The
devcontainer.json
file contains any needed metadata and settings required to configurate a
development container
for a given well-defined tool and runtime stack. It can be used by
tools and services that support the dev container spec
to create a
development environment
that contains one or more
development containers
.
Metadata properties marked with a 🏷️️ can be stored in the
devcontainer.metadata
container image label
in addition to
devcontainer.json
. This label can contain an array of json snippets that will be automatically merged with
devcontainer.json
contents (if any) when a container is created.
forwardPorts
🏷️
array
An array of port numbers or
"host:port"
values (e.g.
[3000, "db:5432"]
) that should always be forwarded from inside the primary container to the local machine (including on the web). The property is most useful for forwarding ports that cannot be auto-forwarded because the related process that starts before the
devcontainer.json
supporting service / tool connects or for forwarding a service not in the primary container in Docker Compose scenarios (e.g.
"db:5432"
). Defaults to
[]
.
portsAttributes
🏷️
object
Object that maps a port number,
"host:port"
value, range, or regular expression to a set of default options. See
port attributes
for available options. For example:
"portsAttributes": {"3000": {"label": "Application port"}}
otherPortsAttributes
🏷️
object
Default options for ports, port ranges, and hosts that aren’t configured using
portsAttributes
. See
port attributes
for available options. For example:
"otherPortsAttributes": {"onAutoForward": "silent"}
containerEnv
🏷️
object
A set of name-value pairs that sets or overrides environment variables for the container. Environment and
pre-defined variables
may be referenced in the values. For example:
"containerEnv": { "MY_VARIABLE": "${localEnv:MY_VARIABLE}" }
If you want to reference an existing container variable while setting this one (like updating the
PATH
), use
remoteEnv
instead.
containerEnv
will set the variable on the Docker container itself, so all processes spawned in the container will have access to it. But it will also be static for the life of the container - you must rebuild the container to update the value.
We recommend using
containerEnv
(over
remoteEnv
) as much as possible since it allows all processes to see the variable and isn’t client-specific.
remoteEnv
🏷️
object
A set of name-value pairs that sets or overrides environment variables for the
devcontainer.json
supporting service / tool (or sub-processes like terminals) but not the container as a whole. Environment and
pre-defined variables
may be referenced in the values.
You may want to use
remoteEnv
(over
containerEnv
) if the value isn’t static since you can update its value without having to rebuild the full container.
remoteUser
🏷️
string
Overrides the user that
devcontainer.json
supporting services tools / runs as in the container (along with sub-processes like terminals, tasks, or debugging). Does not change the user the container as a whole runs as which can be set using
containerUser
. Defaults to the user the container as a whole is running as (often
root
).
You may learn more in the
remoteUser section below
.
containerUser
🏷️
string
Overrides the user for all operations run as inside the container. Defaults to either
root
or the last
USER
instruction in the related Dockerfile used to create the image. If you want any connected tools or related processes to use a different user than the one for the container, see
remoteUser
.
updateRemoteUserUID
🏷️
boolean
On Linux, if
containerUser
or
remoteUser
is specified, the user’s UID/GID will be updated to match the local user’s UID/GID to avoid permission problems with bind mounts. Defaults to
true
.
userEnvProbe
🏷️
Indicates the type of shell to use to “probe” for user environment variables to include in
devcontainer.json
supporting services’ / tools’ processes:
none
,
interactiveShell
,
loginShell
, or
loginInteractiveShell
(default). The specific shell used is based on the default shell for the user (typically bash). For example, bash interactive shells will typically include variables set in
/etc/bash.bashrc
and
~/.bashrc
while login shells usually include variables from
/etc/profile
and
~/.profile
. Setting this property to
loginInteractiveShell
will get variables from all four files.
overrideCommand
🏷️
boolean
Tells
devcontainer.json
supporting services / tools whether they should run
/bin/sh -c "while sleep 1000; do :; done"
when starting the container instead of the container’s default command (since the container can shut down if the default command fails). Set to
false
if the default command must run for the container to function properly. Defaults to
true
for when using an image Dockerfile and
false
when referencing a Docker Compose file.
shutdownAction
🏷️
Indicates whether
devcontainer.json
supporting tools should stop the containers when the related tool window is closed / shut down.
Values are
none
,
stopContainer
(default for image or Dockerfile), and
stopCompose
(default for Docker Compose).
init
🏷️
boolean
Defaults to
false
. Cross-orchestrator way to indicate whether the
tini init process
should be used to help deal with zombie processes.
privileged
🏷️
boolean
Defaults to
false
. Cross-orchestrator way to cause the container to run in privileged mode (
--privileged
). Required for things like Docker-in-Docker, but has security implications particularly when running directly on Linux.
capAdd
🏷️
array
Defaults to
[]
. Cross-orchestrator way to add capabilities typically disabled for a container. Most often used to add the
ptrace
capability required to debug languages like C++, Go, and Rust. For example:
"capAdd": ["SYS_PTRACE"]
securityOpt
🏷️
array
Defaults to
[]
. Cross-orchestrator way to set container security options. For example:
"securityOpt": [ "seccomp=unconfined" ]
mounts
🏷️
string or object
Defaults to unset. Cross-orchestrator way to add additional mounts to a container. Each value is a string that accepts the same values as the
Docker CLI
--mount
flag
. Environment and
pre-defined variables
may be referenced in the value. For example:
"mounts": [{ "source": "dind-var-lib-docker", "target": "/var/lib/docker", "type": "volume" }]
features
object
An object of
Dev Container Feature IDs
and related options to be added into your primary container. The specific options that are available varies by feature, so see its documentation for additional details. For example:
"features": { "ghcr.io/devcontainers/features/github-cli": {} }
overrideFeatureInstallOrder
array
By default, Features will attempt to automatically set the order they are installed based on a
installsAfter
property within each of them. This property allows you to override the Feature install order when needed. For example:
"overrideFeatureInstallОrder": [ "ghcr.io/devcontainers/features/common-utils", "ghcr.io/devcontainers/features/github-cli" ]
customizations
🏷️
object
Product specific properties, defined in
supporting tools
The focus of
devcontainer.json
is to describe how to enrich a container for the purposes of development rather than acting as a multi-container orchestrator format. Instead, container orchestrator formats can be referenced when needed to manage multiple containers and their lifecycles. Today,
devcontainer.json
includes scenario specific properties for working without a container orchestrator (by directly referencing an image or Dockerfile) and for using Docker Compose as a simple multi-container orchestrator.
image
string
Required
when using an image. The name of an image in a container registry (
DockerHub
,
GitHub Container Registry
,
Azure Container Registry
) that
devcontainer.json
supporting services / tools should use to create the dev container.
build.dockerfile
string
Required
when using a Dockerfile. The location of a
Dockerfile
that defines the contents of the container. The path is relative to the
devcontainer.json
file.
build.context
string
Path that the Docker build should be run from relative to
devcontainer.json
. For example, a value of
".."
would allow you to reference content in sibling directories. Defaults to
"."
.
build.args
Object
A set of name-value pairs containing
Docker image build arguments
that should be passed when building a Dockerfile. Environment and
pre-defined variables
may be referenced in the values. Defaults to not set. For example:
"build": { "args": { "MYARG": "MYVALUE", "MYARGFROMENVVAR": "${localEnv:VARIABLE_NAME}" } }
build.options
array
An array of
Docker image build options
that should be passed to the build command when building a Dockerfile. Defaults to
[]
. For example:
"build": { "options": [ "--add-host=host.docker.internal:host-gateway" ] }
build.target
string
A string that specifies a
Docker image build target
that should be passed when building a Dockerfile. Defaults to not set. For example:
"build": { "target": "development" }
build.cacheFrom
string,
array
A string or array of strings that specify one or more images to use as caches when building the image. Cached image identifiers are passed to the
docker build
command with
--cache-from
.
appPort
integer,
string,
array
In most cases, we recommend using the new
forwardPorts property
. This property accepts a port or array of ports that should be published locally when the container is running. Unlike
forwardPorts
, your application may need to listen on all interfaces (
0.0.0.0
) not just
localhost
for it to be available externally. Defaults to
[]
.
Learn more about publishing vs forwarding ports
here
.
Note that the array syntax will execute the command without a shell. You can
learn more
about formatting string vs array properties.
workspaceMount
string
Requires
workspaceFolder
be set as well. Overrides the default local mount point for the workspace when the container is created. Supports the same values as the
Docker CLI
--mount
flag
. Environment and
pre-defined variables
may be referenced in the value. For example:
"workspaceMount": "source=${localWorkspaceFolder}/sub-folder,target=/workspace,type=bind,consistency=cached", "workspaceFolder": "/workspace"
workspaceFolder
string
Requires
workspaceMount
be set. Sets the default path that
devcontainer.json
supporting services / tools should open when connecting to the container. Defaults to the automatic source code mount location.
runArgs
array
An array of
Docker CLI arguments
that should be used when running the container. Defaults to
[]
. For example, this allows ptrace based debuggers like C++ to work in the container:
"runArgs": [ "--cap-add=SYS_PTRACE", "--security-opt", "seccomp=unconfined" ]
.
dockerComposeFile
string,
array
Required
when using
Docker Compose
. Path or an ordered list of paths to Docker Compose files relative to the
devcontainer.json
file. Using an array is useful
when extending your Docker Compose configuration
. The order of the array matters since the contents of later files can override values set in previous ones.
The default
.env
file is picked up from the root of the project, but you can use
env_file
in your Docker Compose file to specify an alternate location.
Note that the array syntax will execute the command without a shell. You can
learn more
about formatting string vs array properties.
service
string
Required
when using
Docker Compose
. The name of the service
devcontainer.json
supporting services / tools should connect to once running.
runServices
array
An array of services in your Docker Compose configuration that should be started by
devcontainer.json
supporting services / tools. These will also be stopped when you disconnect unless
"shutdownAction"
is
"none"
. Defaults to all services.
workspaceFolder
string
Sets the default path that
devcontainer.json
supporting services / tools should open when connecting to the container (which is often the path to a volume mount where the source code can be found in the container). Defaults to
"/"
.
While most properties apply to any
devcontainer.json
supporting tool or service, a few are specific to certain tools. You may explore this in the
supporting tools and services document
.
When creating or working with a dev container, you may need different commands to be run at different points in the container’s lifecycle. The table below lists a set of command properties you can use to update what the container’s contents in the order in which they are run (for example,
onCreateCommand
will run after
initializeCommand
). Each command property is an string or list of command arguments that should execute from the
workspaceFolder
.
initializeCommand
string,
array,
object
A command string or list of command arguments to run on the
host machine
during initialization, including during container creation and on subsequent starts. The command may run more than once during a given session.
⚠️ The command is run wherever the source code is located on the host. For cloud services, this is in the cloud.
Note that the array syntax will execute the command without a shell. You can
learn more
about formatting string vs array vs object properties.
onCreateCommand
🏷️
string,
array,
object
This command is the first of three (along with
updateContentCommand
and
postCreateCommand
) that finalizes container setup when a dev container is created. It and subsequent commands execute
inside
the container immediately after it has started for the first time.
Cloud services can use this command when caching or prebuilding a container. This means that it will not typically have access to user-scoped assets or secrets.
Note that the array syntax will execute the command without a shell. You can
learn more
about formatting string vs array vs object properties.
updateContentCommand
🏷️
string,
array,
object
This command is the second of three that finalizes container setup when a dev container is created. It executes inside the container after
onCreateCommand
whenever new content is available in the source tree during the creation process.
It will execute at least once, but cloud services will also periodically execute the command to refresh cached or prebuilt containers. Like cloud services using
onCreateCommand
, it can only take advantage of repository and org scoped secrets or permissions.
Note that the array syntax will execute the command without a shell. You can
learn more
about formatting string vs array vs object properties.
postCreateCommand
🏷️
string,
array,
object
This command is the last of three that finalizes container setup when a dev container is created. It happens after
updateContentCommand
and once the dev container has been assigned to a user for the first time.
Cloud services can use this command to take advantage of user specific secrets and permissions.
Note that the array syntax will execute the command without a shell. You can
learn more
about formatting string vs array vs object properties.
postStartCommand
🏷️
string,
array,
object
A command to run each time the container is successfully started.
Note that the array syntax will execute the command without a shell. You can
learn more
about formatting string vs array vs object properties.
postAttachCommand
🏷️
string,
array,
object
A command to run each time a tool has successfully attached to the container.
Note that the array syntax will execute the command without a shell. You can
learn more
about formatting string vs array vs object properties.
waitFor
🏷️
An enum that specifies the command any tool should wait for before connecting. Defaults to
updateContentCommand
. This allows you to use
onCreateCommand
or
updateContentCommand
for steps that must happen before
devcontainer.json
supporting tools connect while still using
postCreateCommand
for steps that can happen behind the scenes afterwards.
For each command property, if the value is a single string, it will be run in
/bin/sh
. Use
&&
in a string to execute multiple commands. For example,
"yarn install"
or
"apt-get update && apt-get install -y curl"
. The array syntax
["yarn", "install"]
will invoke the command (in this case
yarn
) directly without using a shell. Each fires after your source code has been mounted, so you can also run shell scripts from your source tree. For example:
bash scripts/install-dev-tools.sh
.
If one of the lifecycle scripts fails, any subsequent scripts will not be executed. For instance, if
postCreateCommand
fails,
postStartCommand
and any following scripts will be skipped.
While
devcontainer.json
does not focus on hardware or VM provisioning, it can be useful to know your container’s minimum RAM, CPU, and storage requirements. This is what the
hostRequirements
properties allow you to do. Cloud services can use these properties to automatically default to the best compute option available, while in other cases, you will be presented with a warning if the requirements are not met.
hostRequirements.cpus
🏷️
integer
Indicates the minimum required number of CPUs / virtual CPUs / cores. For example:
"hostRequirements": {"cpus": 2}
hostRequirements.memory
🏷️
string
A string indicating minimum memory requirements with a
tb
,
gb
,
mb
, or
kb
suffix. For example,
"hostRequirements": {"memory": "4gb"}
hostRequirements.storage
🏷️
string
A string indicating minimum storage requirements with a
tb
,
gb
,
mb
, or
kb
suffix. For example,
"hostRequirements": {"storage": "32gb"}
hostRequirements.gpu
🏷️
boolean,
string,
object
Indicates if any GPU is required. A boolean indicates if a GPU is required or not. The string
"optional"
indicates that a GPU is used when available, but is not required.
The object syntax specifies how much GPU resources are required. The
cores
property indicates the minimum number of cores and the
memory
property indicates minimum storage requirements with a
tb
,
gb
,
mb
, or
kb
suffix. For example,
"gpu": { "cores": 1000, "storage": "32gb" }
protocol
🏷️
Controls protocol handling for forwarded ports. When not set, the port is assumed to be a raw TCP stream which, if forwarded to
localhost
, supports any number of protocols. However, if the port is forwarded to a web URL (e.g. from a cloud service on the web), only HTTP ports in the container are supported. Setting this property to
https
alters handling by ignoring any SSL/TLS certificates present when communicating on the port and using the correct certificate for the forwarded URL instead (e.g
https://*.githubpreview.dev
). If set to
http
, processing is the same as if the protocol is not set. Defaults to not set.
onAutoForward
🏷️
Controls what should happen when a port is auto-forwarded once you’ve connected to the container.
notify
is the default, and a notification will appear when the port is auto-forwarded. If set to
openBrowser
, the port will be opened in the system’s default browser. A value of
openBrowserOnce
will open the browser only once.
openPreview
will open the URL in
devcontainer.json
supporting services’ / tools’ embedded preview browser. A value of
silent
will forward the port, but take no further action. A value of
ignore
means that this port should not be auto-forwarded at all.
requireLocalPort
🏷️
boolean
Dictates when port forwarding is required to map the port in the container to the same port locally or not. If set to
false
, the
devcontainer.json
supporting services / tools will attempt to use the specified port forward to
localhost
, and silently map to a different one if it is unavailable. If set to
true
, you will be notified if it is not possible to use the same port. Defaults to
false
.
elevateIfNeeded
🏷️
boolean
Forwarding low ports like 22, 80, or 443 to
localhost
on the same port from
devcontainer.json
supporting services / tools may require elevated permissions on certain operating systems. Setting this property to
true
will automatically try to elevate the
devcontainer.json
supporting tool’s permissions in this situation. Defaults to
false
.
The format of certain properties will vary depending on the involvement of a shell.
postCreateCommand
,
postStartCommand
,
postAttachCommand
, and
initializeCommand
all have 3 types:
Array: Passed to the OS for execution without going through a shell
String: Goes through a shell (it needs to be parsed into command and arguments)
Object: All lifecycle scripts have been extended to support
object
types to allow for
parallel execution
runArgs
only has the array type. Using
runArgs
via a typical command line, you’ll need single quotes if the shell runs into parameters with spaces. However, these single quotes aren’t passed on to the executable. Thus, in your
devcontainer.json
, you’d follow the array format and leave out the single quotes:
"runArgs": ["--device-cgroup-rule=my rule here"]
Rather than:
"runArgs": ["--device-cgroup-rule='my rule here'"]
We can compare the string, array, and object versions of postAttachCommand
as well. You can use the following string format, which will remove the single quotes as part of the shell’s parsing:
"postAttachCommand": "echo foo='bar'"
By contrast, the array format will keep the single quotes and write them to standard out (you can see the output in the dev container log):
"postAttachCommand": ["echo", "foo='bar'"]
Finally, you may use an object format:
"postAttachCommand": {
"server": "npm start",
"db": ["mysql", "-u", "root", "-p", "my database"]
Variables can be referenced in certain string values in devcontainer.json
in the following format: ${variableName}. The following is a list of available variables you can use.
${localEnv:VARIABLE_NAME}
Value of an environment variable on the host machine (in the examples below, called VARIABLE_NAME
). Unset variables are left blank.
⚠️ Clients (like VS Code) may need to be restarted to pick up newly set variables.
⚠️ For a cloud service, the host is in the cloud rather than your local machine.
Examples
1. Set a variable containing your local home folder on Linux / macOS or the user folder on Windows:
"remoteEnv": { "LOCAL_USER_PATH": "${localEnv:HOME}${localEnv:USERPROFILE}" }
.
A default value for when the environment variable is not set can be given with ${localEnv:VARIABLE_NAME:default_value}
.
2. In modern versions of macOS, default configurations allow setting local variables with the command echo 'export VARIABLE_NAME=my-value' >> ~/.zshenv
.
${containerEnv:VARIABLE_NAME}
remoteEnv
Value of an existing environment variable inside the container once it is up and running (in this case, called VARIABLE_NAME
). For example:
"remoteEnv": { "PATH": "${containerEnv:PATH}:/some/other/path" }
A default value for when the environment variable is not set can be given with ${containerEnv:VARIABLE_NAME:default_value}
.
${localWorkspaceFolder}
Path of the local folder that was opened in the devcontainer.json
supporting service / tool (that contains .devcontainer/devcontainer.json
).
${containerWorkspaceFolder}
The path that the workspaces files can be found in the container.
${localWorkspaceFolderBasename}
Name of the local folder that was opened in the devcontainer.json
supporting service / tool (that contains .devcontainer/devcontainer.json
).
${containerWorkspaceFolderBasename}
Name of the folder where the workspace files can be found in the container.
${devcontainerId}
Allow Features to refer to an identifier that is unique to the dev container they are installed into and that is stable across rebuilds.
The properties supporting it in devcontainer.json are: name
, runArgs
, initializeCommand
, onCreateCommand
, updateContentCommand
, postCreateCommand
, postStartCommand
, postAttachCommand
, workspaceFolder
, workspaceMount
, mounts
, containerEnv
, remoteEnv
, containerUser
, remoteUser
, and customizations
.
Docker has the concept of “publishing” ports when the container is created. Published ports behave very much like ports you make available to your local network. If your application only accepts calls from localhost
, it will reject connections from published ports just as your local machine would for network calls. Forwarded ports, on the other hand, actually look like localhost
to the application.
A dev container configuration will inherit the remoteUser
property from the base image it uses.
Using the images and Templates part of the spec as an example: remoteUser
in these images is set to a custom value - you may view an example in the C++ image. The C++ Template will then inherit the custom remoteUser
value from its base C++ image.