compose/docs/reference/compose.md

6.5 KiB
Raw Blame History

docker compose

Docker Compose

Subcommands

Name Description
build Build or rebuild services
convert Converts the compose file to platform's canonical format
cp Copy files/folders between a service container and the local filesystem
create Creates containers for a service.
down Stop and remove containers, networks
events Receive real time events from containers.
exec Execute a command in a running container.
images List images used by the created containers
kill Force stop service containers.
logs View output from containers
ls List running compose projects
pause Pause services
port Print the public port for a port binding.
ps List containers
pull Pull service images
push Push service images
restart Restart service containers
rm Removes stopped service containers
run Run a one-off command on a service.
start Start services
stop Stop services
top Display the running processes
unpause Unpause services
up Create and start containers
version Show the Docker Compose version information

Options

Name Type Default Description
--ansi string auto Control when to print ANSI control characters ("never"|"always"|"auto")
--compatibility Run compose in backward compatibility mode
--env-file string Specify an alternate environment file.
-f, --file stringArray Compose configuration files
--profile stringArray Specify a profile to enable
--project-directory string Specify an alternate working directory
(default: the path of the, first specified, Compose file)
-p, --project-name string Project name

Description

You can use compose subcommand, docker compose [-f <arg>...] [options] [COMMAND] [ARGS...], to build and manage multiple services in Docker containers.

Use -f to specify name and path of one or more Compose files

Use the -f flag to specify the location of a Compose configuration file.

Specifying multiple Compose files

You can supply multiple -f configuration files. When you supply multiple files, Compose combines them into a single configuration. Compose builds the configuration in the order you supply the files. Subsequent files override and add to their predecessors.

For example, consider this command line:

$ docker compose -f docker-compose.yml -f docker-compose.admin.yml run backup_db

The docker-compose.yml file might specify a webapp service.

services:
  webapp:
    image: examples/web
    ports:
      - "8000:8000"
    volumes:
      - "/data"

If the docker-compose.admin.yml also specifies this same service, any matching fields override the previous file. New values, add to the webapp service configuration.

services:
  webapp:
    build: .
    environment:
      - DEBUG=1

When you use multiple Compose files, all paths in the files are relative to the first configuration file specified with -f. You can use the --project-directory option to override this base path.

Use a -f with - (dash) as the filename to read the configuration from stdin. When stdin is used all paths in the configuration are relative to the current working directory.

The -f flag is optional. If you dont provide this flag on the command line, Compose traverses the working directory and its parent directories looking for a compose.yaml or docker-compose.yaml file.

Specifying a path to a single Compose file

You can use the -f flag to specify a path to a Compose file that is not located in the current directory, either from the command line or by setting up a COMPOSE_FILE environment variable in your shell or in an environment file.

For an example of using the -f option at the command line, suppose you are running the Compose Rails sample, and have a compose.yaml file in a directory called sandbox/rails. You can use a command like docker compose pull to get the postgres image for the db service from anywhere by using the -f flag as follows:

$ docker compose -f ~/sandbox/rails/compose.yaml pull db

Use -p to specify a project name

Each configuration has a project name. If you supply a -p flag, you can specify a project name. If you dont specify the flag, Compose uses the current directory name. Project name can also be set by COMPOSE_PROJECT_NAME environment variable.

Most compose subcommand can be ran without a compose file, just passing project name to retrieve the relevant resources.

$ docker compose -p my_project ps -a
NAME                 SERVICE    STATUS     PORTS
my_project_demo_1    demo       running

$ docker compose -p my_project logs
demo_1  | PING localhost (127.0.0.1): 56 data bytes
demo_1  | 64 bytes from 127.0.0.1: seq=0 ttl=64 time=0.095 ms

Use profiles to enable optional services

Use --profile to specify one or more active profiles Calling docker compose --profile frontend up will start the services with the profile frontend and services without any specified profiles. You can also enable multiple profiles, e.g. with docker compose --profile frontend --profile debug up the profiles frontend and debug will be enabled.

Profiles can also be set by COMPOSE_PROFILES environment variable.

Set up environment variables

You can set environment variables for various docker compose options, including the -f, -p and --profiles flags.

Setting the COMPOSE_FILE environment variable is equivalent to passing the -f flag, COMPOSE_PROJECT_NAME environment variable does the same for to the -p flag, and so does COMPOSE_PROFILES environment variable for to the --profiles flag.

If flags are explicitly set on command line, associated environment variable is ignored

Setting the COMPOSE_IGNORE_ORPHANS environment variable to true will stop docker compose from detecting orphaned containers for the project.