podman-container-cleanup(1)
podman-container-cleanup - Clean up the container's network and mountpoints
Description
podman-container-cleanup
NAME
podman-container-cleanup - Clean up the container’s network and mountpoints
SYNOPSIS
podman container cleanup [options] container [container ...]
DESCRIPTION
podman
container cleanup cleans up exited containers by
removing all mountpoints and network configuration from the
host. The container name or ID can be used.
The cleanup command does not remove the containers.
Running containers will not be cleaned up.
Sometimes container mount points and network stacks can
remain if the podman command was killed or the
container ran in daemon mode. This command is
automatically executed when containers are run in
daemon mode by the conmon process when the
container exits.
OPTIONS
--all, -a
Clean up all
containers.
The default is false.
IMPORTANT: This OPTION does not need a container name or ID
as input argument.
--exec=session
Clean up an exec
session for a single container. Can only be specified
if a single container is being cleaned up (conflicts
with --all as such). If --rm is not specified,
temporary files for the exec session will be cleaned up; if
it is, the exec session will be removed from the
container.
*IMPORTANT: Conflicts with --rmi as the container is
not being cleaned up so the image cannot be removed.*
--latest, -l
Instead of
providing the container ID or name, use the
last created container. If other methods than Podman
are used to run containers such as CRI-O, the
last started container could be from either of those
methods.
The default is false.
IMPORTANT: This OPTION is not available with the remote
Podman client, including Mac and Windows (excluding WSL2)
machines. This OPTION does not need a container name or ID
as input argument.
--rm
After cleanup,
remove the container entirely.
The default is false.
--rmi
After cleanup,
remove the image entirely.
The default is false.
EXAMPLES
Clean up the container "mywebserver".
$ podman container cleanup mywebserver
Clean up the containers with the names "mywebserver", "myflaskserver", "860a4b23".
$ podman container cleanup mywebserver myflaskserver 860a4b23
SEE ALSO
podman(1), podman-container(1), conmon(8)
HISTORY
Jun 2018, Originally compiled by Dan Walsh dwalsh@redhat.com 〈mailto:dwalsh@redhat.com〉