DataGrip 2024.3 Help

Services tool window

The Services tool window allows you to use database and Docker services. To use Docker, install the Docker plugin. For more information about Docker, refer to Docker.

The Services tool window
  1. Data sources.

  2. Sessions and their agents.

  3. Docker containers and images.

For a quick overview of the Services tool window, see the following video.

The main toolbar contains the following buttons and menus that are common for all service types:

The Expand All button

Expand All Ctrl+NumPad +

Expand all items in the list.

The Collapse All button

Collapse All Ctrl+NumPad -

Collapse all items in the list.

The Group By menu

Group By

Choose how you want to organize the list of services:

  • Group Services by Type: arrange services by type, such as Run Dashboard, Docker, or Database

  • Service Groups: arrange services by group, such as a build tool or a data source name

The Filter menu

Filter

Choose how you want to filter the list of services.

The Open in New Tab button

Open in New Tab

Move the selected items to a separate tab.

The Add Service menu

Add Service Alt+Insert

Choose a service type to add.

Configure Services tool window

You can adjust the layout of the Services tool window by moving services to their own separate tool windows (right-click a service and select Open in New Tab).

You can also configure it in a dedicated dialog.

  1. In the Services tool window, click and select Configure Services Tool Window.

    Alternatively, press Ctrl+Shift+A and start typing Configure Services Tool Window.

  2. Use the Exclude and Include buttons to move services from the Services tool window to a separate tool window and vice versa. Configurations from the Run/Debug section don't have their own tool windows — instead, they appear in the Run or Debug tool window when they are not included in the Services tool window.

Run/debug configurations

Run/debug configurations are not listed in the Services tool window by default. You need to explicitly specify the types of configurations you want to be available and create the corresponding configurations.

Buttons on the toolbar depend on the selected type of the run/debug configuration and can include the following:

The Run button

Run Ctrl+Shift+F10

Run the selected configuration.

The Debug button

Debug ⌃ ⇧ D

Run the selected configuration in Debug mode.

The Stop button

Stop Ctrl+F2

Stop the selected configuration.

The Rerun button

Rerun Ctrl+Shift+F10

Rerun the selected configuration.

The Rerun in Debug Mode button

Rerun in Debug Mode ⌃ ⇧ D

Rerun the selected configuration in Debug mode.

The Filters menu

Filters

Filter the output for the selected configuration. For example, you can select to show warnings and successful steps.

The More menu

More

Additional actions related to the configuration. For example, you can open and modify the settings of the selected configuration.

Database service

Database services in the Services tool window
  1. Main toolbar.

  2. Left toolbar.

  3. Context menu.

  4. Output tab.

  5. Result tab.

  6. Right toolbar.

Left toolbar

Buttons on the toolbar depend on the selected item and can include the following:

Icon

Action and shortcut

Description

The Jump to Console button

Jump to Query Console Ctrl+Shift+F10

Open the Query Consoles popup. In the Query Consoles popup, you can select a query console that you want to open in the editor.

the Deactivate icon

Deactivate Ctrl+F2

Close the database connection for the selected data source or data sources. (The data sources with connected sessions are indicated with a green dot in the corner of their icon.)

Tx

Transaction Mode

and

Transaction Isolation

Select the isolation level for database transactions and the way the transactions are committed.

  • Auto: the current transaction is committed automatically when you submit your local changes to the database server.

  • Manual: the changes submitted to the database server are accumulated in a transaction that can either be committed or rolled back explicitly by means of the Submit and Commit (the Submit and Commit icon) or Roll Back (the Roll Back button) buttons on the toolbar.

For more information about database transaction modes and isolation, refer to Submit changes to a database.

the Commit icon

Commit

(For the Manual transaction mode.) Commit the current transaction. This button is available only for the manual transaction mode. See also, transaction mode and isolation.

the Roll back icon

Roll back

(For the Manual transaction mode.) Roll back changes. This button is available only for the manual transaction mode. See also, transaction modes and isolation.

the Cancel Running Statements icon

Cancel Running Statements

Ctrl+F2

Terminate execution of the current statement or statements.

Context menu

Actions of the context menu depend on the selected item and can include the following:

Icon

Action and shortcut

Description

The Jump to Console button

Jump to Query Console Ctrl+Shift+F10

Open the Query Consoles popup. In the Query Consoles popup, you can select a query console that you want to open in the editor.

the Deactivate icon

Deactivate Ctrl+F2

Close the database connection for the selected data source or data sources. (The data sources with connected sessions are indicated with a green dot in the corner of their icon.)

Close All Sessions

Close all opened sessions to a data source.

Open in New Tab

Move the selected items to a separate tab.

Open Each in New Tab

Split the selected items into separate tabs.

Open Each Type in New Tab

Create separate tabs for each type of service.

Delete Delete

Close all opened sessions to a data source. Identical to Close All Sessions.

Tx

Transaction Mode

and

Transaction Isolation

Select the isolation level for database transactions and the way the transactions are committed.

  • Auto: the current transaction is committed automatically when you submit your local changes to the database server.

  • Manual: the changes submitted to the database server are accumulated in a transaction that can either be committed or rolled back explicitly by means of the Submit and Commit (the Submit and Commit icon) or Roll Back (the Roll Back button) buttons on the toolbar.

For more information about database transaction modes and isolation, refer to Submit changes to a database.

the Commit icon

Commit

(For the Manual transaction mode.) Commit the current transaction. This button is available only for the manual transaction mode. See also, transaction mode and isolation.

the Roll back icon

Roll back

(For the Manual transaction mode.) Roll back changes. This button is available only for the manual transaction mode. See also, transaction modes and isolation.

the Cancel Running Statements icon

Cancel Running Statements

Ctrl+F2

Terminate execution of the current statement or statements.

Close Session

Close the selected session.

Switch session

Attach the selected file to one of the available sessions. To detach the file from a session, open the file in the editor, click the <session> list and select Detach Session.

Open in New Tab

Move the selected items to a separate tab.

Open Each in New Tab

Split the selected items into separate tabs.

Open Each Type in New Tab

Create separate tabs for each type of service.

Delete Delete

Close all opened sessions to a data source. Identical to Close All Sessions.

the Jump to Source button

Jump to Source F4

Open the file in the editor.

Output tab

Use the Output tab of Services tool window to view information about SQL statements and other operations that you performed in a query console. Also, the Output tab displays information about errors, timestamps, affected rows, query duration, the autocommit mode, and other operations.

The Output tab

Right toolbar

Item

Tooltip

Description

the Soft-wrap icon

Soft-Wrap

Wrap long lines of text.

the Scroll to End icon

Scroll to End

Scroll the output log to the end.

the Print icon

Print

Print a query console file, a selected text, or all the files in a directory.

the Clear All icon

Clear All

Clear the Output tab.

Context menu

Item

Description

Copy Copy

Copy the selected text.

Copy Path/Reference

Copy a reference link to a file or a line.

Compare with clipboard Compare with Clipboard

Open the Clipboard vs Editor dialog where you can see the diff between the selected text and the text that you copied to a clipboard.

Search with Google

Open a browser and run a search on Google for the selected text.

Fold Lines Like This

Fold the lines that include the selected text.

Pause Output

Pause the output logging.

Delete Clear All

Clear the output log.

Result tab

Use the Result tab of Services tool window to see the data that was retrieved from the database in a table format. You can sort, add, edit, and remove data as well as perform other associated table tasks. For more information about working with tables, rows, columns, and cells, refer to Tables.

Result tab in the Services tool window

Most of the functions in the Result tab are accessed by using controls on the toolbar, context menu commands for the data cells, and associated keyboard shortcuts. You can see what other actions with tables you can perform in Tables.

Toolbar controls

Icon

Action and shortcut

Description

First page

Previous page

the Change page size button

Next page

Last page

First Page

Previous Page Ctrl+Alt+Up

Change page size

Next Page Ctrl+Alt+Down

Last Page

Use navigation icons and corresponding commands for switching between pages that show the retrieved data and change the page size.

A number of rows that you see on the Result tab are referred to as a result set page. If this number is less than the number of rows that satisfy the query, only a subset of all the rows is shown at a time. If all the rows are currently shown, navigation icons and the corresponding commands are inactive. You can see the limit between the navigation buttons. You can change it here by clicking and selecting the necessary limit or in settings.

  • First page: jump to the first page of results.

  • Previous page: go to the previous page of results.

  • Next page: go to the next page of results.

  • Last page: jump to the last page of results.

To change the size of a result set page, click the Change page size button and select the size. Alternatively, open settings (Ctrl+Alt+S) and navigate to Database | Data Editor and Viewer. In the Limit page size to field, type a new size of a result set page. Alternatively, to disable the page size restriction, clear the Limit page size to checkbox.

the Reload Page icon

Reload Page

Ctrl+F5

Reload data for the table view to synchronize the data that you see in the editor with the contents of the database. Also, use the Reload Page button when you want to apply a new page size limit setting after its change.

the Update Interval icon

Update Interval

Select, pause, or disable update interval for the current table. You can also set a custom one.

the Cancel Running Statements icon

Cancel Running Statements

Ctrl+F2

Terminate execution of the current statement or statements.

the Add Row icon

Add Row

Alt+Insert

Add a row to the table.

To save a new row, click Submit button (the Submit button).

The Add Row button is disabled in the inappropriate context. For example, if the current table does not permit adding rows.

For more information about working with rows, refer to Rows.

the Delete Row icon

Delete Row

Ctrl+Y

Delete the selected row or rows.

To select multiple rows, click numbers in the gutter. Also, you can press Ctrl and click the necessary rows.

The Delete Row button is disabled in the inappropriate context. For example, if the current table does not permit removing rows.

the Revert Selected button

Revert Selected

Ctrl+Alt+Z

Revert changes that you made to a cell value. You can select a scope of different cells and revert values in this scope.

For more information about reverting changes, refer to Submit changes to a database.

the Preview Pending Changes icon

Preview Pending Changes

Preview DML of changes that you made to the table.

the Submit button

Submit

Ctrl+Enter

Submit local changes to the database server. For more information about submitting and reverting changes, refer to Submit changes to a database.

Transaction mode

Transaction Mode

and

Transaction Isolation

Select the isolation level for database transactions and the way the transactions are committed.

  • Auto: the current transaction is committed automatically when you submit your local changes to the database server.

  • Manual: the changes submitted to the database server are accumulated in a transaction that can either be committed or rolled back explicitly by means of the Submit and Commit (the Submit and Commit icon) or Roll Back (the Roll Back button) buttons on the toolbar.

For more information about database transaction modes and isolation, refer to Submit changes to a database.

the Submit and Commit icon

Submit and CommitCtrl+Alt+Shift+Enter

(For the Manual transaction mode.) Submit and commit the current transaction. This button is available only for the manual transaction mode. See also, transaction mode and isolation.

the Roll Back icon

Roll Back

(For the Manual transaction mode.) Roll back changes. This button is available only for the manual transaction mode. See also, transaction modes and isolation.

the Pin icon

Pin Tab

Pin the tab to the tool window to keep the query result.

For more information about pinning tabs, refer to Pin the tab with query results.

Data Extractor

Data Extractors

Select an output format for your data. For the list of available formats and full information about data extractors, refer to the Data extractors topic.

Also, you can configure the following options:

  • Skip Computed Columns: do not include virtual columns that are not physically stored in the table (for example, the identity column).

  • Skip Generated Columns: for INSERT and UPDATE statements, do not include auto-increment fields when copying or saving data.

  • Configure CSV Formats: open the CSV Formats dialog where you can manage your delimiter-separated values formats (for example, CSV, TSV).

  • Go To Scripts Directory: open a directory with scripts that convert table data into different output formats.

For more information about data extractors, refer to the Data extractors topic.

the Export Data icon

Export Data

Export the table data to the clipboard or save to a file.

the Copy to Database icon

Copy to Database

Copy the data to another table, schema or database. Select the target schema (a new table will be created) or table (the data will be added to the selected table). In the dialog that opens, specify the data mapping info and the settings for the target table.

the Compare Data icon

Compare Data

Compare the current table with a table from the list.

For more information about comparing tables, refer to Compare table data.

the View as icon

View as

Select the mode for browsing and editing table data.

  • Transpose: viewing mode in which rows and columns are interchanged. You can combine this checkbox with other viewing modes.

    To make this mode a default for tables and views, open settings by pressing Ctrl+Alt+S and navigate to Database | Data Editor and Viewer. . From the Automatically transpose tables list, select Always. When this option is enabled, query results are not transposed.

  • Table: the default viewing mode of table data. Data in a table is stored in a cell that is an intersection of a vertical column and horizontal row.

  • Tree: viewing mode in which data is displayed in the key-value table with the possibility to expand the key cell if it contains children nodes. Data from the expanded children node is distributed between key and value columns. You might consider using this mode to work with JSON and array data.

  • Text: viewing mode in which data is displayed as a text.

For more information about viewing data, refer to View data.

the Show Options Menu icon

Show Options Menu

The Show Options Menu list includes the following options:

  • Show Geo Viewer: enable a graphic viewer to explore geospatial data in your database.

    For more information about the Geo viewer, refer to Using Geo viewer for geographical data in PostgreSQL.

  • Show Value Editor: open a separate editor where you can edit data that is stored in the cell.

    For more information about the editor, refer to Value editor.

  • Show Aggregate View: open the aggregate view where you can select values of multiple cells and get a single summary value.

    For more information about the view, refer to Aggregate view.

  • Paste Format: select how you want to treat the text from the clipboard on paste.

  • Reset View: restore the initial table view if you customized the table view before (for example, hidden columns or sorted data).

  • View Query: view the query that generated the table.

  • Copy Query to Console: copy the query that generated the table to query console.

  • Open Data View Settings...: open the Data Editor and Viewer section in settings, where you can define how table data are shown and modified in your query consoles and data editors.

    For more information about the Data Editor and Viewer settings section, refer to Data editor and viewer.

Context menu

You can find all basic actions for working with cells under the context menu. To call the context menu, right-click the cell that you want to modify. The following table lists all the actions.

Context menu of a cell in data editor

Action

Shortcut

Description

Edit

Enter

Edit a value in the selected cell or cells. Alternatively, you can double-click the cell and start typing a value. The Edit command is unavailable for read-only values.

  • To open the auto-completion list, press Ctrl+Space.

  • To confirm your changes, press Enter.

  • To cancel editing, press Escape.

For more information about editing cells, refer to Cells.

the Open in Value Editor icon Open in Value Editor

Shift+Enter

Open in a separate value editor where you can edit data that is stored in the cell.

For more information about the editor, refer to Value editor.

the Show Aggregate View icon Show Aggregate View

Open the aggregate view where you can select values of multiple cells and get a single summary value.

For more information about the view, refer to Aggregate view.

the Revert Selected button Revert Selected

Ctrl+Alt+Z

Revert changes that you made to a cell value. You can select a scope of different cells and revert values in this scope.

For more information about reverting changes, refer to Submit changes to a database.

Set Highlighting Language

Select a language that the IDE should use to highlight data in a cell.

Change Display Type

Select how the IDE should display binary data in the column. 16-byte data is displayed as UUID by default.

Set DEFAULT

Ctrl+Alt+D

Set the current cell value to the default value or the value that you specified for the column.

For more information about viewing or set a default value, refer to Manage default and NULL values for a cell.

Set NULL

Ctrl+Alt+N

Set the current cell value to NULL.

For more information about allowing a NULL value, refer to Manage default and NULL values for a cell.

Generate UUID

Generates the UUID for the selected cell.

Load File

Load a file into the field.

Save LOB

For the cells that contain a binary large object (LOB). Save content of a cell into a file.

the Copy icon Copy

Ctrl+C

Copy selection to the clipboard.

the Copy Aggregation Result (SUM) icon Copy Aggregation Result (SUM)

Ctrl+Shift+C

Copy a summary value for a range of cells. By default, DataGrip copies the SUM aggregation result. To change the default, right-click the status bar and ensure that the Aggregator option is selected. Click the aggregator widget on the status bar and select the aggregator to use as default.

the Paste icon Paste

Ctrl+V

Paste the contents of clipboard into the table.

Add Row

Add a row to the end of a table.

Delete Row

Alt+Delete

Delete selected rows.

Clone Row

Create a duplicate of the selected row and adds the duplicate to the end of a table.

Go To

Navigation Bar

Jump to a navigation bar.

Database Explorer

Open the selected object in the Database Explorer.

Related Symbol

Navigate to one of the related objects.

DDL

Open an object definition (DDL).

Row

Ctrl+G

Jump to a specified row.

In the Go to Row dialog, specify the column and row number (use the column:row pattern).

the Related Rows icon Related Rows

F4

Navigates to the related records:

  • Records that the current record references.

  • Records that reference the current record.

If more than one record is referenced or referencing the current one, select the target record in the popup that appears.

The action is not available if there are no related records.

For more information about related data, refer to Navigate between related rows.

For more information about action behavior options, refer to Advanced Settings.

the Open URL icon Open URL

F4

Opens URL in OS default browser.

Requires the links opening URL Click Settings enabled in the Database | Data Editor and Viewer settings page  Ctrl+Alt+S.

the Open File icon Open File

F4

Open file URI in OS default file browser. For example, file:///Users/Username/image.png.

Requires the links opening URL Click Settings enabled in the Database | Data Editor and Viewer settings page  Ctrl+Alt+S.

Filter by

Select a filter that you want to a column.

Full-Text Search

Ctrl+Alt+Shift+F

Open a search window where you can search for data in your database or a group of databases. For more information about full-text search, refer to Full-text search in databases.

Export Table to Clipboard

Copy the whole table to the clipboard. This action does not depend on Limit page size to setting.

Switch Session

Open a window to select another session or create a new one. For more information about sessions, refer to Sessions.

Quick Documentation

Ctrl+Q

Show information about selected objects. For different database objects, Quick Documentation shows corresponding information. For example, for a group of cells, you will see a summary for the selection. You can preview it in a regular or in a transposed view and also see the related records by their foreign keys.

Docker

This type of service is available if you have configured connection settings for at least one Docker instance. For more information, refer to Connect to the Docker daemon.

Add a Docker connection

  1. Click The Add Service menu Add Service and select Docker | Connection.

  2. Configure the Docker connection settings and click OK.

    For more information, refer to Docker connection settings.

Main Docker node

These are the main actions for working with the selected Docker connection:

The Connect button Connect Ctrl+Enter

Connect to the selected Docker daemon and list all available images and containers.

The Disconnect button Disconnect

Disconnect the selected Docker daemon.

The Edit Configuration button Edit Configuration Shift+F4

Edit the selected Docker connection settings.

The Delete Connections button Delete Connections

Delete the connection to the selected Docker daemon.

The Pull Image button Pull Image

Pull an image from a Docker registry. For more information, refer to Pull a public image from Docker Hub.

Delete Connections Clean Up

Remove all stopped containers, unused volumes and networks, dangling images, and all build caches.

Containers

This node lists all containers managed by the corresponding Docker daemon.

Delete Connections Clean Up

Remove all stopped containers.

When you select a container, the following actions are available:

The Start button Start

Run the selected container.

The Restart button Restart

Restart the selected container.

The Stop button Stop

Stop the selected container.

The Terminal button Terminal

Open a tab with the Terminal in the selected container.

You can choose between creating a Terminal with the current container user privileges or log in with root user privileges.

More actions are available under the More actions menu:

Show Files

Open the Files tab to browse the file system of the container.

For more information, refer to Browse files in a container.

The Inspect button Inspect

Open the Inspection tab with detailed information about the container in JSON format.

For more information, refer to View detailed information about a running container.

The Copy Image ID button Copy Image ID

Copy the ID of the image that was used to run this container.

The Copy Container ID button Copy Container ID

Copy the ID of the container.

Container dashboard

The Dashboard tab provides important information about the selected container:

  • Name and hash ID of the container. You can click the image name to highlight the image that was used to run the selected container.

  • Names and values of environment variables defined in the container.

  • Ports mappings between the container and the host.

  • Volume bindings between the container and the host.

Click Add to add a new variable, port binding, or volume binding, and recreate the container.

Click the More button to open a menu with some additional actions:

Images

This node lists all images managed by the corresponding Docker daemon.

Type the image name in the Image to pull field and click The Pull button Pull to pull a new image from a configured Docker registry. For more information, refer to Pull a public image from Docker Hub.

When you select an image, the following actions are available:

The Create Container button Create Container

Create a Docker container from the selected image.

The Show Layers button Show Layers

Open the Layers tab that shows the layers (intermediate internal untagged images) from which the selected image consists.

The Push Image button Push Image

Push an image to a Docker registry. For more information, refer to Push an image to a Docker registry.

More actions are available under the More actions menu:

The Copy Image ID button Copy Image ID

Copy the hash ID of the selected image.

The Inspect button Inspect

Open the Inspection tab with detailed information about the image in JSON format.

For more information, refer to the docker inspect command reference.

The Show Labels button Show Labels

Open the Labels tab with the image's labels.

Image dashboard

The Dashboard tab provides important information about the selected image:

  • Name, hash ID, date of latest changes, and size of the image.

  • List of tags that point to the image.

  • List of existing containers created from this image.

Networks

This node lists all networks managed by the corresponding Docker daemon.

The Create Network button Create Network

Create a Docker network for your containers to operate in.

The Clean Up button Clean Up

Remove all unused networks.

Network dashboard

The Dashboard tab provides important information about the selected network:

  • Name and hash ID of the network.

  • List of containers connected to this network.

  • List of labels assigned to this network.

Click Inspect to run docker inspect on the selected network and output it to a separate tab.

Volumes

This node lists all volumes managed by the corresponding Docker daemon.

The Create Volume button Create Volume

Create a Docker volume for your containers to use.

The Clean Up button Clean Up

Remove all unused volumes.

When you select a volume, the following actions are available:

The Inspect button Inspect

Open the Inspection tab with detailed information about the volume in JSON format.

For more information, refer to the docker inspect command reference.

The Delete Volume button Remove

Remove the selected volume.

Volume dashboard

The Dashboard tab provides important information about the selected volume:

  • Name or hash ID of the volume.

  • List of containers that use this volume.

  • List of this volume's labels.

Docker Compose

The Start All button Start All

Deploy your selected Docker Compose services using the associated run/debug configuration. For more information, refer to Docker Compose.

The Stop button Stop

Stop all containers in the selected Docker Compose services.

The Down button Down

Stop and remove all containers in the selected Docker Compose services, including all related networks, volumes, and images.

Kubernetes

This type of service is available if:

  • The Kubernetes plugin is installed and enabled. For more information about the Kubernetes integration in DataGrip, refer to Kubernetes.

  • DataGrip detects a Kubernetes cluster configuration file. By default, this is a file named config in the $HOME/.kube directory. You can specify other kubeconfig files by setting the KUBECONFIG environment variable. For more information about kubeconfig files, refer to Organizing Cluster Access Using kubeconfig Files.

By default, the Services tool window shows the current cluster context taken from the default kubeconfig file. You can add more clusters to this tool window.

Icon

Action

Description

The Refresh button

Refresh

Refresh information from the Kubernetes cluster.

The Namespace menu

Namespace

Select a namespace to filter the resources available in the cluster.

the Add Context action

New Kubernetes Contexts

Add a Kubernetes cluster as a node in the Services tool window.

Connect Telepresence

Connect Telepresence

Connect to a cluster using Telepresence (available if a cluster is selected).

The View YAML button

View YAML

In the opened file, the following actions are available:

  • the Apply icon: Apply changes to the current context and namespace.

  • the Delete icon: Delete the resource from the current context and namespace.

  • the Refresh icon: Reload the file content from the cluster

  • the Diff icon: Show the differences between the opened file and the corresponding cluster resource in the diff viewer.

  • Change Context: Change current cluster

The Describe Resource button

Describe Resource

Display detailed information about the selected resource, similarly to the kubectl describe command.

The Delete Resource button

Delete Resource

Remove the selected resource from the cluster.

The Follow Log button

Follow Log

Output the log of a container in the selected pod.

The Download Log button

Download Log

Save the log of a container in the selected pod to a scratch file and open it in the editor.

Instead of using a scratch file, you can set the path for saving logs or choose the location every time. To configure the download location for pod logs, click The Show Settings button or open Settings | Build, Execution, Deployment | Kubernetes.

The Open Console button

Open Console

Attach to the console of the process running inside a container of the selected pod.

The Run Shell button

Run Shell

Run an interactive shell for the container in the selected pod.

By default, DataGrip runs /bin/bash. To run a different shell, open Settings | Build, Execution, Deployment | Kubernetes and, in the Command to run shell inside container field, specify the shell that your pods use.

The Run Shell button

Forward Ports

Forward one or more local ports to remote ports in a pod.

For example:

  • 7070 — listen on local port 7070 and forward data to/from remote port 7070.

  • :8080 — listen on a random local port and forward data to/from remote port 8080.

  • 8888:5000 — listen on local port 8888 and forward data to/from remote port 5000.

Fore more examples on port forwarding, refer to the Kubernetes documentation.

Productivity tips

Use tabs

The Services tool window can include a lot of services, which you can group according to their type or create separate tabs for your own custom grouping. For example, you can create a tab that will include the following: the run configuration for the application that you are developing, the Docker container that runs the database used as a backend for your application, and a console for accessing the database.

Hide the services tree

Click The Show Options Menu button in the right part of the Services tool window toolbar and then click Show Services Tree to remove the checkbox. You can also press Ctrl+Shift+T to toggle the services tree.

If you hide the services tree, it is replaced by a services navigation bar. Press Alt+Home to focus the services navigation bar.

Hide, remove, and delete services

Right-click any service and select Delete Delete to completely remove the corresponding run configuration, cloud provider, Docker connection, and so on.

If you don't want to show run/debug configurations of a certain type in the Services tool window, right-click the corresponding configuration and select Remove Configuration Type from Services. This will not remove the actual configuration.

To hide a specific run configuration from the Services tool window, right-click the corresponding configuration and select Hide Configuration. To see all hidden run configurations, click the Add Service menu and select Restore Hidden Configurations.

Last modified: 04 December 2024