mirror of https://github.com/docker/compose.git
364 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
364 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
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page_title: Extending services in Compose
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page_description: How to use Docker Compose's "extends" keyword to share configuration between files and projects
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page_keywords: fig, composition, compose, docker, orchestration, documentation, docs
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## Extending services in Compose
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Docker Compose's `extends` keyword enables sharing of common configurations
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among different files, or even different projects entirely. Extending services
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is useful if you have several applications that reuse commonly-defined services.
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Using `extends` you can define a service in one place and refer to it from
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anywhere.
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Alternatively, you can deploy the same application to multiple environments with
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a slightly different set of services in each case (or with changes to the
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configuration of some services). Moreover, you can do so without copy-pasting
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the configuration around.
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### Understand the extends configuration
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When defining any service in `docker-compose.yml`, you can declare that you are
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extending another service like this:
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```yaml
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web:
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extends:
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file: common-services.yml
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service: webapp
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```
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This instructs Compose to re-use the configuration for the `webapp` service
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defined in the `common-services.yml` file. Suppose that `common-services.yml`
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looks like this:
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```yaml
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webapp:
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build: .
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ports:
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- "8000:8000"
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volumes:
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- "/data"
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```
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In this case, you'll get exactly the same result as if you wrote
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`docker-compose.yml` with that `build`, `ports` and `volumes` configuration
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defined directly under `web`.
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You can go further and define (or re-define) configuration locally in
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`docker-compose.yml`:
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```yaml
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web:
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extends:
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file: common-services.yml
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service: webapp
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environment:
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- DEBUG=1
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cpu_shares: 5
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```
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You can also write other services and link your `web` service to them:
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```yaml
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web:
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extends:
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file: common-services.yml
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service: webapp
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environment:
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- DEBUG=1
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cpu_shares: 5
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links:
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- db
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db:
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image: postgres
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```
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For full details on how to use `extends`, refer to the [reference](#reference).
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### Example use case
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In this example, you’ll repurpose the example app from the [quick start
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guide](index.md). (If you're not familiar with Compose, it's recommended that
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you go through the quick start first.) This example assumes you want to use
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Compose both to develop an application locally and then deploy it to a
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production environment.
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The local and production environments are similar, but there are some
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differences. In development, you mount the application code as a volume so that
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it can pick up changes; in production, the code should be immutable from the
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outside. This ensures it’s not accidentally changed. The development environment
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uses a local Redis container, but in production another team manages the Redis
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service, which is listening at `redis-production.example.com`.
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To configure with `extends` for this sample, you must:
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1. Define the web application as a Docker image in `Dockerfile` and a Compose
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service in `common.yml`.
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2. Define the development environment in the standard Compose file,
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`docker-compose.yml`.
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- Use `extends` to pull in the web service.
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- Configure a volume to enable code reloading.
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- Create an additional Redis service for the application to use locally.
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3. Define the production environment in a third Compose file, `production.yml`.
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- Use `extends` to pull in the web service.
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- Configure the web service to talk to the external, production Redis service.
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#### Define the web app
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Defining the web application requires the following:
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1. Create an `app.py` file.
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This file contains a simple Python application that uses Flask to serve HTTP
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and increments a counter in Redis:
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from flask import Flask
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from redis import Redis
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import os
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app = Flask(__name__)
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redis = Redis(host=os.environ['REDIS_HOST'], port=6379)
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@app.route('/')
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def hello():
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redis.incr('hits')
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return 'Hello World! I have been seen %s times.\n' % redis.get('hits')
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if __name__ == "__main__":
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app.run(host="0.0.0.0", debug=True)
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This code uses a `REDIS_HOST` environment variable to determine where to
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find Redis.
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2. Define the Python dependencies in a `requirements.txt` file:
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flask
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redis
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3. Create a `Dockerfile` to build an image containing the app:
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FROM python:2.7
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ADD . /code
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WORKDIR /code
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RUN pip install -r
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requirements.txt
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CMD python app.py
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4. Create a Compose configuration file called `common.yml`:
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This configuration defines how to run the app.
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web:
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build: .
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ports:
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- "5000:5000"
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Typically, you would have dropped this configuration into
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`docker-compose.yml` file, but in order to pull it into multiple files with
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`extends`, it needs to be in a separate file.
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#### Define the development environment
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1. Create a `docker-compose.yml` file.
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The `extends` option pulls in the `web` service from the `common.yml` file
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you created in the previous section.
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web:
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extends:
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file: common.yml
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service: web
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volumes:
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- .:/code
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links:
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- redis
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environment:
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- REDIS_HOST=redis
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redis:
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image: redis
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The new addition defines a `web` service that:
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- Fetches the base configuration for `web` out of `common.yml`.
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- Adds `volumes` and `links` configuration to the base (`common.yml`)
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configuration.
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- Sets the `REDIS_HOST` environment variable to point to the linked redis
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container. This environment uses a stock `redis` image from the Docker Hub.
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2. Run `docker-compose up`.
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Compose creates, links, and starts a web and redis container linked together.
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It mounts your application code inside the web container.
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3. Verify that the code is mounted by changing the message in
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`app.py`—say, from `Hello world!` to `Hello from Compose!`.
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Don't forget to refresh your browser to see the change!
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#### Define the production environment
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You are almost done. Now, define your production environment:
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1. Create a `production.yml` file.
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As with `docker-compose.yml`, the `extends` option pulls in the `web` service
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from `common.yml`.
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web:
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extends:
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file: common.yml
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service: web
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environment:
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- REDIS_HOST=redis-production.example.com
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2. Run `docker-compose -f production.yml up`.
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Compose creates *just* a web container and configures the Redis connection via
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the `REDIS_HOST` environment variable. This variable points to the production
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Redis instance.
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> **Note**: If you try to load up the webapp in your browser you'll get an
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> error—`redis-production.example.com` isn't actually a Redis server.
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You've now done a basic `extends` configuration. As your application develops,
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you can make any necessary changes to the web service in `common.yml`. Compose
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picks up both the development and production environments when you next run
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`docker-compose`. You don't have to do any copy-and-paste, and you don't have to
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manually keep both environments in sync.
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### Reference
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You can use `extends` on any service together with other configuration keys. It
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always expects a dictionary that should always contain two keys: `file` and
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`service`.
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The `file` key specifies which file to look in. It can be an absolute path or a
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relative one—if relative, it's treated as relative to the current file.
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The `service` key specifies the name of the service to extend, for example `web`
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or `database`.
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You can extend a service that itself extends another. You can extend
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indefinitely. Compose does not support circular references and `docker-compose`
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returns an error if it encounters them.
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#### Adding and overriding configuration
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Compose copies configurations from the original service over to the local one,
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**except** for `links` and `volumes_from`. These exceptions exist to avoid
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implicit dependencies—you always define `links` and `volumes_from`
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locally. This ensures dependencies between services are clearly visible when
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reading the current file. Defining these locally also ensures changes to the
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referenced file don't result in breakage.
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If a configuration option is defined in both the original service and the local
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service, the local value either *override*s or *extend*s the definition of the
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original service. This works differently for other configuration options.
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For single-value options like `image`, `command` or `mem_limit`, the new value
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replaces the old value. **This is the default behaviour - all exceptions are
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listed below.**
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```yaml
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# original service
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command: python app.py
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# local service
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command: python otherapp.py
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# result
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command: python otherapp.py
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```
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In the case of `build` and `image`, using one in the local service causes
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Compose to discard the other, if it was defined in the original service.
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```yaml
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# original service
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build: .
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# local service
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image: redis
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# result
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image: redis
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```
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```yaml
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# original service
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image: redis
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# local service
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build: .
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# result
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build: .
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```
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For the **multi-value options** `ports`, `expose`, `external_links`, `dns` and
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`dns_search`, Compose concatenates both sets of values:
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```yaml
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# original service
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expose:
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- "3000"
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# local service
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expose:
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- "4000"
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- "5000"
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# result
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expose:
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- "3000"
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- "4000"
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- "5000"
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```
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In the case of `environment`, Compose "merges" entries together with
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locally-defined values taking precedence:
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```yaml
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# original service
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environment:
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- FOO=original
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- BAR=original
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# local service
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environment:
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- BAR=local
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- BAZ=local
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# result
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environment:
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- FOO=original
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- BAR=local
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- BAZ=local
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```
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Finally, for `volumes`, Compose "merges" entries together with locally-defined
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bindings taking precedence:
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```yaml
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# original service
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volumes:
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- /original-dir/foo:/foo
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- /original-dir/bar:/bar
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# local service
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volumes:
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- /local-dir/bar:/bar
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- /local-dir/baz/:baz
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# result
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volumes:
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- /original-dir/foo:/foo
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- /local-dir/bar:/bar
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- /local-dir/baz/:baz
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```
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