kopia lustrzana https://github.com/linuxserver/docker-documentation
Additional info on how to get started with compose
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# Docker Compose
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## Intro
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Compose is a tool for defining and running multi-container Docker applications. With Compose, you use a YAML file to configure your application’s services. Then, with a single command, you create and start all the services from your configuration. You can follow these instructions to install docker-compose: https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/
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Compose is a tool for defining and running multi-container Docker applications. With Compose, you use a YAML file to configure your application’s services. Then, with a single command, you create and start all the services from your configuration.
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## Single service
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Here's a basic example for deploying a Linuxserver container with docker-compose:
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```yaml
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version: "2"
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version: "2.1"
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services:
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heimdall:
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image: linuxserver/heimdall
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container_name: heimdall
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mem_limit: 256m
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volumes:
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- /opt/appdata/heimdall:/config
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- /home/user/appdata/heimdall:/config
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environment:
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- PUID: 1050
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- PGID: 1050
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- PUID: 1000
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- PGID: 1000
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- TZ=Europe/London
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ports:
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- 80:80
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- 443:443
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restart: unless-stopped
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```
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If you save the above snippet in a file named `docker-compose.yml`, you can simply run `docker-compose up -d` from within the same folder and the heimdall image will be automatically pulled, and a container will be created and started. `up` means bring the services up, and `-d` means do it in the background.
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If you want to do it from a different folder or if you named the yaml file differently, ie. `heimdall.yml`, then you can define it in the command with `-f`: `docker-compose up -d -f /path/to/heimdall.yml`
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To bring down the services, simply do `docker-compose down` or `docker-compose down -f /path/to/heimdall.yml` and all containers defined by the yml will be stopped and destroyed.
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## Multiple Services
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You can have multiple services managed by a single compose yaml. Copy the contents below the `services:` line in any of our readme yaml samples into the same yaml file and the `docker-compose up/down` commands will apply to all services at once.
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Let's say you have the following in a yaml file named `docker-compose.yml`:
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```yaml
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version: "2.1"
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services:
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heimdall:
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image: linuxserver/heimdall
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container_name: heimdall
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volumes:
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- /home/user/appdata/heimdall:/config
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environment:
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- PUID: 1000
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- PGID: 1000
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- TZ=Europe/London
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ports:
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- 80:80
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- 443:443
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restart: unless-stopped
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nginx:
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image: linuxserver/nginx
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container_name: nginx
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environment:
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- PUID=1000
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- PGID=1000
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- TZ=Europe/London
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volumes:
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- /home/user/appdata/nginx:/config
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ports:
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- 81:80
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- 444:443
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restart: unless-stopped
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mariadb:
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image: linuxserver/mariadb
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container_name: mariadb
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environment:
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- PUID=1000
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- PGID=1000
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- MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=ROOT_ACCESS_PASSWORD
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- TZ=Europe/London
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volumes:
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- /home/user/appdata/mariadb:/config
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ports:
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- 3306:3306
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restart: unless-stopped
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```
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You now have 3 services defined in there: `heimdall`, `nginx` and `mariadb`. When you do a `docker-compose up -d`, it will first download the images for all three if they don't exist (if they exist, they are not updated) and it will create all three containers and start them. `docker-compose down` will bring all three services down and destroy the containers (persistent data will remain).
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## Updates
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If you want to update the images and recreate the containers with the same vars, it's extremely easy with docker-compose. First we tell it to update all images via `docker-compose pull`. Then we issue `docker-compose up -d` and it will automatically recreate the containers (as necessary) based on the updated images. If a container's image is already the latest and there was no update, it remains untouched.
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Similarly, if you edit the contents of the yaml file and re-issue `docker-compose up -d`, only the containers affected by the changes to the yaml file will be recreated, others will be untouched.
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Defining the containers running on your server as code is a core tenet of a "Devops" approach to the world. Constructing elaborate `docker run` commands and then forgetting which variables you passed is a thing of the past when using `docker-compose`.
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## Tips & Tricks
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@ -29,7 +93,7 @@ Create the file `~/.bash_aliases` and populate with the following content:
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```bash
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alias dcp='docker-compose -f /opt/docker-compose.yml '
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alias dcpull='docker-compose -f /opt/docker-compose.yml pull --parallel'
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alias dcpull='docker-compose -f /opt/docker-compose.yml pull'
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alias dclogs='docker-compose -f /opt/docker-compose.yml logs -tf --tail="50" '
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alias dtail='docker logs -tf --tail="50" "$@"'
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```
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