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Docker CLI Networks Cheat Sheet 2026

Docker CLI — Networks Cheat Sheet 2026

Docker CLI Networks Cheat Sheet is the complete quick-reference of Docker CLI Networks commands grouped by function. Copy any command with one click and find what you need with Ctrl+F in under 3 seconds.

Networks

Action Command Useful flags
List all available and configured networks on Docker daemon
docker network ls
Create a user-defined network
docker network create --driver <driver_name> <network_name>
--driver
Display detailed information about one or more networks
docker network inspect <network_name1 network_name2 ...>
Connect a container to a network using a name or ID
docker network connect <network_name> <container_name|id>
Disconnect a container from a network
docker network disconnect <network_name> <container_name|id>
Remove all unused (not referenced by any container) networks
docker network prune
Remove one or more unused networks
docker network rm <network_name1 network_name2 ...>

⚠️ Dangerous / Destructive Commands

These commands are irreversible. Verify your environment (dev/staging vs prod) before running them.

Action Command Warning
⚠️ Destroy ⚠️
terraform destroy -auto-approve
Irreversible — verify the target before running
⚠️ Delete
kubectl delete namespace production
Irreversible — verify the target before running
⚠️ Prune ⚠️
docker system prune -af --volumes
Irreversible — verify the target before running
⚠️ Delete
pvesh delete /nodes/{node}/qemu/{vmid}
Irreversible — verify the target before running
⚠️ Delete
az group delete --name MyResourceGroup --yes
Irreversible — verify the target before running

FAQ — Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Networks and the other groups?

Each group in this Docker CLI cheat sheet covers a distinct area. Networks focuses on its specific scope, while the other groups and the remaining groups cover networking, storage, security and diagnostics respectively.

How do I check the installed Docker CLI version?

Run the version command (usually docker version or docker --version). The output shows the client and, when applicable, the server version.

Why does Docker CLI return ‘permission denied’?

A ‘permission denied’ error in Docker CLI usually means the current user lacks sufficient privileges or credentials are not configured. Check: (1) assigned IAM/RBAC roles, (2) an active authentication context via the corresponding login command.

How do I filter Docker CLI output by status or name?

Use flags such as --filter, --selector or --query depending on the tool. You can also pipe into grep or jq to process JSON:

docker list | grep RUNNING

What is the fastest way to debug a Docker CLI error?

Add the verbose flag (--verbose, -v or --debug) to the failing command. This reveals the underlying HTTP/API calls and the full error response body.

Official sources & references

Commands cross-checked against vendor documentation and high-authority repositories: