podman-rm - Remove one or more containers
podman rm [
options]
container
podman container rm [
options]
container
podman rm will remove one or more containers from the host. The container
name or ID can be used. This does not remove images. Running or unusable
containers will not be removed without the
-f option.
Remove all containers. Can be used in conjunction with
-f as well.
Read container ID from the specified
file and rm the container. Can be
specified multiple times.
Remove selected container and recursively remove all containers that depend on
it.
Filter what containers remove. Multiple filters can be given with multiple uses
of the --filter flag. Filters with the same key work inclusive with the only
exception being
label which is exclusive. Filters with different keys
always work exclusive.
Valid filters are listed below:
Filter
|
Description
|
id |
[ID] Container's ID (accepts regex) |
name |
[Name] Container's name (accepts regex) |
label |
[Key] or [Key=Value] Label assigned to a container |
exited |
[Int] Container's exit code |
status |
[Status] Container's status: 'created', 'exited', 'paused', 'running',
'unknown' |
ancestor |
[ImageName] Image or descendant used to create container |
before |
[ID] or [Name] Containers created before this container |
since |
[ID] or [Name] Containers created since this container |
volume |
[VolumeName] or [MountpointDestination] Volume mounted in container |
health |
[Status] healthy or unhealthy |
pod |
[Pod] name or full or partial ID of pod |
network |
[Network] name or full ID of network |
Force the removal of running and paused containers. Forcing a container removal
also removes containers from container storage even if the container is not
known to podman. Containers could have been created by a different container
engine. In addition, forcing can be used to remove unusable containers, e.g.
containers whose OCI runtime has become unavailable.
Ignore errors when specified containers are not in the container store. A user
might have decided to manually remove a container which would lead to a
failure during the ExecStop directive of a systemd service referencing that
container.
Instead of providing the container name or ID, use the last created container.
If you use methods other than Podman to run containers such as CRI-O, the last
started container could be from either of those methods. (This option is not
available with the remote Podman client, including Mac and Windows (excluding
WSL2) machines)
Seconds to wait before forcibly stopping the container.
The --force option must be specified to use the --time option.
Remove anonymous volumes associated with the container. This does not include
named volumes created with
podman volume create, or the
--volume
option of
podman run and
podman create.
Remove container with a given name
Remove container with a given name and all of the containers that depend on it
$ podman rm --depend mywebserver
Remove multiple containers with given names or IDs
$ podman rm mywebserver myflaskserver 860a4b23
Remove multiple containers with IDs read from files
$ podman rm --cidfile ./cidfile-1 --cidfile /home/user/cidfile-2
Forcibly remove container with a given ID
Remove all containers regardless of the run state
Forcibly remove the last created container
0 All specified containers removed
1 One of the specified containers did not exist, and no other failures
2 One of the specified containers is paused or running
125 The command fails for any other reason
podman(1),
crio(8)
August 2017, Originally compiled by Ryan Cole
[email protected]
⟨mailto:
[email protected]⟩