ```sudo service docker start * Starting Docker: docker``` was the fix for me. – Alejandro Armas Aug 17 '21 at 20:42
  • @AlejandroArmas suggestion worked for me too. – shary.sharath Nov 17 '21 at 08:25
253

Just Run

sudo dockerd

dockerd is the daemon service for docker containers, because it is not running in background we're not able to take any actions related to the service, which needs be restarted.

Yash Pokar
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    It gives me error `Error starting daemon: Devices cgroup isn't mounted` – Vineet 'DEVIN' Dev Jun 26 '19 at 14:42
  • @fepegar Possibly you're not having docker installed properly – Yash Pokar Oct 24 '19 at 09:43
  • @YashPokar indeed, I ended up reinstalling and now things work as expected. Thanks. – fepegar Oct 24 '19 at 15:09
  • Only command that works for me inside a docker container to start a docker container. Need it for codebuild, to create my own environment while building. :-) – We are Borg Jun 09 '20 at 05:34
  • I use Rasperry 3 B with debian 9 and get: `failed to mount overlay:no such device. aufs was not found in /proc/filesystems and again failed to mount overlay`. `apt install docker-compose` did not work, I followed [this](https://dev.to/rohansawant/installing-docker-and-docker-compose-on-the-raspberry-pi-in-5-simple-steps-3mgl) toutorial – Timo Oct 12 '20 at 17:52
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    Thanks, it worked form me! Also @fepegar told that the installation can be not OK. How I would repair it? – noStaleReads Dec 02 '20 at 11:50
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    Worked for me on the wsl2 running Ubuntu too. – Eduardo Fernandes Apr 13 '21 at 16:08
  • Thanks! This gave me a lot more info and the actual error of why docker wasn't starting: `failed to start daemon: Error initializing network controller: error obtaining controller instance: unable to add return rule in DOCKER-ISOLATION-STAGE-1 chain`, which I was able to solve by switching [iptables to nftables in my Debian](https://forums.docker.com/t/failing-to-start-dockerd-failed-to-create-nat-chain-docker/78269/2). – Kevin Cruijssen Oct 14 '21 at 09:22
  • it also helped me in wsl2 – sari paisley Dec 22 '21 at 16:27
  • This works. Neither `sudo service docker start` nor `sudo service docker start` worked. but if you had previously run docker, first I had to stop docker using `sudo service docker stop` before running `sudo dockerd` – ewalel Mar 14 '22 at 06:00
76

You can get this error if docker doesn't shut down cleanly. The following answer is for the docker snap package.

Run snap logs docker and look for the following:

Error starting daemon: pid file found, ensure docker is not running or delete /var/snap/docker/179/run/docker.pid

Deleting that file and restarting docker worked for me.

rm /var/snap/docker/<your-version-number>/run/docker.pid
snap stop docker
snap start docker

Make sure to replace ‍‍‍‍<your-version-number>‍ with the appropriate version number.

Hamidreza
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niklas
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60

I just hit this after doing a fresh install of DOCKER from the main docs. The problem for me was that immediately after the install, the service is not running.

These commands will help you to make sure docker is up and running for your run command to find it:

$ sudo service --status-all 
$ sudo service docker start
$ sudo service docker start
Paul McDaniel
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57

Easy way to fix this issue, try this

sudo su
systemctl start docker
systemctl enable docker
systemctl restart docker
Willie Cheng
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34

First, try with sudo, as the current user may not have access permissions to communicate to docker daemon i.e.:

/var/run/docker.sock

If its still not working, then, after the installation, simply stop the docker daemon:

sudo service docker stop

And, run the following command to start the daemon in background:

sudo nohup docker daemon -H tcp://0.0.0.0:2375 -H unix:///var/run/docker.sock

To make working with Docker easier, you should add your username to the Docker users group. Adding a user to the group can be done with the command below:

sudo usermod -aG docker $USER

Also, this step is mentioned in the official documentation of docker Post-installation steps for Linux.

Ubuntu 16.04 users can follow these steps:

Inside file /lib/systemd/system/docker.service change:

ExecStart=/usr/bin/dockerd fd://

to

ExecStart=/usr/bin/dockerd -H tcp://0.0.0.0:2375

Inside file /etc/init.d/docker change:

DOCKER_OPTS=

to

DOCKER_OPTS="-H tcp://0.0.0.0:2375"

and then restart your machine, and start playing with docker.

J. Scott Elblein
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mohan08p
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    running `sudo nohup docker daemon -H http://tcp://0.0.0.0:2375 () -H http://unix:///var/run/docker.sock` gives `bash: syntax error near unexpected token `('` – Umair Ayub Jun 21 '17 at 18:52
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    I am running redhat linux – Umair Ayub Jun 21 '17 at 18:52
  • ohh... sorry. Extra chars (), updated. Which version of RHEL ? Simply check what value you get with $DOCKER_HOST ? – mohan08p Jun 22 '17 at 06:36
  • $ sudo systemctl enable docker to start the docker service at boot time. – mohan08p Jun 22 '17 at 06:42
  • I am now trying to install Docker on `CentOS Linux release 7.3.1611 (Core)` ... But now error is `Your Linux kernel version 2.6.32-042stab116.2 is not supported for running docker. Please upgrade your kernel to 3.10.0 or newer.` ... can i update the kernel using `yum update kernel` ... ???? question is, will it delete everything on my server? its a live servers with a website running on it, i dont want to mess it up. – Umair Ayub Jun 22 '17 at 07:57
  • Yes. It's true you require min kernel version 3.10.0 or newer... Yes, be careful, if it's container environment, you could lose everything... as the kernel is shared b/w the containers. But, if it's VM env you could possibly do it with some techniques... like migrating your production server.. etc. – mohan08p Jun 22 '17 at 12:50
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    Warning to anyone following this advice, `-H tcp://0.0.0.0:2375` exposes an unencrypted root login over the network without any password. – BMitch Sep 12 '18 at 22:34
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    I saw docker not starting because of not enough space. – prayagupa Apr 23 '21 at 19:13
29

enter image description here

I just simply forget running the Docker Desktop in my mac, after running Docker Desktop, you will be good to go.

halfer
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Ping Woo
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23

This usually happened if you haven't stopped docker probably.

To resolve

service docker stop
cd /var/run/docker/libcontainerd
rm -rf containerd/*
rm -f docker-containerd.pid
service docker start

then "docker run...." to download your image and start the container as usual

Innocent Anigbo
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22

It's worked for me:

sudo systemctl unmask docker
sudo systemctl start docker
Rakibul Islam
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  • what does it do? – DJ_Stuffy_K Dec 02 '20 at 15:41
  • @DJ_Stuffy_K Masking a service prevents the service from being started manually or automatically, which is a stronger version of disable. Masking disables all symlinks of the specified unit file are removed. [For more details](https://adeshsuryan.in/what-is-docker-mask-and-how-to-unmask-docker-service/) – Rakibul Islam Dec 03 '20 at 05:21
17

I guess if you are using WSL with GUI, then you could just try

sudo /etc/init.d/docker start
Memphis Meng
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16

I had this problem after closing docker while pulling a container:

docker pull mongo

At first I was getting weird errors so I purged docker:

sudo apt-get purge docker.io

and reinstalled:

sudo apt-get install docker.io

All of this did nothing; I couldn't even run the "hello-world" container.

The correct fix, for me at least was:

systemctl unmask docker.service
systemctl unmask docker.socket
systemctl start docker.service

After this I could pull mongo and run "hello world".

J. Scott Elblein
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Jonathan Saylor
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15

This works fine for me..!

service docker restart
pkamb
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Augustine Jose
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7

I'm running on root and tried below, it worked:

service docker start

export DOCKER_HOST="tcp://0.0.0.0:2375"
Talha
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user11500628
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    If this works on your host, then you effectively have no root password. Anyone with access to that port can run commands as root on your host. – BMitch May 14 '19 at 20:27
7

It happens by the docker is not started yet.

Please check the docker status

$ sudo systemctl status docker

Then start and enable the docker and recheck the status

$ sudo systemctl start docker && sudo systemctl enable docker && sudo systemctl status docker

Thats it. Now the last step for checking the docker is working fine

$ sudo docker run hello-world
Karthikeyan Ganesan
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7

On Ubuntu 20.04 and Docker version 20.10.11,as a non root user, Running:

sudo service docker start

Then checking the status

sudo service docker status

Shows

* Docker is running

But trying any docker command such as

docker images

Shows the same error

Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at unix:///var/run/docker.sock. Is the docker daemon running?

Running the below solves it

sudo service docker restart

Restart solved it, while start did not

David Mwaura
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6

here's the solution which works for me on Linux

systemctl start docker.

Mohammad Heydari
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5

I also received the error message below, after installing the docker and running: docker run hello-world #Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at unix: /var/run/docker.sock. Is the docker daemon running?

Here's a solution, what worked for me. Environment

  • Windows 10 (Don't forget to enable on windows: Settings> Update and Security> Developer mode)
  • Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
  • Docker Desktop version 2.3.0.2 (45183)
    • Enable in Docker Desktop: Expose daemon on tcp: // localhost: 2375 without TLS
    • Docker Desktop must also be running (connected to Docker Hub ... just log in)

After installing ubuntu, update the repository

sudo apt-get update

To use a repository over HTTPS

sudo apt-get install apt-transport-https ca-certificates curl gnupg-agent software-properties-common

Add the official Docker GPG key:

curl -fsSL https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu/gpg | sudo apt-key add -

Make sure you now have the key with the fingerprint

sudo apt-key fingerprint 0EBFCD88

Update the repository

sudo apt-get update

Update the docker repository

sudo add-apt-repository "deb [arch = amd64] https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu $ (lsb_release -cs) stable "

Update the repository again

sudo apt-get update

Command to install the docker in version: 5: 18.09.9 ~ 3-0 ~ ubuntu-bionic

sudo apt-get install docker-ce = 5: 18.09.9 ~ 3-0 ~ ubuntu-bionic docker-ce-cli = 5: 18.09.9 ~ 3-0 ~ ubuntu-bionic containerd.io

Command to set the DOCKER_HOST

export DOCKER_HOST="tcp://0.0.0.0:2375"

Note: put the command above in your profile to start with the ubunto ex: echo "export DOCKER_HOST="tcp://0.0.0.0:2375"" >> ~/.bashrc

Add user to the docker group

sudo usermod -aG docker $USER

Restart ubuntu

(Close and open the ubuntu window again) or run:

source ~/.bashrc

Testing the installation (DO NOT use more sudo before docker commands (it will give an error), the user "root" has already been included in the docker group)

docker run hello-world

The message below should be displayed

Hello from Docker! This message shows that your installation appears to be working correctly.

Note: if it fails, run the command again:

export DOCKER_HOST="tcp://0.0.0.0:2375"

Reference: https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/ubuntu/ Session: INSTALL DOCKER ENGINE

#For other versions of the docker that can be installed with ubuntu, see the repository using the command below: apt-cache madison docker-ce

Then install the desired version of the docker:

sudo apt-get install docker-ce = <VERSION_STRING> docker-ce-cli = <VERSION_STRING> containerd.io
Renier
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ukaliko
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  • Hi @ukaliko, did you install "Docker Desktop" on windows? this instruction : https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/ubuntu/#installation-methods does not mention the "docker desktop" – soMuchToLearnAndShare Sep 06 '20 at 14:08
  • Hi @ukaliko, I decided to install the "docker desktop" on windows. and now all works. maybe in the future i will try to upgrade WSL to WSL2 and see if i can avoid the unsafe tcp 2375 port thing. – soMuchToLearnAndShare Sep 06 '20 at 14:57
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    just a small comment @ukaliko, ```sudo usermod -aG docker $ USER```, you had a space between ```$``` and ```USER``` – soMuchToLearnAndShare Sep 08 '20 at 09:09
  • Thanks for letting me know soMuchToLearnAndShare , here's the tip guys. soMuchToLearnAndShare sorry I just saw your comment. But I'm glad that everything worked! Show!...Vlw soMuchToLearnAndShare. Strong hug! – ukaliko Aug 26 '21 at 23:18
4

Make sure information in this path /etc/docker/daemon.json

{
  "registry-mirror": [
    "https://registry.docker-cn.com"
  ],
  "insecure-registries": [
    "192.168.199.100:5000"
  ]
}

delete

"insecure-registries": [
    "192.168.199.100:5000"
]

and runs well enter image description here

Jignesh Joisar
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chao chen
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4

I installed docker from snap repository. So I also had to start from snap (running Ubuntu).

sudo snap start docker

Otherwise you can also install it from their repositories.

Sir hennihau
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4

if you are using MAC so just type docker in finder it will automatically resolve.

Amit Kumar
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4

2022 Solution

This work by my side:

Add the below in your volume:

volumes:
 - "/var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock"

after that execute the below command

 sudo  chown 1000:1000 /var/run/docker.sock

Please note 1000 is the ID of the user. to know it execute the below command:

id
Abd Abughazaleh
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3

I was trying to run docker(just installed) in an instance of AWS when the message appears. I just write sudo service docker start and works fine for me.

Also see AWS with Docker

dmarquina
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3

This exception comes when the service of docker is not running or the logged in user dont have the permission to access docker and generally it comes in RedHat

Using below command should resolve the issue

sudo service docker start

enter image description here

Sumit Arora
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3

for linux run

sudo dockerd

However, if you use Docker Client for mac it won't work. try the below code

$socat TCP-LISTEN:2376,reuseaddr,fork UNIX-CLIENT:/var/run/docker.sock

https://forums.docker.com/t/using-pycharm-docker-plugin-with-docker-beta/8617/9

That workaround opens port 2376 to the world... as TLS isn't enabled, this is a bad idea as anyone on the same network can hijack your docker daemon

Kaushik J
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2

I had the same problem for gitlab CI running node:lts image:

  • I just restarted the docker daemon and restart the container, it worked for me.
2

use this in ubuntu export DOCKER_HOST=tcp://localhost:2375

  • 1
    If this works on your system, then you effectively have no root password. Anyone with access to that port can run commands as root on the host. – BMitch May 14 '19 at 20:25
2

export DOCKER_HOST=tcp://localhost:2375 is perfect for anyone who doesn't have sudo access and the user doesn't have access to unix:///var/run/docker.sock

  • 2
    This is also useful for anyone that doesn't normally have root access but would like to easily become root on your host. Anyone with access to that port can run commands as root. – BMitch May 14 '19 at 20:28
  • @BMitch care to elaborate? – Fran Marzoa Aug 02 '19 at 10:50
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    @FranMarzoa from another user that you do not trust, or even another host, you can run any `docker run` command with the root user inside the container, privileged, with host namespaces on pid and network, and mounting the root filesystem ok the box. – BMitch Aug 02 '19 at 12:46
2

None of the current answers worked for my version of this error. I'm using the desktop version of Ubuntu 18. The following two commands fixed the issue.

sudo snap connect docker:home :home

sudo snap start docker

Eric
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2

In root mode, run the command systemctl start docker

And afterwards, you can check the status by running systemctl status docker

bluegrounds
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Aditya
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2

I had this problem when docker was started after my terminal was started. Restarting the terminal or the process hosting the terminal (such as vscode) resolved the issue.

GaTechThomas
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2

If you are trying to install docker with wsl 2 linux subsystem in windows, please read this document and check whether this command is executed:

wsl.exe --set-version (distro name) 2

and also check in your Windows OS docker->settings->Resources->Enable integration with additional distros: are checked on and restarted.

J. Scott Elblein
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Unni
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1

I faced same issue on Linux when I installed docker using yum (yum install docker).

Resolution: download docker binary from official site: docker install, unpack and follow the installation steps.

Denys
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1

It could be related to no disk space left on the hard drive. Make sure you have space left on the device, Docker can't start up if there isn't any space left.

basickarl
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1

This might be a bit late for you but hope it will help someone find their way through the docker jungles. The problem might be coming from a tcp port binding issue verify if this file exists

/etc/systemd/system/docker.service.d

this is the default UNIX socket listening override file. The file might actauly be empty, but i find that the fact that it exists sometimes causes some headaches like what you faced. if it exists 1. then 2. if not just go straight to 2.

1. $ sudo rm -rf /etc/systemd/system/docker.service.d

2. $ sudo systemctl deamon-reload

I find that some of the recommendations here overlook the error being in the actual daemon failing to load

A good friend when playing with docker is

$ systemctl status docker.service
Ngodza
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For those fresh installing & trying to running docker on RaspberryPi (RPi) like me, I needed to reboot my RPi 4B+ to resolve this issue and actually run the docker daemon.

By the time of writing this contribution this great manual does mention the necessity to reboot RPi, but only after setting "Non root-user to the Docker Group".

HTH, should someone miss this like me..

Sold Out
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0

This worked for me, It might just work for you if you are using Ubuntu 16 or 18 (14 may also work). Easy to give a try:

Go to Ubuntu Software, type in Docker. Uninstall docker (108 mb) if it is preinstalled there. Install docker Now run the commands and see if the same error comes

The error:

enter image description here

After doing the above steps. enter image description here

As you can see, it worked:)

0

For me the solution was to simply make sure I had installed the correct Docker package. For example, for Ubuntu the depreciated packages are:

  • docker
  • docker-engine
  • docker.io
  • containerd
  • runc

For installation check https://docs.docker.com. Instructions are provided for Ubuntu, CentOS, Debian and Fedora at the time of writing.

RikH
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  • You missed some steps: follow this link for signing the repo. https://medium.com/@sebagomez/installing-the-docker-client-on-ubuntus-windows-subsystem-for-linux-612b392a44c4 – Robert Mar 27 '19 at 00:17
  • @Robert, above I also refer to the official docs.docker to get the PGP key. This is more secure than users copying it from this site or medium. – RikH Mar 27 '19 at 08:50
  • I tried the ubuntu steps and those are not working. Need the signing process and the link I provided. – Robert Mar 27 '19 at 12:51
  • @Robert, thanks I have removed my incomplete instructions and instead just refer to the official documentation. – RikH Mar 27 '19 at 13:20
0

For everyone who is having problems with Docker at the time of installation.

An error pointing to a failure in the docker service, do the commands below.

$ sudo apt update

$ sudo apt install apt-transport-https ca-certificates curl gnupg2 software-properties-common

$ curl -fsSL https://download.docker.com/linux/debian/gpg | sudo apt-key add -

$ sudo add-apt-repository "deb [arch=amd64] https://download.docker.com/linux/debian $(lsb_release -cs) stable"

$ sudo apt update

$ apt-cache policy docker-ce

$ sudo apt install docker-ce
Hisham Javed
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0

I had the same issue. In my case, VPN was the culprit. Turning off the VPN helped with the successful installation.

0

Just adding to the knowledge base. I found this video helpful. I do not have DOCKER_HOST defined. I do have a /etc/wsl.conf that has:

[automount]
root = /
options = "metadata"

After Restarting a few times docker hello-world worked.

Ray Tayek
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0

I didn't see this solution mentioned, so I'll post it in case it might help someone. I was running into this error on my MacOS machine. The reason was that I had the DOCKER_HOST environment variable set in my dotfiles. Unsetting it through unset DOCKER_HOST did the trick. I found the tip in the official docker for Mac documentation: https://docs.docker.com/desktop/mac/troubleshoot/#workarounds-for-common-problems.

deivid
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-1

This issue can be resolved permanently by running 1. systemctl enable docker 2. service docker start

-1

Use docker start <your_container_name>

Then connect to database by using mssql -u <yourUsername> -p <yourPassword>

If you get an error in the first step then the docker is running and go with the second step.

Note: I use Mac as my primary OS and this might be the same answer for Unix based OSs. If not! Sorry in advance.

Christoph Kluge
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Pavankumar AN
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-2

Just restarting the system worked for me. It might be a temporary issue

  • I found I was actually in a shell inside the docker image! Just open another terminal and type `docker ps` to see what images are running. – RufusVS Jan 05 '22 at 19:49
  • This was useful for me I had updated Docker and some terms and conditions was changed At loggin, Docker was relaunched and request me permissions with my password and accept the new terms and conditions – Manuel Alanis Feb 15 '22 at 20:51