Mazz Mosley 4d69a57edd Include flask output
When running `docker-compose up`, an extra line of output, from flask,
is outputted. I've included it so anyone new to docker-compose who
sees this output will know that it's expected and not worry that
something might have gone wrong.

Signed-off-by: Mazz Mosley <mazz@houseofmnowster.com>
2015-07-01 15:58:10 +01:00
2015-07-01 15:58:10 +01:00
2015-06-22 08:44:41 -07:00
2015-06-18 11:56:43 -07:00
2015-06-18 10:34:34 -07:00
2014-07-24 10:24:17 -07:00
2015-02-27 11:18:41 +00:00
2015-02-28 15:18:29 -06:00
2015-06-03 23:03:17 +02:00
2015-02-25 10:45:40 +00:00
2015-06-18 11:11:51 -07:00
2015-03-30 11:34:26 -04:00
2015-03-26 09:09:15 -07:00

Docker Compose

(Previously known as Fig)

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

Installation and documentation

Contributing

Build Status

Want to help build Compose? Check out our contributing documentation.

Description
Define and run multi-container applications with Docker
Readme Apache-2.0 51 MiB
Languages
Go 97.1%
Dockerfile 2%
Makefile 0.5%
HCL 0.3%