
On April 19, 2026, Dockhand switched from version 1.0.25 to the new 1.0.26 version. Dockhand fixes the following issues and adds new options:
New – Persist sort order across page navigation for all data grids
New – Show git repository URL and branch in git stack edit modal
New – Show memory limit alongside usage in containers and stacks views
New – Option to delete associated volumes when removing a stack
New – Collapse consecutive port mappings into ranges in container list
Fix: Bearer token authentication fails with enterprise license active
Fix: Clicking stack name toggles stats accordion instead of just opening editor
Fix: Scheduled image prune notifications missing environment name
Fix: Gotify, ntfy, Pushover, and webhook notifications missing environment name
Fix: MFA code field not recognized by Bitwarden and other password managers

🌟Starring projects like Dockhand on GitHub is a quick way to thank developers for their work. It boosts visibility so more people discover it, attracts contributors, and motivates the team to keep improving it.
What is Dockhand? Dockhand allows you to easily manage your different Docker environments. Dockhand is a modern, self-hosted Docker management platform with an intuitive web interface for homelabs, small businesses, and enterprises. It simplifies container operations, stack deployments, and observability through real-time management (start/stop/restart containers, web terminals, file transfers), a visual Compose editor, GitOps auto-sync, metrics, logs, OIDC/SSO, MFA, vulnerability scans, and multi-host support via the open-source Hawser agent. You can deploy it quickly as a Docker container with no cloud dependencies or telemetry. It’s forever free for personal use.

This post was updated on Sunday / April 19th, 2026 at 4:14 PM