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wagoodman/dive

A tool for exploring each layer in a docker image

wagoodman/dive.json
{
"createdAt": "2018-05-13T15:44:01Z",
"defaultBranch": "main",
"description": "A tool for exploring each layer in a docker image",
"fullName": "wagoodman/dive",
"homepage": "",
"language": "Go",
"name": "dive",
"pushedAt": "2025-11-24T19:04:00Z",
"stargazersCount": 52689,
"topics": [
"cli",
"docker",
"docker-image",
"explorer",
"inspector",
"tui"
],
"updatedAt": "2025-11-27T05:44:39Z",
"url": "https://github.com/wagoodman/dive"
}

GitHub release Validations Go Report Card License: MIT Donate

A tool for exploring a Docker image, layer contents, and discovering ways to shrink the size of your Docker/OCI image.

![Image]!(.data/demo.gif)

To analyze a Docker image simply run dive with an image tag/id/digest:

Terminal window
dive <your-image-tag>

or you can dive with Docker directly:

alias dive="docker run -ti --rm -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock docker.io/wagoodman/dive"
dive <your-image-tag>
# for example
dive nginx:latest

or if you want to build your image then jump straight into analyzing it:

Terminal window
dive build -t <some-tag> .

Building on macOS (supporting only the Docker container engine):

Terminal window
docker run --rm -it \
-v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \
-v "$(pwd)":"$(pwd)" \
-w "$(pwd)" \
-v "$HOME/.dive.yaml":"$HOME/.dive.yaml" \
docker.io/wagoodman/dive:latest build -t <some-tag> .

Additionally you can run this in your CI pipeline to ensure you’re keeping wasted space to a minimum (this skips the UI):

CI=true dive <your-image>

![Image]!(.data/demo-ci.png)

This is beta quality! Feel free to submit an issue if you want a new feature or find a bug :)

Show Docker image contents broken down by layer

As you select a layer on the left, you are shown the contents of that layer combined with all previous layers on the right. Also, you can fully explore the file tree with the arrow keys.

Indicate what’s changed in each layer

Files that have changed, been modified, added, or removed are indicated in the file tree. This can be adjusted to show changes for a specific layer, or aggregated changes up to this layer.

Estimate “image efficiency”

The lower left pane shows basic layer info and an experimental metric that will guess how much wasted space your image contains. This might be from duplicating files across layers, moving files across layers, or not fully removing files. Both a percentage “score” and total wasted file space is provided.

Quick build/analysis cycles

You can build a Docker image and do an immediate analysis with one command: dive build -t some-tag .

You only need to replace your docker build command with the same dive build command.

CI Integration

Analyze an image and get a pass/fail result based on the image efficiency and wasted space. Simply set CI=true in the environment when invoking any valid dive command.

Multiple Image Sources and Container Engines Supported

With the --source option, you can select where to fetch the container image from:

Terminal window
dive <your-image> --source <source>

or

Terminal window
dive <source>://<your-image>

With valid source options as such:

  • docker: Docker engine (the default option)
  • docker-archive: A Docker Tar Archive from disk
  • podman: Podman engine (linux only)

Ubuntu/Debian

Using debs:

Terminal window
DIVE_VERSION=$(curl -sL "https://api.github.com/repos/wagoodman/dive/releases/latest" | grep '"tag_name":' | sed -E 's/.*"v([^"]+)".*/\1/')
curl -fOL "https://github.com/wagoodman/dive/releases/download/v${DIVE_VERSION}/dive_${DIVE_VERSION}_linux_amd64.deb"
sudo apt install ./dive_${DIVE_VERSION}_linux_amd64.deb

Using snap:

Terminal window
sudo snap install docker
sudo snap install dive
sudo snap connect dive:docker-executables docker:docker-executables
sudo snap connect dive:docker-daemon docker:docker-daemon

[!CAUTION] The Snap method is not recommended if you installed Docker via apt-get, since it might break your existing Docker daemon.

See also: https://github.com/wagoodman/dive/issues/546

RHEL/Centos

Terminal window
DIVE_VERSION=$(curl -sL "https://api.github.com/repos/wagoodman/dive/releases/latest" | grep '"tag_name":' | sed -E 's/.*"v([^"]+)".*/\1/')
curl -fOL "https://github.com/wagoodman/dive/releases/download/v${DIVE_VERSION}/dive_${DIVE_VERSION}_linux_amd64.rpm"
rpm -i dive_${DIVE_VERSION}_linux_amd64.rpm

Arch Linux

Available in the extra repository and can be installed via pacman:

Terminal window
pacman -S dive

Mac

If you use Homebrew:

Terminal window
brew install dive

If you use MacPorts:

Terminal window
sudo port install dive

Or download the latest Darwin build from the releases page.

Windows

If you use Chocolatey

Terminal window
choco install dive

If you use scoop

Terminal window
scoop install main/dive

If you use winget:

Terminal window
winget install --id wagoodman.dive

Or download the latest Windows build from the releases page.

Go tools Requires Go version 1.10 or higher.

Terminal window
go install github.com/wagoodman/dive@latest

Note: installing in this way you will not see a proper version when running dive -v.

Nix/NixOS

On NixOS:

Terminal window
nix-env -iA nixos.dive

On non-NixOS (Linux, Mac)

Terminal window
nix-env -iA nixpkgs.dive

X-CMD

x-cmd is a toolbox for Posix Shell, offering a lightweight package manager built using shell and awk.

Terminal window
x env use dive

Docker

Terminal window
docker pull docker.io/wagoodman/dive
# or alternatively
docker pull ghcr.io/wagoodman/dive

When running you’ll need to include the Docker socket file:

Terminal window
docker run --rm -it \
-v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \
docker.io/wagoodman/dive:latest <dive arguments...>

Docker for Windows (showing PowerShell compatible line breaks; collapse to a single line for Command Prompt compatibility)

Terminal window
docker run --rm -it `
-v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock `
docker.io/wagoodman/dive:latest <dive arguments...>

Note: depending on the version of docker you are running locally you may need to specify the docker API version as an environment variable:

Terminal window
DOCKER_API_VERSION=1.37 dive ...

or if you are running with a docker image:

Terminal window
docker run --rm -it \
-v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \
-e DOCKER_API_VERSION=1.37 \
docker.io/wagoodman/dive:latest <dive arguments...>

if you are using an alternative runtime (Colima etc) then you may need to specify the docker host as an environment variable in order to pull local images:

Terminal window
export DOCKER_HOST=$(docker context inspect -f '{{ .Endpoints.docker.Host }}')

When running dive with the environment variable CI=true then the dive UI will be bypassed and will instead analyze your docker image, giving it a pass/fail indication via return code. Currently there are three metrics supported via a .dive-ci file that you can put at the root of your repo:

rules:
# If the efficiency is measured below X%, mark as failed.
# Expressed as a ratio between 0-1.
lowestEfficiency: 0.95
# If the amount of wasted space is at least X or larger than X, mark as failed.
# Expressed in B, KB, MB, and GB.
highestWastedBytes: 20MB
# If the amount of wasted space makes up for X% or more of the image, mark as failed.
# Note: the base image layer is NOT included in the total image size.
# Expressed as a ratio between 0-1; fails if the threshold is met or crossed.
highestUserWastedPercent: 0.20

You can override the CI config path with the --ci-config option.

Key BindingDescription
Ctrl + C or QExit
TabSwitch between the layer and filetree views
Ctrl + FFilter files
ESCClose filter files
PageUp or UScroll up a page
PageDown or DScroll down a page
Up or KMove up one line within a page
Down or JMove down one line within a page
Ctrl + ALayer view: see aggregated image modifications
Ctrl + LLayer view: see current layer modifications
SpaceFiletree view: collapse/uncollapse a directory
Ctrl + SpaceFiletree view: collapse/uncollapse all directories
Ctrl + AFiletree view: show/hide added files
Ctrl + RFiletree view: show/hide removed files
Ctrl + MFiletree view: show/hide modified files
Ctrl + UFiletree view: show/hide unmodified files
Ctrl + BFiletree view: show/hide file attributes
PageUp or UFiletree view: scroll up a page
PageDown or DFiletree view: scroll down a page

No configuration is necessary, however, you can create a config file and override values:

# supported options are "docker" and "podman"
container-engine: docker
# continue with analysis even if there are errors parsing the image archive
ignore-errors: false
log:
enabled: true
path: ./dive.log
level: info
# Note: you can specify multiple bindings by separating values with a comma.
# Note: UI hinting is derived from the first binding
keybinding:
# Global bindings
quit: ctrl+c
toggle-view: tab
filter-files: ctrl+f, ctrl+slash
close-filter-files: esc
up: up,k
down: down,j
left: left,h
right: right,l
# Layer view specific bindings
compare-all: ctrl+a
compare-layer: ctrl+l
# File view specific bindings
toggle-collapse-dir: space
toggle-collapse-all-dir: ctrl+space
toggle-added-files: ctrl+a
toggle-removed-files: ctrl+r
toggle-modified-files: ctrl+m
toggle-unmodified-files: ctrl+u
toggle-filetree-attributes: ctrl+b
page-up: pgup,u
page-down: pgdn,d
diff:
# You can change the default files shown in the filetree (right pane). All diff types are shown by default.
hide:
- added
- removed
- modified
- unmodified
filetree:
# The default directory-collapse state
collapse-dir: false
# The percentage of screen width the filetree should take on the screen (must be >0 and <1)
pane-width: 0.5
# Show the file attributes next to the filetree
show-attributes: true
layer:
# Enable showing all changes from this layer and every previous layer
show-aggregated-changes: false

dive will search for configs in the following locations:

  • $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/dive/*.yaml
  • $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS/dive/*.yaml
  • ~/.config/dive/*.yaml
  • ~/.dive.yaml

.yml can be used instead of .yaml if desired.