How to clear the logs properly for a Docker container?

First the bad answer. From this question there's a one-liner that you can run:

echo "" > $(docker inspect --format='{{.LogPath}}' <container_name_or_id>)

instead of echo, there's the simpler:

: > $(docker inspect --format='{{.LogPath}}' <container_name_or_id>)

or there's the truncate command:

truncate -s 0 $(docker inspect --format='{{.LogPath}}' <container_name_or_id>)

I'm not a big fan of either of those since they modify Docker's files directly. The external log deletion could happen while docker is writing json formatted data to the file, resulting in a partial line, and breaking the ability to read any logs from the docker logs cli. For an example of that happening, see this comment on duketwo's answer

Instead, you can have Docker automatically rotate the logs for you. This is done with additional flags to dockerd if you are using the default JSON logging driver:

dockerd ... --log-opt max-size=10m --log-opt max-file=3

You can also set this as part of your daemon.json file instead of modifying your startup scripts:

{
  "log-driver": "json-file",
  "log-opts": {"max-size": "10m", "max-file": "3"}
}

These options need to be configured with root access. Make sure to run a systemctl reload docker after changing this file to have the settings applied. This setting will then be the default for any newly created containers. Note, existing containers need to be deleted and recreated to receive the new log limits.


Similar log options can be passed to individual containers to override these defaults, allowing you to save more or fewer logs on individual containers. From docker run this looks like:

docker run --log-driver json-file --log-opt max-size=10m --log-opt max-file=3 ...

or in a compose file:

version: '3.7'
services:
  app:
    image: ...
    logging:
      options:
        max-size: "10m"
        max-file: "3"

For additional space savings, you can switch from the json log driver to the "local" log driver. It takes the same max-size and max-file options, but instead of storing in json it uses a binary syntax that is faster and smaller. This allows you to store more logs in the same sized file. The daemon.json entry for that looks like:

{
  "log-driver": "local",
  "log-opts": {"max-size": "10m", "max-file": "3"}
}

The downside of the local driver is external log parsers/forwarders that depended on direct access to the json logs will no longer work. So if you use a tool like filebeat to send to Elastic, or Splunk's universal forwarder, I'd avoid the "local" driver.

I've got a bit more on this in my Tips and Tricks presentation.


Use:

truncate -s 0 /var/lib/docker/containers/*/*-json.log

You may need sudo

sudo sh -c "truncate -s 0 /var/lib/docker/containers/*/*-json.log"

ref. Jeff S. How to clear the logs properly for a Docker container?

Reference: Truncating a file while it's being used (Linux)


On Docker for Windows and Mac, and probably others too, it is possible to use the tail option. For example:

docker logs -f --tail 100

This way, only the last 100 lines are shown, and you don't have first to scroll through 1M lines...

(And thus, deleting the log is probably unnecessary)