763efc67f0
provides an accurate representation of the recent file structure updates Signed-off-by: Joseph Barreca <jbarrec.tech@gmail.com>
1.9 KiB
1.9 KiB
Compose sample application
PHP server with an Nginx proxy and a MySQL database
Project structure:
.
├── backend
│ ├── index.php
├── db
│ └── password.txt
├── docker-compose.yaml
├── proxy
│ ├── conf
│ └── Dockerfile
└── README.md
services:
backend:
image: php:8.0.3-fpm-buster
...
db:
image: mysql:8.0.19
...
proxy:
build: proxy
ports:
- 80:80
...
The compose file defines an application with three services proxy
, backend
and db
.
When deploying the application, docker-compose maps port 80 of the proxy service container to port 80 of the host as specified in the file.
Make sure port 80 on the host is not already in use.
Deploy with docker-compose
$ docker-compose up -d
Creating nginx-php-mysql_db_1 ... done
Creating nginx-php-mysql_backend_1 ... done
Creating nginx-php-mysql_proxy_1 ... done
Expected result
Listing containers must show three containers running and the port mapping as below:
$ docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
2244050972fc nginx-php-mysql_proxy "/docker-entrypoint.…" 51 seconds ago Up 49 seconds 0.0.0.0:80->80/tcp nginx-php-mysql_proxy_1
75353040cb38 nginx-php-mysql_backend "docker-php-entrypoi…" 51 seconds ago Up 50 seconds 9000/tcp nginx-php-mysql_backend_1
e54bd7e0c790 mysql:8.0.19 "docker-entrypoint.s…" 52 seconds ago Up 50 seconds 3306/tcp, 33060/tcp nginx-php-mysql_db_1
After the application starts, navigate to http://localhost:80
in your web browser or run:
$ curl localhost:80
<h1>hello world in php!</h1>
Stop and remove the containers
$ docker-compose down