docs/network/index.md

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---
title: Networking overview
description: How networking works from the container's point of view
keywords: networking, container, standalone
redirect_from:
- /engine/userguide/networking/configure-dns/
- /engine/userguide/networking/default_network/configure-dns/
- /engine/userguide/networking/default_network/binding/
- /engine/userguide/networking/default_network/container-communication/
- /engine/userguide/networking/
- /engine/userguide/networking/dockernetworks/
- /articles/networking/
- /config/containers/container-networking/
---
Container networking refers to the ability for containers to connect to and
communicate with each other, or to non-Docker workloads.
A container has no information about what kind of network it's attached to,
or whether their peers are also Docker workloads or not.
A container only sees a network interface with an IP address,
a gateway, a routing table, DNS services, and other networking details.
That is, unless the container uses the `none` network driver.
This page describes networking from the point of view of the container.
This page describes the concepts around container networking.
This page doesn't describe OS-specific details about how Docker networks work.
For information about how Docker manipulates `iptables` rules on Linux,
see [Docker and iptables](iptables.md).
## Published ports
By default, when you create or run a container using `docker create` or `docker run`,
the container doesn't expose any of its ports to the outside world.
To make a port available to services outside of Docker,
or to Docker containers running on a different network,
use the `--publish` or `-p` flag.
This creates a firewall rule in the container,
mapping a container port to a port on the Docker host to the outside world.
Here are some examples:
| Flag value | Description |
| ------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `-p 8080:80` | Map TCP port 80 in the container to port `8080` on the Docker host. |
| `-p 192.168.1.100:8080:80` | Map TCP port 80 in the container to port `8080` on the Docker host for connections to host IP `192.168.1.100`. |
| `-p 8080:80/udp` | Map UDP port 80 in the container to port `8080` on the Docker host. |
| `-p 8080:80/tcp -p 8080:80/udp` | Map TCP port 80 in the container to TCP port `8080` on the Docker host, and map UDP port `80` in the container to UDP port `8080` on the Docker host. |
> **Important**
>
> Publishing container ports is insecure by default. Meaning, when you publish
> a container's ports it becomes available not only to the Docker host, but to
> the outside world as well.
>
> To publish a container's port and only expose it to the Docker host, include
> the localhost IP address in the port mapping command. On most systems, that
> IP is `127.0.0.1`.
>
> ```console
> $ docker run -p 127.0.0.1:8080:80 nginx
> ```
{: .important }
## IP address and hostname
By default, the container gets an IP address for every Docker network it attaches to.
A container receives an IP address out of the IP pool of the network it attaches to.
The Docker daemon effectively acts as a DHCP server for each container.
Each network also has a default subnet mask and gateway.
When a container starts, it can only attach to a single network, using the `--network` flag.
You can connect a running container to multiple networks using the `docker network connect` command.
When you start a container using the `--network` flag,
you can specify the IP address for the container on that network using the `--ip` or `--ip6` flags.
When you connect an existing container to a different network using `docker network connect`,
you can use the `--ip` or `--ip6` flags on that command
to specify the container's IP address on the additional network.
In the same way, a container's hostname defaults to be the container's ID in Docker.
You can override the hostname using `--hostname`.
When connecting to an existing network using `docker network connect`,
you can use the `--alias` flag to specify an additional network alias for the container on that network.
## DNS services
By default, containers inherit the DNS settings of the host, as defined in the `/etc/resolv.conf` configuration file.
Containers that attach to the default `bridge` network receive a copy of this file.
Containers that attach to a
[custom network](network-tutorial-standalone.md#use-user-defined-bridge-networks)
use Docker's embedded DNS server.
The embedded DNS server forwards external DNS lookups to the DNS servers configured on the host.
Custom hosts, defined in `/etc/hosts` on the host machine, aren't inherited by containers.
To pass additional hosts into container, refer to
[add entries to container hosts file](../engine/reference/commandline/run.md#add-host)
in the `docker run` reference documentation.
You can override these settings on a per-container basis.
| Flag | Description |
| -------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `--dns` | The IP address of a DNS server. To specify multiple DNS servers, use multiple `--dns` flags. If the container can't reach any of the IP addresses you specify, it uses Google's public DNS server at `8.8.8.8`. This allows containers to resolve internet domains. |
| `--dns-search` | A DNS search domain to search non-fully-qualified hostnames. To specify multiple DNS search prefixes, use multiple `--dns-search` flags. |
| `--dns-opt` | A key-value pair representing a DNS option and its value. See your operating system's documentation for `resolv.conf` for valid options. |
| `--hostname` | The hostname a container uses for itself. Defaults to the container's ID if not specified. |
## Proxy server
If your container needs to use a proxy server, see
[Use a proxy server](proxy.md).