awesome-compose/wordpress-mysql
Kohei Niimi 3253a84db6
delete one of the two restart. (#108)
Signed-off-by: Kohei Niimi <kouhei.aquamarines@gmail.com>
2021-03-19 10:24:41 +01:00
..
docker-compose.yaml delete one of the two restart. (#108) 2021-03-19 10:24:41 +01:00
output.jpg Add wordpress-mysql sample 2020-03-18 21:33:08 +01:00
README.md Add wordpress-mysql sample 2020-03-18 21:33:08 +01:00

Wordpress with MySQL

This example defines one of the basic setups for Wordpress. More details on how this works can be found on the official wordpress image page.

Project structure:

.
├── docker-compose.yaml
└── README.md

docker-compose.yaml

services:
  db:
    image: mysql:8.0.19
    ...
  wordpress:
    image: wordpress:latest
    ports:
      - 80:80
    restart: always
    ...

When deploying this setup, docker-compose maps the wordpress container port 80 to port 80 of the host as specified in the compose file.

Deploy with docker-compose

$ docker-compose up -d
Creating network "wordpress-mysql_default" with the default driver
Creating volume "wordpress-mysql_db_data" with default driver
...
Creating wordpress-mysql_db_1        ... done
Creating wordpress-mysql_wordpress_1 ... done

Expected result

Check containers are running and the port mapping:

$ docker ps
CONTAINER ID        IMAGE               COMMAND                  CREATED             STATUS              PORTS                 NAMES
5fbb4181a069        wordpress:latest    "docker-entrypoint.s…"   35 seconds ago      Up 34 seconds       0.0.0.0:80->80/tcp    wordpress-mysql_wordpress_1
e0884a8d444d        mysql:8.0.19        "docker-entrypoint.s…"   35 seconds ago      Up 34 seconds       3306/tcp, 33060/tcp   wordpress-mysql_db_1

Navigate to http://localhost:80 in your web browser to access Wordpress.

page

Stop and remove the containers

$ docker-compose down

To remove all Gitea data, delete the named volumes by passing the -v parameter:

$ docker-compose down -v