Docker live for Visual Studio CodeThe Docker extension makes it easy to build, manage, and deploy containerized applications from Visual Studio Code. It also provides one-click debugging of Node.js, Python, and .NET Core inside a container. InstallationTo install the extension, open the Extensions view, search for Overview of the extension featuresEditing Docker filesYou can get IntelliSense when editing your In addition, you can use the Problems panel (Ctrl+Shift+M on Windows/Linux, Shift+Command+M on Mac) to view common errors for Generating Docker filesYou can add Docker files to your workspace by opening the Command Palette (F1) and using Docker: Add Docker Files to Workspace command. The command will generate a The extension can scaffold Docker files for most popular development languages (C#, Node.js, Python, Ruby, Go, and Java) and customizes the generated Docker files accordingly. When these files are created, we also create the necessary artifacts to provide first-class debugging support for Node.js, Python, and .NET (C#). Docker ExplorerThe Docker extension contributes a Docker Explorer view to VS Code. The Docker Explorer lets you examine and manage Docker assets: containers, images, volumes, networks, and container registries. If the Azure Account extension is installed, you can browse your Azure Container Registries as well. The right-click menu provides access to commonly used commands for each type of asset. You can rearrange the Docker view panes by dragging them up or down with a mouse and use the context menu to hide or show them. Docker commandsMany of the most common Docker commands are built right into the Command Palette: You can run Docker commands to manage images, networks, volumes, image registries, and Docker Compose. In addition, the Docker: Prune System command will remove stopped containers, dangling images, and unused networks and volumes. Docker ComposeDocker Compose lets you define and run multi-container applications with Docker. Our Compose Language Service in the Docker extension gives you IntelliSense and tab completions when authoring We also provide tooltips when you hover over a Docker Compose YAML attribute. While Once your Using image registriesYou can display the content and push, pull, or delete images from Docker Hub and Azure Container Registry: An image in an Azure Container Registry can be deployed to Azure App Service directly from VS Code. See Deploy images to Azure App Service to get started. For more information about how to authenticate to and work with registries, see Using container registries. Debugging services running inside a containerYou can debug services built using Node.js, Python, or .NET (C#) that are running inside a container. The extension offers custom tasks that help with launching a service under the debugger and with attaching the debugger to a running service instance. For more information, see Debug containerized apps and Customize the Docker extension. Azure CLI integrationYou can start Azure CLI (command-line interface) in a standalone, Linux-based container with Docker Images: Run Azure CLI command. This gives you access to the full Azure CLI command set in an isolated environment. For more information on available commands, see Get started with Azure CLI. TelemetryVS Code collects usage data and sends it to Microsoft to help improve our products and services. Read our privacy statement to learn more. If you don’t wish to send usage data to Microsoft, you can set the |