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Alexandre Jardin
Alexandre Jardin

Posted on • Originally published at ajardin.fr on

Garbage collector for Docker

If you are heavily using Docker on your local environment, it’s common to have a lot of dangling images, stopped containers, orphans volumes, etc. And if you have multiple environments, it can be challenging to clean only useless things without impacting what you want to keep, like databases, for example.

Before executing something, please be sure to understand what it implies!

Manual cleaning

It’s possible to remove images manually, containers and volumes.

You can even use the built-in version of these three commands.

But what if you want to remove everything except some specific elements?

Advanced cleaning

Spotify teams provide a garbage collector that can run as a scheduled task with native whitelist support. Furthermore, it can run through a Docker container! You can find all details about the usage on GitHub. The only thing missing from that tool, in my opinion, is the volumes cleanup.

That’s why I decided to create a small script to implement a workaround until that feature is officially supported (maybe once this pull request will be merged). The script is only composed of four main steps.

1. Check if there are exclusion patterns
2. Request confirmation before going further
These two steps would prevent any unwanted loss if we forgot to configure exclusion patterns or if we accidentally call the script.

3. Remove all unused images and containers
The source code of the Spotify garbage collector is downloaded from GitHub, and the corresponding Docker image is built from it. After that, a container is run with all exclusion patterns passed as environment variables. And all unused images and containers are removed, except those whitelisted.

4. Remove all dangling volumes
All dangling volumes, except those whitelisted, are removed. That last part is only executed if the -v argument is passed to the script; otherwise, the treatment is skipped.

And finally, here is my custom version of the Docker garbage collector.

Thanks for reading!

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