container-debug

Debug running Docker containers and Compose services. Use when inspecting container logs, exec-ing into running containers, diagnosing networking issues, checking resource usage, debugging multi-stage builds, troubleshooting health checks, or fixing Compose service dependencies.

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Install skill "container-debug" with this command: npx skills add gitgoodordietrying/container-debug

Container Debug

Debug running Docker containers and Compose services. Covers logs, exec, networking, resource inspection, multi-stage builds, health checks, and common failure patterns.

When to Use

  • Container exits immediately or crashes on start
  • Application inside container behaves differently than on host
  • Containers can't communicate with each other
  • Container is using too much memory or CPU
  • Multi-stage Docker build produces unexpected results
  • Health checks are failing
  • Compose services start in wrong order or can't connect

Container Logs

View and filter logs

# Last 100 lines
docker logs --tail 100 my-container

# Follow (stream) logs
docker logs -f my-container

# Follow with timestamps
docker logs -f -t my-container

# Logs since a time
docker logs --since 30m my-container
docker logs --since "2026-02-03T10:00:00" my-container

# Logs between times
docker logs --since 1h --until 30m my-container

# Compose: logs for all services
docker compose logs -f

# Compose: logs for specific service
docker compose logs -f api db

# Redirect logs to file for analysis
docker logs my-container > container.log 2>&1

# Separate stdout and stderr
docker logs my-container > stdout.log 2> stderr.log

Inspect log driver

# Check what log driver a container uses
docker inspect --format='{{.HostConfig.LogConfig.Type}}' my-container

# If json-file driver, find the actual log file
docker inspect --format='{{.LogPath}}' my-container

# Check log file size
ls -lh $(docker inspect --format='{{.LogPath}}' my-container)

Exec Into Containers

Interactive shell

# Bash (most common)
docker exec -it my-container bash

# If bash isn't available (Alpine, distroless)
docker exec -it my-container sh

# As root (even if container runs as non-root user)
docker exec -u root -it my-container bash

# With specific environment variables
docker exec -e DEBUG=1 -it my-container bash

# Run a single command (no interactive shell)
docker exec my-container cat /etc/os-release
docker exec my-container ls -la /app/
docker exec my-container env

Debug a crashed container

# Container exited? Check exit code
docker inspect --format='{{.State.ExitCode}}' my-container
docker inspect --format='{{.State.Error}}' my-container

# Common exit codes:
# 0   = clean exit
# 1   = application error
# 137 = killed (OOM or docker kill) — 128 + signal 9
# 139 = segfault — 128 + signal 11
# 143 = terminated (SIGTERM) — 128 + signal 15

# Start a stopped container to debug it
docker start -ai my-container

# Or override the entrypoint to get a shell
docker run -it --entrypoint sh my-image

# Copy files out of a stopped container
docker cp my-container:/app/error.log ./error.log
docker cp my-container:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf ./nginx.conf

Debug without a shell (distroless / scratch images)

# Use docker cp to extract files
docker cp my-container:/app/config.json ./

# Use nsenter to get a shell in the container's namespace (Linux)
PID=$(docker inspect --format='{{.State.Pid}}' my-container)
nsenter -t $PID -m -u -i -n -p -- /bin/sh

# Attach a debug container to the same namespace
docker run -it --pid=container:my-container --net=container:my-container busybox sh

# Docker Desktop: use debug extension
docker debug my-container

Networking

Inspect container networking

# Show container IP address
docker inspect -f '{{range .NetworkSettings.Networks}}{{.IPAddress}}{{end}}' my-container

# Show all network details
docker inspect -f '{{json .NetworkSettings.Networks}}' my-container | jq

# List all networks
docker network ls

# Inspect a network (see all connected containers)
docker network inspect bridge
docker network inspect my-compose-network

# Show port mappings
docker port my-container

Test connectivity between containers

# From inside container A, reach container B
docker exec container-a ping container-b
docker exec container-a curl http://container-b:8080/health

# DNS resolution inside container
docker exec my-container nslookup db
docker exec my-container cat /etc/resolv.conf
docker exec my-container cat /etc/hosts

# Test if port is reachable
docker exec my-container nc -zv db 5432
docker exec my-container wget -qO- http://api:3000/health

# If curl/ping not available in container, install or use a debug container:
docker run --rm --network container:my-container curlimages/curl curl -s http://localhost:8080

Common networking issues

# "Connection refused" between containers
# 1. Check the app binds to 0.0.0.0, not 127.0.0.1
docker exec my-container netstat -tlnp
# If listening on 127.0.0.1 — fix the app config

# 2. Check containers are on the same network
docker inspect -f '{{json .NetworkSettings.Networks}}' container-a | jq 'keys'
docker inspect -f '{{json .NetworkSettings.Networks}}' container-b | jq 'keys'

# 3. Check published ports vs exposed ports
# EXPOSE only documents, it doesn't publish
# Use -p host:container to publish

# "Name not found" — DNS not resolving container names
# Container names resolve only on user-defined networks, NOT the default bridge
docker network create my-net
docker run --network my-net --name api my-api-image
docker run --network my-net --name db postgres
# Now "api" and "db" resolve to each other

Capture network traffic

# tcpdump inside a container
docker exec my-container tcpdump -i eth0 -n port 8080

# If tcpdump not available, use a sidecar
docker run --rm --net=container:my-container nicolaka/netshoot tcpdump -i eth0 -n

# netshoot has: tcpdump, curl, nslookup, netstat, iperf, etc.
docker run --rm --net=container:my-container nicolaka/netshoot bash

Resource Usage

Real-time stats

# All containers
docker stats

# Specific containers
docker stats api db redis

# One-shot (no streaming)
docker stats --no-stream

# Formatted output
docker stats --format "table {{.Name}}\t{{.CPUPerc}}\t{{.MemUsage}}\t{{.NetIO}}"

Memory investigation

# Check memory limit
docker inspect --format='{{.HostConfig.Memory}}' my-container
# 0 means unlimited

# Check if container was OOM-killed
docker inspect --format='{{.State.OOMKilled}}' my-container

# Memory usage breakdown (Linux cgroups)
docker exec my-container cat /sys/fs/cgroup/memory.current 2>/dev/null || \
docker exec my-container cat /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/memory.usage_in_bytes

# Process memory inside container
docker exec my-container ps aux --sort=-%mem | head -10
docker exec my-container top -bn1

Disk usage

# Overall Docker disk usage
docker system df
docker system df -v

# Container filesystem size
docker inspect --format='{{.SizeRw}}' my-container

# Find large files inside container
docker exec my-container du -sh /* 2>/dev/null | sort -rh | head -10
docker exec my-container find /tmp -size +10M -type f

# Check for log file bloat
docker exec my-container ls -lh /var/log/

Dockerfile Debugging

Multi-stage build debugging

# Build up to a specific stage
docker build --target builder -t my-app:builder .

# Inspect what's in the builder stage
docker run --rm -it my-app:builder sh
docker run --rm my-app:builder ls -la /app/
docker run --rm my-app:builder cat /app/package.json

# Check which files made it to the final image
docker run --rm my-image ls -laR /app/

# Build with no cache (fresh build)
docker build --no-cache -t my-app .

# Build with progress output
docker build --progress=plain -t my-app .

Image inspection

# Show image layers (size of each)
docker history my-image
docker history --no-trunc my-image

# Inspect image config (entrypoint, cmd, env, ports)
docker inspect my-image | jq '.[0].Config | {Cmd, Entrypoint, Env, ExposedPorts, WorkingDir}'

# Compare two images
docker history image-a --format "{{.Size}}\t{{.CreatedBy}}" > layers-a.txt
docker history image-b --format "{{.Size}}\t{{.CreatedBy}}" > layers-b.txt
diff layers-a.txt layers-b.txt

# Find what changed between builds
docker diff my-container
# A = added, C = changed, D = deleted

Health Checks

Define and debug health checks

# In Dockerfile
HEALTHCHECK --interval=30s --timeout=10s --start-period=60s --retries=3 \
  CMD curl -f http://localhost:8080/health || exit 1
# Check health status
docker inspect --format='{{.State.Health.Status}}' my-container
# "healthy", "unhealthy", or "starting"

# See health check log (last 5 results)
docker inspect --format='{{json .State.Health}}' my-container | jq

# Run health check manually
docker exec my-container curl -f http://localhost:8080/health

# Override health check at run time
docker run --health-cmd "curl -f http://localhost:8080/health || exit 1" \
           --health-interval 10s my-image

# Disable health check
docker run --no-healthcheck my-image

Docker Compose Debugging

Service startup issues

# Check service status
docker compose ps

# See why a service failed
docker compose logs failed-service

# Start with verbose output
docker compose up --build 2>&1 | tee compose.log

# Start a single service (with dependencies)
docker compose up db

# Start without dependencies
docker compose up --no-deps api

# Recreate containers from scratch
docker compose up --force-recreate --build

# Check effective config (after variable substitution)
docker compose config

Service dependency and startup order

# docker-compose.yml
services:
  api:
    depends_on:
      db:
        condition: service_healthy
      redis:
        condition: service_started

  db:
    image: postgres:16
    healthcheck:
      test: ["CMD-SHELL", "pg_isready -U postgres"]
      interval: 5s
      timeout: 5s
      retries: 5

  redis:
    image: redis:7
    healthcheck:
      test: ["CMD", "redis-cli", "ping"]
      interval: 5s
      timeout: 5s
      retries: 5
# Wait for a service to be healthy before running commands
docker compose up -d db
docker compose exec db pg_isready  # Polls until ready
docker compose up -d api

Cleanup

# Remove stopped containers
docker container prune

# Remove unused images
docker image prune

# Remove everything unused (containers, images, networks, volumes)
docker system prune -a

# Remove volumes too (WARNING: deletes data)
docker system prune -a --volumes

# Remove dangling build cache
docker builder prune

Tips

  • docker logs -f is the first thing to check. Most container failures are visible in the logs.
  • Exit code 137 means OOM-killed. Increase the memory limit or fix the memory leak.
  • Apps inside containers must bind to 0.0.0.0, not 127.0.0.1. Localhost inside a container is isolated.
  • Container names only resolve via DNS on user-defined networks, not the default bridge. Always create a custom network for multi-container setups.
  • docker exec only works on running containers. For crashed containers, use docker cp to extract logs or override the entrypoint with docker run --entrypoint sh.
  • nicolaka/netshoot is the Swiss Army knife for container networking. It has every networking tool pre-installed.
  • --progress=plain during builds shows full command output, which is essential for debugging build failures.
  • Health checks with start-period prevent false unhealthy status during slow application startup.

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container-debug | V50.AI