command: docker stack ls aliases: list short: List stacks long: |- Lists the stacks. > **Note** > > This is a cluster management command, and must be executed on a swarm > manager node. To learn about managers and workers, refer to the > [Swarm mode section](https://docs.docker.com/engine/swarm/) in the > documentation. usage: docker stack ls [OPTIONS] pname: docker stack plink: docker_stack.yaml options: - option: all-namespaces value_type: bool default_value: "false" description: List stacks from all Kubernetes namespaces deprecated: true experimental: false experimentalcli: false kubernetes: true swarm: false - option: format value_type: string description: Pretty-print stacks using a Go template deprecated: false experimental: false experimentalcli: false kubernetes: false swarm: false - option: namespace value_type: stringSlice default_value: '[]' description: Kubernetes namespaces to use deprecated: true experimental: false experimentalcli: false kubernetes: true swarm: false inherited_options: - option: kubeconfig value_type: string description: Kubernetes config file deprecated: true experimental: false experimentalcli: false kubernetes: true swarm: false - option: orchestrator value_type: string description: Orchestrator to use (swarm|kubernetes|all) deprecated: true experimental: false experimentalcli: false kubernetes: false swarm: false examples: |- The following command shows all stacks and some additional information: ```console $ docker stack ls ID SERVICES ORCHESTRATOR myapp 2 Kubernetes vossibility-stack 6 Swarm ``` ### Formatting The formatting option (`--format`) pretty-prints stacks using a Go template. Valid placeholders for the Go template are listed below: | Placeholder | Description | |-----------------|--------------------| | `.Name` | Stack name | | `.Services` | Number of services | | `.Orchestrator` | Orchestrator name | | `.Namespace` | Namespace | When using the `--format` option, the `stack ls` command either outputs the data exactly as the template declares or, when using the `table` directive, includes column headers as well. The following example uses a template without headers and outputs the `Name` and `Services` entries separated by a colon (`:`) for all stacks: ```console $ docker stack ls --format "{{.Name}}: {{.Services}}" web-server: 1 web-cache: 4 ``` deprecated: false min_api_version: "1.25" experimental: false experimentalcli: false kubernetes: false swarm: false