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{ const container = $el; // The div with overflow const item = document.getElementById('sidebar-current-page') if (item) { const containerTop = container.scrollTop; const containerBottom = containerTop + container.clientHeight; const itemTop = item.offsetTop - container.offsetTop; const itemBottom = itemTop + item.offsetHeight; // Scroll only if the item is out of view if (itemBottom > containerBottom - 200) { container.scrollTop = itemTop - (container.clientHeight / 2 - item.offsetHeight / 2); } } })" class="md:h-[calc(100vh-64px)] fixed md:sticky top-0 md:top-16 z-40 hidden h-screen flex-none overflow-y-auto overflow-x-hidden bg-background-light dark:bg-gray-dark-100 w-full md:z-auto md:block md:w-[300px]" :class="{ 'hidden': ! $store.showSidebar }">

containerd image store

This page provides information about the ongoing integration of containerd for image and file system management in the Docker Engine.

Note

Images and containers are not shared between the classic image store and the new containerd image store. When you switch image stores, containers and images from the inactive store remain but are hidden until you switch back.

What is containerd?

containerd is an abstraction of the low-level kernel features used to run and manage containers on a system. It's a platform used in container software like Docker and Kubernetes.

Docker Engine already uses containerd for container lifecycle management, which includes creating, starting, and stopping containers. This page describes the next step of the containerd integration for Docker: the containerd image store.

Image store

The image store is the component responsible for pushing, pulling, and storing images on the filesystem. The classic Docker image store is limited in the types of images that it supports. For example, it doesn't support image indices, containing manifest lists. When you create multi-platform images, for example, the image index resolves all the platform-specific variants of the image. An image index is also required when building images with attestations.

The containerd image store extends range of image types that the Docker Engine can natively interact with. While this is a low-level architectural change, it's a prerequisite for unlocking a range of new use cases, including:

  • Build multi-platform images and images with attestations
  • Support for using containerd snapshotters with unique characteristics, such as stargz for lazy-pulling images on container startup, or nydus and dragonfly for peer-to-peer image distribution.
  • Ability to run Wasm containers

Enable the containerd image store

The containerd image store is enabled by default in Docker Desktop version 4.34 and later, but only for clean installs or if you perform a factory reset. If you upgrade from an earlier version of Docker Desktop, or if you use an older version of Docker Desktop you must manually switch to the containerd image store.

To manually enable this feature in Docker Desktop:

  1. Navigate to Settings in Docker Desktop.
  2. In the General tab, check Use containerd for pulling and storing images.
  3. Select Apply & Restart.

To disable the containerd image store, clear the Use containerd for pulling and storing images checkbox.

Build multi-platform images

The term multi-platform image refers to a bundle of images for multiple different architectures. Out of the box, the default builder for Docker Desktop doesn't support building multi-platform images.

$ docker build --platform=linux/amd64,linux/arm64 .
[+] Building 0.0s (0/0)
ERROR: Multi-platform build is not supported for the docker driver.
Switch to a different driver, or turn on the containerd image store, and try again.
Learn more at https://docs.docker.com/go/build-multi-platform/

Enabling the containerd image store lets you build multi-platform images and load them to your local image store:

Feedback

Thanks for trying the new features available with containerd. Give feedback or report any bugs you may find through the issues tracker on the feedback form.