Provided by: docker.io_20.10.21-0ubuntu1~18.04.3_amd64 bug

NAME

       docker-network-connect - Connect a container to a network

SYNOPSIS

       docker network connect [OPTIONS] NETWORK CONTAINER

DESCRIPTION

       Connects  a  container  to  a  network. You can connect a container by name or by ID. Once
       connected, the container can communicate with other containers in the same network.

              $ docker network connect multi-host-network container1

       You can also use the docker run --network=<network-name> option to start a  container  and
       immediately connect it to a network.

              $ docker run -itd --network=multi-host-network --ip 172.20.88.22 --ip6 2001:db8::8822 busybox

       You  can pause, restart, and stop containers that are connected to a network.  A container
       connects to its configured networks when it runs.

       If specified, the container's IP address(es) is reapplied  when  a  stopped  container  is
       restarted. If the IP address is no longer available, the container fails to start. One way
       to guarantee that the IP address is available is to specify an  --ip-range  when  creating
       the  network,  and  choose the static IP address(es) from outside that range. This ensures
       that the IP address is not given to another container while this container is not  on  the
       network.

              $ docker network create --subnet 172.20.0.0/16 --ip-range 172.20.240.0/20 multi-host-network

              $ docker network connect --ip 172.20.128.2 multi-host-network container2

       To  verify  the container is connected, use the docker network inspect command. Use docker
       network disconnect to remove a container from the network.

       Once connected in network, containers can communicate using only  another  container's  IP
       address  or  name.  For  overlay  networks  or  custom  plugins  that  support  multi-host
       connectivity, containers connected to  the  same  multi-host  network  but  launched  from
       different Engines can also communicate in this way.

       You  can  connect  a  container to one or more networks. The networks need not be the same
       type. For example, you can connect a single container bridge and overlay networks.

OPTIONS

       --alias=[]      Add network-scoped alias for the container

       --driver-opt=[]      driver options for the network

       -h, --help[=false]      help for connect

       --ip=""      IPv4 address (e.g., 172.30.100.104)

       --ip6=""      IPv6 address (e.g., 2001:db8::33)

       --link=      Add link to another container

       --link-local-ip=[]      Add a link-local address for the container

SEE ALSO

       docker-network(1)