3.1
(versions/library-3.1/Dockerfile)3.2
(versions/library-3.2/Dockerfile)3.3
(versions/library-3.3/Dockerfile)3.4
,latest
(versions/library-3.4/Dockerfile)edge
(versions/library-edge/Dockerfile)
For more information about this image and its history, please see the relevant manifest file (library/alpine
). This image is updated via pull requests to the docker-library/official-images
GitHub repo.
For detailed information about the virtual/transfer sizes and individual layers of each of the above supported tags, please see the repos/alpine/tag-details.md
file in the docker-library/repo-info
GitHub repo.
Alpine Linux is a Linux distribution built around musl libc and BusyBox. The image is only 5 MB in size and has access to a package repository that is much more complete than other BusyBox based images. This makes Alpine Linux a great image base for utilities and even production applications. Read more about Alpine Linux here and you can see how their mantra fits in right at home with Docker images.
Use like you would any other base image:
FROM alpine:3.3
RUN apk add --no-cache mysql-client
ENTRYPOINT ["mysql"]
This example has a virtual image size of only 16 MB. Compare that to our good friend Ubuntu:
FROM ubuntu:14.04
RUN apt-get update \
&& apt-get install -y mysql-client \
&& rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
ENTRYPOINT ["mysql"]
This yields us a virtual image size of about 232 MB image.
This image is well documented. Check out the documentation at Viewdocs.
This image is officially supported on Docker version 1.12.2.
Support for older versions (down to 1.6) is provided on a best-effort basis.
Please see the Docker installation documentation for details on how to upgrade your Docker daemon.
If you have any problems with or questions about this image, please contact us through a GitHub issue. If the issue is related to a CVE, please check for a cve-tracker
issue on the official-images
repository first.
You can also reach many of the official image maintainers via the #docker-library
IRC channel on Freenode.
You are invited to contribute new features, fixes, or updates, large or small; we are always thrilled to receive pull requests, and do our best to process them as fast as we can.
Before you start to code, we recommend discussing your plans through a GitHub issue, especially for more ambitious contributions. This gives other contributors a chance to point you in the right direction, give you feedback on your design, and help you find out if someone else is working on the same thing.
Documentation for this image is stored in the alpine/
directory of the docker-library/docs
GitHub repo. Be sure to familiarize yourself with the repository's README.md
file before attempting a pull request.