Nm.putty PDocsLinux & DevOps
Related
10 Reasons CachyOS Linux Outpaces Ubuntu 26.04 LTS and Fedora Workstation 44Terraform Unveils Game-Changing Cost Analytics and Governance UpgradesUnveiling Latest Terraform Enhancements: Cost Insights, Project Controls, and MorePlatform Engineering's 'Virtuous Cycle' Emerges as Key to Scaling Infrastructure10 Key Steps Fedora Takes to Combat Recent Kernel VulnerabilitiesHow Fedora Handles Kernel Security Vulnerabilities: A Step-by-Step GuideFedora KDE Plasma Desktop 44 Launches: Major Accessibility Upgrades and Simplified Setup Highlight Latest ReleaseFedora KDE Plasma Desktop 44: Key Features and Enhancements

Docker Container Security Best Practices

Last updated: 2026-04-30 18:25:03 · Linux & DevOps

Image Security

Start with minimal base images like Alpine or distroless. Scan images for vulnerabilities using tools like Trivy or Snyk. Never run containers as root — use USER directive in Dockerfiles.

Build Security

Use multi-stage builds to minimize the attack surface. Pin base image versions with SHA256 digests. Never embed secrets in images — use Docker secrets or environment variables at runtime.

Runtime Security

Apply resource limits (CPU, memory) to prevent denial of service. Use read-only file systems where possible. Drop unnecessary Linux capabilities with --cap-drop=ALL and add only what is needed.

Network Security

Use Docker networks to isolate containers. Never expose unnecessary ports. Use TLS for inter-container communication in production environments.

Monitoring

Implement runtime security monitoring with Falco or Sysdig. Log container activity and set up alerts for suspicious behavior. Regularly audit container configurations.