# Overview of Docker Compose Compose is a tool for defining and running multi-container applications with Docker. With Compose, you define a multi-container application in a single file, then spin your application up in a single command which does everything that needs to be done to get it running. Compose is great for development environments, staging servers, and CI. We don't recommend that you use it in production yet. Using Compose is basically a three-step process. 1. Define your app's environment with a `Dockerfile` so it can be reproduced anywhere. 2. Define the services that make up your app in `docker-compose.yml` so they can be run together in an isolated environment: 3. Lastly, run `docker-compose up` and Compose will start and run your entire app. A `docker-compose.yml` looks like this: web: build: . ports: - "5000:5000" volumes: - .:/code links: - redis redis: image: redis Compose has commands for managing the whole lifecycle of your application: * Start, stop and rebuild services * View the status of running services * Stream the log output of running services * Run a one-off command on a service ## Compose documentation - [Installing Compose](install.md) - [Get started with Django](django.md) - [Get started with Rails](rails.md) - [Get started with Wordpress](wordpress.md) - [Command line reference](cli.md) - [Yaml file reference](yml.md) - [Compose environment variables](env.md) - [Compose command line completion](completion.md) ## Quick start Let's get started with a walkthrough of getting a simple Python web app running on Compose. It assumes a little knowledge of Python, but the concepts demonstrated here should be understandable even if you're not familiar with Python. ### Installation and set-up First, [install Docker and Compose](install.md). Next, you'll want to make a directory for the project: $ mkdir composetest $ cd composetest Inside this directory, create `app.py`, a simple web app that uses the Flask framework and increments a value in Redis. Don't worry if you don't have Redis installed, docker is going to take care of that for you when we [define services](#define-services): from flask import Flask from redis import Redis app = Flask(__name__) redis = Redis(host='redis', port=6379) @app.route('/') def hello(): redis.incr('hits') return 'Hello World! I have been seen %s times.' % redis.get('hits') if __name__ == "__main__": app.run(host="0.0.0.0", debug=True) Next, define the Python dependencies in a file called `requirements.txt`: flask redis ### Create a Docker image Now, create a Docker image containing all of your app's dependencies. You specify how to build the image using a file called [`Dockerfile`](http://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/): FROM python:2.7 ADD . /code WORKDIR /code RUN pip install -r requirements.txt CMD python app.py This tells Docker to: * Build an image starting with the Python 2.7 image. * Add the current directory `.` into the path `/code` in the image. * Set the working directory to `/code`. * Install your Python dependencies. * Set the default command for the container to `python app.py` For more information on how to write Dockerfiles, see the [Docker user guide](https://docs.docker.com/userguide/dockerimages/#building-an-image-from-a-dockerfile) and the [Dockerfile reference](http://docs.docker.com/reference/builder/). You can test that this builds by running `docker build -t web .`. ### Define services Next, define a set of services using `docker-compose.yml`: web: build: . ports: - "5000:5000" volumes: - .:/code links: - redis redis: image: redis This defines two services: #### web * Builds from the `Dockerfile` in the current directory. * Forwards the exposed port 5000 on the container to port 5000 on the host machine. * Connects the web container to the Redis service via a link. * Mounts the current directory on the host to `/code` inside the container allowing you to modify the code without having to rebuild the image. #### redis * Uses the public [Redis](https://registry.hub.docker.com/_/redis/) image which gets pulled from the Docker Hub registry. ### Build and run your app with Compose Now, when you run `docker-compose up`, Compose will pull a Redis image, build an image for your code, and start everything up: $ docker-compose up Pulling image redis... Building web... Starting composetest_redis_1... Starting composetest_web_1... redis_1 | [8] 02 Jan 18:43:35.576 # Server started, Redis version 2.8.3 web_1 | * Running on http://0.0.0.0:5000/ web_1 | * Restarting with stat If you're using [Boot2docker](https://github.com/boot2docker/boot2docker), then `boot2docker ip` will tell you its address and you can open `http://ip-from-boot2docker:5000` in a browser. If you're not using Boot2docker and are on linux, then the web app should now be listening on port 5000 on your Docker daemon host. If http://0.0.0.0:5000 doesn't resolve, you can also try localhost:5000. You should get a message in your browser saying: `Hello World! I have been seen 1 times.` Refreshing the page will increment the number. If you want to run your services in the background, you can pass the `-d` flag (for "detached" mode) to `docker-compose up` and use `docker-compose ps` to see what is currently running: $ docker-compose up -d Starting composetest_redis_1... Starting composetest_web_1... $ docker-compose ps Name Command State Ports ------------------------------------------------------------------- composetest_redis_1 /usr/local/bin/run Up composetest_web_1 /bin/sh -c python app.py Up 5000->5000/tcp The `docker-compose run` command allows you to run one-off commands for your services. For example, to see what environment variables are available to the `web` service: $ docker-compose run web env See `docker-compose --help` to see other available commands. You can also install [command completion](completion.md) for the bash and zsh shell, which will also show you available commands. If you started Compose with `docker-compose up -d`, you'll probably want to stop your services once you've finished with them: $ docker-compose stop At this point, you have seen the basics of how Compose works. - Next, try the quick start guide for [Django](django.md), [Rails](rails.md), or [Wordpress](wordpress.md). - See the reference guides for complete details on the [commands](cli.md), the [configuration file](yml.md) and [environment variables](env.md). ## Release Notes ### Version 1.2.0 (April 7, 2015) For complete information on this release, see the [1.2.0 Milestone project page](https://github.com/docker/compose/wiki/1.2.0-Milestone-Project-Page). In addition to bug fixes and refinements, this release adds the following: * The `extends` keyword, which adds the ability to extend services by sharing common configurations. For details, see [PR #1088](https://github.com/docker/compose/pull/1088). * Better integration with Swarm. Swarm will now schedule inter-dependent containers on the same host. For details, see [PR #972](https://github.com/docker/compose/pull/972). ## Getting help Docker Compose is still in its infancy and under active development. If you need help, would like to contribute, or simply want to talk about the project with like-minded individuals, we have a number of open channels for communication. * To report bugs or file feature requests: please use the [issue tracker on Github](https://github.com/docker/compose/issues). * To talk about the project with people in real time: please join the `#docker-compose` channel on IRC. * To contribute code or documentation changes: please submit a [pull request on Github](https://github.com/docker/compose/pulls). For more information and resources, please visit the [Getting Help project page](https://docs.docker.com/project/get-help/).