# Port bindings Port bindings is done in two parts. Firstly, by providing a list of ports to open inside the container in the `Client().create_container()` method. Bindings are declared in the `host_config` parameter. ```python container_id = cli.create_container( 'busybox', 'ls', ports=[1111, 2222], host_config=cli.create_host_config(port_bindings={ 1111: 4567, 2222: None }) ) ``` You can limit the host address on which the port will be exposed like such: ```python cli.create_host_config(port_bindings={1111: ('127.0.0.1', 4567)}) ``` Or without host port assignment: ```python cli.create_host_config(port_bindings={1111: ('127.0.0.1',)}) ``` If you wish to use UDP instead of TCP (default), you need to declare ports as such in both the config and host config: ```python container_id = cli.create_container( 'busybox', 'ls', ports=[(1111, 'udp'), 2222], host_config=cli.create_host_config(port_bindings={ '1111/udp': 4567, 2222: None }) ) ``` To bind multiple host ports to a single container port, use the following syntax: ```python cli.create_host_config(port_bindings={ 1111: [1234, 4567] }) ``` You can also bind multiple IPs to a single container port: ```python cli.create_host_config(port_bindings={ 1111: [ ('192.168.0.100', 1234), ('192.168.0.101', 1234) ] }) ```