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Using Compose in production
Compose is still primarily aimed at development and testing environments. Compose may be used for smaller production deployments, but is probably not yet suitable for larger deployments.
When deploying to production, you'll almost certainly want to make changes to your app configuration that are more appropriate to a live environment. These changes may include:
- Removing any volume bindings for application code, so that code stays inside the container and can't be changed from outside
- Binding to different ports on the host
- Setting environment variables differently (e.g., to decrease the verbosity of logging, or to enable email sending)
- Specifying a restart policy (e.g.,
restart: always
) to avoid downtime - Adding extra services (e.g., a log aggregator)
For this reason, you'll probably want to define an additional Compose file, say
production.yml
, which specifies production-appropriate
configuration. This configuration file only needs to include the changes you'd
like to make from the original Compose file. The additional Compose file
can be applied over the original docker-compose.yml
to create a new configuration.
Once you've got a second configuration file, tell Compose to use it with the
-f
option:
$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml -f production.yml up -d
See Using multiple compose files for a more complete example.
Deploying changes
When you make changes to your app code, you'll need to rebuild your image and
recreate your app's containers. To redeploy a service called
web
, you would use:
$ docker-compose build web
$ docker-compose up --no-deps -d web
This will first rebuild the image for web
and then stop, destroy, and recreate
just the web
service. The --no-deps
flag prevents Compose from also
recreating any services which web
depends on.
Running Compose on a single server
You can use Compose to deploy an app to a remote Docker host by setting the
DOCKER_HOST
, DOCKER_TLS_VERIFY
, and DOCKER_CERT_PATH
environment variables
appropriately. For tasks like this,
Docker Machine makes managing local and
remote Docker hosts very easy, and is recommended even if you're not deploying
remotely.
Once you've set up your environment variables, all the normal docker-compose
commands will work with no further configuration.
Running Compose on a Swarm cluster
Docker Swarm, a Docker-native clustering system, exposes the same API as a single Docker host, which means you can use Compose against a Swarm instance and run your apps across multiple hosts.
Compose/Swarm integration is still in the experimental stage, and Swarm is still in beta, but if you'd like to explore and experiment, check out the integration guide.