- Windows Server 2019 Install Docker Offline
- Install Docker Windows Server 2019 Offline
- Docker Windows Server 2016 Install
- Docker Windows Server 2019 Install
Install Docker Enterprise Edition for Windows Server 2016 Estimated reading time: 4 minutes Docker Enterprise Edition for Windows Server 2016 (Docker EE) enables native Docker containers on Windows Server 2016. The Docker EE installation package includes everything you need to run Docker on Windows Server 2016.
Today, Microsoft is announcing general availability of Windows Server 2016 at the Ignite conference in Atlanta. For Windows developers and IT-pros, the most exciting new Windows feature is containers, and containers on Windows Server 2016 are powered by Docker. Install Compose on Windows Server. Follow these instructions if you are running the Docker daemon and client directly on Microsoft Windows Server and want to install Docker Compose. Start an “elevated” PowerShell (run it as administrator). Search for PowerShell, right-click, and choose Run as administrator.
-->Applies to: SQL Server (all supported versions) - Linux
Note
The examples shown below use the docker.exe but most of these commands also work with Podman. It provides the CLI similar to Docker container Engine. You can read more about podman here.
In this quickstart, you use Docker to pull and run the SQL Server 2017 container image, mssql-server-linux. Then connect with sqlcmd to create your first database and run queries.
Tip
If you want to run SQL Server 2019 containers, see the SQL Server 2019 version of this article.
Note
Starting with SQL Server 2019 CU3, Ubuntu 18.04 is supported.
In this quickstart, you use Docker to pull and run the SQL Server 2019 container image, mssql-server. Then connect with sqlcmd to create your first database and run queries.
Tip
This quickstart creates SQL Server 2019 containers. If you prefer to create SQL Server 2017 containers, see the SQL Server 2017 version of this article.
This image consists of SQL Server running on Linux based on Ubuntu 18.04. It can be used with the Docker Engine 1.8+ on Linux or on Docker for Mac/Windows. This quickstart specifically focuses on using the SQL Server on Linux image. The Windows image is not covered, but you can learn more about it on the mssql-server-windows-developer Docker Hub page.
Prerequisites
- Docker Engine 1.8+ on any supported Linux distribution or Docker for Mac/Windows. For more information, see Install Docker.
- Docker overlay2 storage driver. This is the default for most users. If you find that you are not using this storage provider and need to change, see the instructions and warnings in the docker documentation for configuring overlay2.
- Minimum of 2 GB of disk space.
- Minimum of 2 GB of RAM.
- System requirements for SQL Server on Linux.
Pull and run the 2017 container image
Before starting the following steps, make sure that you have selected your preferred shell (bash, PowerShell, or cmd) at the top of this article.
Pull the SQL Server 2017 Linux container image from Microsoft Container Registry.
Tip
If you want to run SQL Server 2019 containers, see the SQL Server 2019 version of this article.
The previous command pulls the latest SQL Server 2017 container image. If you want to pull a specific image, you add a colon and the tag name (for example,
mcr.microsoft.com/mssql/server:2017-GA-ubuntu
). To see all available images, see the mssql-server Docker hub page.For the bash commands in this article,
sudo
is used. On macOS,sudo
might not be required. On Linux, if you do not want to usesudo
to run Docker, you can configure a docker group and add users to that group. For more information, see Post-installation steps for Linux.To run the container image with Docker, you can use the following command from a bash shell (Linux/macOS) or elevated PowerShell command prompt.
Note
If you are using PowerShell Core, replace the double quotes with single quotes.
Note
The password should follow the SQL Server default password policy, otherwise the container can not setup SQL server and will stop working. By default, the password must be at least 8 characters long and contain characters from three of the following four sets: Uppercase letters, Lowercase letters, Base 10 digits, and Symbols. You can examine the error log by executing the docker logs command.
By default, this creates a container with the Developer edition of SQL Server 2017. The process for running production editions in containers is slightly different. For more information, see Run production container images.
The following table provides a description of the parameters in the previous
docker run
example:Parameter Description -e 'ACCEPT_EULA=Y' Set the ACCEPT_EULA variable to any value to confirm your acceptance of the End-User Licensing Agreement. Required setting for the SQL Server image. -e 'SA_PASSWORD=<YourStrong@Passw0rd>' Specify your own strong password that is at least 8 characters and meets the SQL Server password requirements. Required setting for the SQL Server image. -p 1433:1433 Map a TCP port on the host environment (first value) with a TCP port in the container (second value). In this example, SQL Server is listening on TCP 1433 in the container and this is exposed to the port, 1433, on the host. --name sql1 Specify a custom name for the container rather than a randomly generated one. If you run more than one container, you cannot reuse this same name. -h sql1 Used to explicitly set the container hostname, if you don't specify it, it defaults to the container ID which is a randomly generated system GUID. -d Run the container in the background (daemon) mcr.microsoft.com/mssql/server:2017-latest The SQL Server 2017 Linux container image. To view your Docker containers, use the
docker ps
command.You should see output similar to the following screenshot:
If the STATUS column shows a status of Up, then SQL Server is running in the container and listening on the port specified in the PORTS column. If the STATUS column for your SQL Server container shows Exited, see the Troubleshooting section of the configuration guide.
The -h
(host name) parameter as discussed above, changes the internal name of the container to a custom value. This is the name you'll see returned in the following Transact-SQL query:
Setting -h
and --name
to the same value is a good way to easily identify the target container.
- As a final step, change your SA password because the
SA_PASSWORD
is visible inps -eax
output and stored in the environment variable of the same name. See steps below.
Pull and run the 2019 container image
Before starting the following steps, make sure that you have selected your preferred shell (bash, PowerShell, or cmd) at the top of this article.
Pull the SQL Server 2019 Linux container image from Microsoft Container Registry.
Note
If you are using PowerShell Core, replace the double quotes with single quotes.
Tip
This quickstart uses the SQL Server 2019 Docker image. If you want to run the SQL Server 2017 image, see the SQL Server 2017 version of this article.
The previous command pulls the SQL Server 2019 container image based on Ubuntu. To instead use container images based on RedHat, see Run RHEL-based container images. To see all available images, see the mssql-server-linux Docker hub page.
For the bash commands in this article,
sudo
is used. On macOS,sudo
might not be required. On Linux, if you do not want to usesudo
to run Docker, you can configure a docker group and add users to that group. For more information, see Post-installation steps for Linux.To run the container image with Docker, you can use the following command from a bash shell (Linux/macOS) or elevated PowerShell command prompt.
Note
The password should follow the SQL Server default password policy, otherwise the container can not setup SQL server and will stop working. By default, the password must be at least 8 characters long and contain characters from three of the following four sets: Uppercase letters, Lowercase letters, Base 10 digits, and Symbols. You can examine the error log by executing the docker logs command.
By default, this creates a container with the Developer edition of SQL Server 2019.
The following table provides a description of the parameters in the previous
docker run
example:Parameter Description -e 'ACCEPT_EULA=Y' Set the ACCEPT_EULA variable to any value to confirm your acceptance of the End-User Licensing Agreement. Required setting for the SQL Server image. -e 'SA_PASSWORD=<YourStrong@Passw0rd>' Specify your own strong password that is at least 8 characters and meets the SQL Server password requirements. Required setting for the SQL Server image. -p 1433:1433 Map a TCP port on the host environment (first value) with a TCP port in the container (second value). In this example, SQL Server is listening on TCP 1433 in the container and this is exposed to the port, 1433, on the host. --name sql1 Specify a custom name for the container rather than a randomly generated one. If you run more than one container, you cannot reuse this same name. -h sql1 Used to explicitly set the container hostname, if you don't specify it, it defaults to the container ID which is a randomly generated system GUID. mcr.microsoft.com/mssql/server:2019-latest The SQL Server 2019 Ubuntu Linux container image. To view your Docker containers, use the
docker ps
command.You should see output similar to the following screenshot:
If the STATUS column shows a status of Up, then SQL Server is running in the container and listening on the port specified in the PORTS column. If the STATUS column for your SQL Server container shows Exited, see Troubleshooting SQL Server Docker containers.
The -h
(host name) parameter as discussed above, changes the internal name of the container to a custom value. This changes the internal name of the container to a custom value. This is the name you'll see returned in the following Transact-SQL query:
Setting -h
and --name
to the same value is a good way to easily identify the target container.
- As a final step, change your SA password because the
SA_PASSWORD
is visible inps -eax
output and stored in the environment variable of the same name. See steps below.
Change the SA password
The SA account is a system administrator on the SQL Server instance that gets created during setup. After creating your SQL Server container, the SA_PASSWORD
environment variable you specified is discoverable by running echo $SA_PASSWORD
in the container. For security purposes, change your SA password.
Choose a strong password to use for the SA user.
Use
docker exec
to run sqlcmd to change the password using Transact-SQL. In the following example, replace the old password,<YourStrong!Passw0rd>
, and the new password,<YourNewStrong!Passw0rd>
, with your own password values.
Connect to SQL Server
The following steps use the SQL Server command-line tool, sqlcmd, inside the container to connect to SQL Server.
Use the
docker exec -it
command to start an interactive bash shell inside your running container. In the following examplesql1
is name specified by the--name
parameter when you created the container.Once inside the container, connect locally with sqlcmd. Sqlcmd is not in the path by default, so you have to specify the full path.
Tip
You can omit the password on the command-line to be prompted to enter it.
If successful, you should get to a sqlcmd command prompt:
1>
.
Create and query data
The following sections walk you through using sqlcmd and Transact-SQL to create a new database, add data, and run a query.
Create a new database
The following steps create a new database named TestDB
.
From the sqlcmd command prompt, paste the following Transact-SQL command to create a test database:
On the next line, write a query to return the name of all of the databases on your server:
The previous two commands were not executed immediately. Type
GO
on a new line to execute the previous commands:
Insert data
Next create a new table, Inventory
, and insert two new rows.
From the sqlcmd command prompt, switch context to the new
TestDB
database:Create new table named
Inventory
:Insert data into the new table:
Type
GO
to execute the previous commands:
Select data
Now, run a query to return data from the Inventory
table.
From the sqlcmd command prompt, enter a query that returns rows from the
Inventory
table where the quantity is greater than 152:Execute the command:
Exit the sqlcmd command prompt
To end your sqlcmd session, type
QUIT
:To exit the interactive command-prompt in your container, type
exit
. Your container continues to run after you exit the interactive bash shell.
Connect from outside the container
You can also connect to the SQL Server instance on your Docker machine from any external Linux, Windows, or macOS tool that supports SQL connections.
The following steps use sqlcmd outside of your container to connect to SQL Server running in the container. These steps assume that you already have the SQL Server command-line tools installed outside of your container. The same principles apply when using other tools, but the process of connecting is unique to each tool.
Find the IP address for the machine that hosts your container. On Linux, use ifconfig or ip addr. On Windows, use ipconfig.
For this example, install the sqlcmd tool on your client machine. For more information, see Install sqlcmd on Windows or Install sqlcmd on Linux.
Run sqlcmd specifying the IP address and the port mapped to port 1433 in your container. In this example, that is the same port, 1433, on the host machine. If you specified a different mapped port on the host machine, you would use it here. You will also need to open the appropriate inbound port on your firewall to allow the connection.
Run Transact-SQL commands. When finished, type
QUIT
.
Other common tools to connect to SQL Server include:
Remove your container
If you want to remove the SQL Server container used in this tutorial, run the following commands:
Warning
Stopping and removing a container permanently deletes any SQL Server data in the container. If you need to preserve your data, create and copy a backup file out of the container or use a container data persistence technique.
Docker demo
After you have tried using the SQL Server container image for Docker, you might want to know how Docker is used to improve development and testing. The following video shows how Docker can be used in a continuous integration and deployment scenario.
Next steps
For a tutorial on how to restore database backup files into a container, see Restore a SQL Server database in a Linux Docker container. Explore other scenarios, such as running multiple containers, data persistence, and troubleshooting.
Also, check out the mssql-docker GitHub repository for resources, feedback, and known issues.
Estimated reading time: 6 minutes
Docker Desktop for Windows is the Community version of Docker for Microsoft Windows.You can download Docker Desktop for Windows from Docker Hub.
By downloading Docker Desktop, you agree to the terms of the Docker Software End User License Agreement and the Docker Data Processing Agreement.
System requirements
Your Windows machine must meet the following requirements to successfully install Docker Desktop.
Hyper-V backend and Windows containers
Windows 10 64-bit: Pro, Enterprise, or Education (Build 17134 or higher).
For Windows 10 Home, see System requirements for WSL 2 backend.
- Hyper-V and Containers Windows features must be enabled.
The following hardware prerequisites are required to successfully run ClientHyper-V on Windows 10:
- 64 bit processor with Second Level Address Translation (SLAT)
- 4GB system RAM
- BIOS-level hardware virtualization support must be enabled in theBIOS settings. For more information, seeVirtualization.
WSL 2 backend
- Windows 10 64-bit: Home, Pro, Enterprise, or Education, version 1903 (Build 18362 or higher).
- Enable the WSL 2 feature on Windows. For detailed instructions, refer to the Microsoft documentation.
The following hardware prerequisites are required to successfully runWSL 2 on Windows 10:
- 64-bit processor with Second Level Address Translation (SLAT)
- 4GB system RAM
- BIOS-level hardware virtualization support must be enabled in theBIOS settings. For more information, seeVirtualization.
- Download and install the Linux kernel update package.
Note
Docker supports Docker Desktop on Windows for those versions of Windows 10 that are still within Microsoft’s servicing timeline.
What’s included in the installer
The Docker Desktop installation includes Docker Engine,Docker CLI client, Docker Compose,Notary,Kubernetes,and Credential Helper.
Containers and images created with Docker Desktop are shared between alluser accounts on machines where it is installed. This is because all Windowsaccounts use the same VM to build and run containers. Note that it is not possible to share containers and images between user accounts when using the Docker Desktop WSL 2 backend.
Nested virtualization scenarios, such as running Docker Desktop on aVMWare or Parallels instance might work, but there are no guarantees. Formore information, see Running Docker Desktop in nested virtualization scenarios.
About Windows containers
Looking for information on using Windows containers?
- Switch between Windows and Linux containersdescribes how you can toggle between Linux and Windows containers in Docker Desktop and points you to the tutorial mentioned above.
- Getting Started with Windows Containers (Lab)provides a tutorial on how to set up and run Windows containers on Windows 10, Windows Server 2016 and Windows Server 2019. It shows you how to use a MusicStore applicationwith Windows containers.
- Docker Container Platform for Windows articles and blogposts on the Docker website.
Install Docker Desktop on Windows
Double-click Docker Desktop Installer.exe to run the installer.
If you haven’t already downloaded the installer (
Docker Desktop Installer.exe
), you can get it from Docker Hub. It typically downloads to yourDownloads
folder, or you can run it from the recent downloads bar at the bottom of your web browser.When prompted, ensure the Enable Hyper-V Windows Features or the Install required Windows components for WSL 2 option is selected on the Configuration page.
Follow the instructions on the installation wizard to authorize the installer and proceed with the install.
When the installation is successful, click Close to complete the installation process.
If your admin account is different to your user account, you must add the user to the docker-users group. Run Computer Management as an administrator and navigate to Local Users and Groups > Groups > docker-users. Right-click to add the user to the group.Log out and log back in for the changes to take effect.
Start Docker Desktop
Docker Desktop does not start automatically after installation. To start Docker Desktop, search for Docker, and select Docker Desktop in the search results.
When the whale icon in the status bar stays steady, Docker Desktop is up-and-running, and is accessible from any terminal window.
If the whale icon is hidden in the Notifications area, click the up arrow on thetaskbar to show it. To learn more, see Docker Settings.
When the initialization is complete, Docker Desktop launches the onboarding tutorial. The tutorial includes a simple exercise to build an example Docker image, run it as a container, push and save the image to Docker Hub.
Congratulations! You are now successfully running Docker Desktop on Windows.
If you would like to rerun the tutorial, go to the Docker Desktop menu and select Learn.
Windows Server 2019 Install Docker Offline
Automatic updates
Starting with Docker Desktop 3.0.0, updates to Docker Desktop will be available automatically as delta updates from the previous version.
When an update is available, Docker Desktop automatically downloads it to your machine and displays an icon to indicate the availability of a newer version. All you need to do now is to click Update and restart from the Docker menu. This installs the latest update and restarts Docker Desktop for the changes to take effect.
Uninstall Docker Desktop
To uninstall Docker Desktop from your Windows machine:
Install Docker Windows Server 2019 Offline
- From the Windows Start menu, select Settings > Apps > Apps & features.
- Select Docker Desktop from the Apps & features list and then select Uninstall.
- Click Uninstall to confirm your selection.
Important
Uninstalling Docker Desktop destroys Docker containers, images, volumes, andother Docker related data local to the machine, and removes the files generatedby the application. Refer to the back up and restore datasection to learn how to preserve important data before uninstalling.
Where to go next
Docker Windows Server 2016 Install
- Getting started introduces Docker Desktop for Windows.
- Get started with Docker is a tutorial that teaches you how todeploy a multi-service stack.
- Troubleshooting describes common problems, workarounds, andhow to get support.
- FAQs provide answers to frequently asked questions.
- Release notes lists component updates, new features, and improvements associated with Docker Desktop releases.
- Back up and restore data provides instructions on backing up and restoring data related to Docker.