Reputation: 3842
At which IP address can a docker container connect to its host on Docker for Windows (on Windows 10)? How do you find this IP address?
Example: you have a service running at port 1234 on your Windows 10 machine. A program inside your container must access this service. What IP address should the program use to connect to the host?
Upvotes: 105
Views: 178936
Reputation: 21577
It's so strange that in 2022 April, this is still a question. and most of the host.docker.internal
and 172.17.0.1
do NOT work for WINDOWS docker.
so, I suggest for windows docker user, just simple type ipconfig
in cmd :
and you will get some ips for your windows (host) machine:
then ,in your docker, install ping/curl/ifconfig/telnet
, then type ifconfig
to get your "docker's" ip address, then type ping <WINDOWS_HOST_IP>
to see if the ip is correct.
This needs you install external tools to docker, but it worth.
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 131
I had the similar issue. In my case /etc/hosts file was missing from my container. This was because I was not using docker desktop. Docker desktop allows docker deamon to write this entry in /etc/hosts file. I was using docker engine with lcow on windows server 2019. I simply had to use my host machine IP instead of host.docker.internal to access the services on my host machine. I could use this IP since it was static. In case of dynamic IP you will need dns to resolve that IP or use bridge network IP. See the details of the issue and how I fixed it on this thread: Unable to resolve docker.host.internal with docker-compose on windows server 2019
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 11
open Command Prompt and type ipconfig
look for
IPv4 Address. . . . . . . . . . . : 192.xxx.0.xxx
The IP address to the right of IPv4 Address is the one you need.
OR
"host" : "host.docker.internal"
also work
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 578
I'm using Windows containers with Docker version 20.10.11. I'm trying to reach a server running on the host machine. I tried all other answers/comments. None are working for me. I tried...
The only way I can communicate is using the standard ethernet adapter's IPv4 on the host (not the container):
Using curl http://10.0.0.4:8080
accesses the server just fine.
Side note - running a config script beforehand would also solve the problem... just shouldn't be necessary. https://stackoverflow.com/a/67434367/7991646
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 121
On Windows 10, after your docker container is started, you can run docker-machine ip
in command line (cmd or Docker QuickStart Terminal, etc) to get the ip address of your docker container. This ip address is usually, 192.168.99.100.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 16642
Just for adding a note for docker toolbox users. Short answer is: 192.168.56.1
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 41600
The host will have a host.docker.internal
registered in the default DNS used by containers. So you can use something like curl http://host.docker.internal/
to access a web server running on your machine even if that server is running in another container provided you exposed the port.
Upvotes: 28
Reputation: 655
One of options that allows you to connect from container to host, is to run your container with parameter
--net="host"
Example:
docker run -it --net="host" container_name
Then from container, you can connect to service on host using:
localhost:port
But in this case, you will not be able to link more containers using --link
parameter.
More on this topic: http://phillbarber.blogspot.sk/2015/02/connect-docker-to-service-on-parent-host.html
UPDATE:
From version 18.03, you can use DNS name host.docker.internal
, which resolves to the internal IP address used by the host.
More: https://docs.docker.com/docker-for-windows/networking/
On older versions, you can connect to service running on host Windows using IP address you get executing command ipconfig on host -> Ethernet adapter -> IPv4 Address
UPDATE
As per Datz comment below, docker.for.win.localhost
is working in Docker for Windows (confirmed).
Upvotes: 64
Reputation: 3842
Short answer: in most cases, you'll need 10.0.75.1 .
In Docker for Windows, the container communicates through a vEthernet adapter called DockerNAT. To find its details, open Command Prompt and type
ipconfig
Look for an entry that looks like
Ethernet adapter vEthernet (DockerNAT):
Connection-specific DNS Suffix . :
Link-local IPv6 Address . . . . . : fe80::fd29:297:4583:3ad4%4
IPv4 Address. . . . . . . . . . . : 10.0.75.1
Subnet Mask . . . . . . . . . . . : 255.255.255.0
Default Gateway . . . . . . . . . :
The IP address to the right of IPv4 Address
is the one you need.
Note: make sure the service allows connections from outside your host. As far as that service is concerned, your docker container is a different machine. Also make sure Windows Firewall allows communication to and from the service.
Upvotes: 104