docs/hello-world
Tianon Gravi acb7edfd20 Update "Tags" section to be labelled "Supported tags" instead, to make it clear that this isn't the full list of tags, but is instead the list of tags that are currently supported for active usage 2014-09-15 17:29:16 -06:00
..
.keep adding some directories for andrew to dump the short and long desc in 2014-07-31 15:09:43 -06:00
README-content.md Update/fix hello-world description 2014-09-09 15:33:45 -06:00
README-short.txt pulled descriptions from registry.hub 2014-08-14 16:26:19 -06:00
README.md Update "Tags" section to be labelled "Supported tags" instead, to make it clear that this isn't the full list of tags, but is instead the list of tags that are currently supported for active usage 2014-09-15 17:29:16 -06:00
logo.png logos for all the things 2014-08-06 16:37:56 -06:00
update.sh Add simple script to auto-update the hello-world description 2014-09-09 15:36:42 -06:00

README.md

Supported tags and respective Dockerfile links

Example output

$ docker run hello-world
Hello from Docker.
This message shows that your installation appears to be working correctly.

To generate this message, Docker took the following steps:
 1. The Docker client contacted the Docker daemon.
 2. The Docker daemon pulled the "hello-world" image from the Docker Hub.
    (Assuming it was not already locally available.)
 3. The Docker daemon created a new container from that image which runs the
    executable that produces the output you are currently reading.
 4. The Docker daemon streamed that output to the Docker client, which sent it
    to your terminal.

To try something more ambitious, you can run an Ubuntu container with:
 $ docker run -it ubuntu bash

For more examples and ideas, visit:
 http://docs.docker.com/userguide/

$ docker images hello-world
REPOSITORY   TAG     IMAGE ID      VIRTUAL SIZE
hello-world  latest  565a9d68a73f  922 B

User Feedback

Issues

If you have any problems with, or questions about this image, please contact us through a GitHub issue or via the IRC channel #docker-library on Freenode.

Contributing

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.