Book Image

A Developer's Essential Guide to Docker Compose

By : Emmanouil Gkatziouras
Book Image

A Developer's Essential Guide to Docker Compose

By: Emmanouil Gkatziouras

Overview of this book

Software development is becoming increasingly complex due to the various software components used. Applications need to be packaged with software components to facilitate their operations, making it complicated to run them. With Docker Compose, a single command can set up your application and the needed dependencies. This book starts with an overview of Docker Compose and its usage and then shows how to create an application. You will also get to grips with the fundamentals of Docker volumes and network, along with Compose commands, their purpose, and use cases. Next, you will set up databases for daily usage using Compose and, leveraging Docker networking, you will establish communication between microservices. You will also run entire stacks locally on Compose, simulate production environments, and enhance CI/CD jobs using Docker Compose. Later chapters will show you how to benefit from Docker Compose for production deployments, provision infrastructure on public clouds such as AWS and Azure, and wrap up with Compose deployments on said infrastructure. By the end of this book, you will have learned how to effectively utilize Docker Compose for day-to-day development.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Part 1: Docker Compose 101
6
Part 2: Daily Development with Docker Compose
12
Part 3: Deployment with Docker Compose

Attaching a Docker volume to a container

We will create our first Docker volume using the following:

$ docker volume create example-volume
example-volume

We will inspect the volume that we’ve just created:

$ docker volume ls --filter="name=example-volume" --format='{{json .}}'
{"Driver":"local","Labels":"","Links":"N/A","Mountpoint":"/var/lib/docker/volumes/example-volume/_data","Name":"example-volume","Scope":"local","Size":"N/A"}

By inspecting the preceding volume, we see that the volume is using the local driver. A local driver is the default driver option when creating volumes. The volume data will reside on the host that Docker Engine runs. There’s also a mount point to our local filesystem. This is where the data in this volume resides physically on the host.

Since we created the volume, we...