The Docker daemon binds to a Unix socket instead of a TCP port. By default that Unix socket is owned by the user root
and other users can only access it using sudo
. The Docker daemon always runs as the root
user.
If you don’t want to preface the docker
command with sudo
, create a Unix group called docker
and add users to it. When the Docker daemon starts, it creates a Unix socket accessible by members of the docker
group.
Warning
The
docker
group grants privileges equivalent to theroot
user. For details on how this impacts security in your system, see Docker Daemon Attack Surface.
Note:
To run Docker without root privileges, see Run the Docker daemon as a non-root user (Rootless mode).
To create the docker
group and add your user:
Create the
docker
group.$ sudo groupadd docker
Add your user to the
docker
group.$ sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
Log out and log back in so that your group membership is re-evaluated.
If testing on a virtual machine, it may be necessary to restart the virtual machine for changes to take effect.
On a desktop Linux environment such as X Windows, log out of your session completely and then log back in.
On Linux, you can also run the following command to activate the changes to groups:
$ newgrp docker
Verify that you can run
docker
commands withoutsudo
.$ docker run hello-world
This command downloads a test image and runs it in a container. When the container runs, it prints a message and exits.
If you initially ran Docker CLI commands using
sudo
before adding your user to thedocker
group, you may see the following error, which indicates that your~/.docker/
directory was created with incorrect permissions due to thesudo
commands.WARNING: Error loading config file: /home/user/.docker/config.json - stat /home/user/.docker/config.json: permission denied
To fix this problem, either remove the
~/.docker/
directory (it is recreated automatically, but any custom settings are lost), or change its ownership and permissions using the following commands:$ sudo chown "$USER":"$USER" /home/"$USER"/.docker -R $ sudo chmod g+rwx "$HOME/.docker" -R
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