Connecting to Redis running in Docker Container from Host machine

I see lots of people struggling with this, sort of feel like maybe there is a bug in the redis container image, and others seem to be chasing a similar problem.

I'm using the standard redis image on DockerHub. (https://github.com/dockerfile/redis)

running it like this:

docker run -it -p 6379:6379 redis bash

Once I'm in I can start the server, and do a redis ping from the container image.

Unfortunately, I cannot connect to the redis container from my host.

I have tried setting, such as below.

bind 127.0.0.1

and removed the bind from the configuration

and tried turn off protected mode

protected-mode no

I know it is reading the configuration file, since I changed ports just to test, and I was able to do that.

I'm running Windows 10, so maybe it is a windows networking issue. I never have a problem with docker normally. I'm puzzled


Solution 1:

The problem is with your bind, You should set the following:

bind 0.0.0.0

This will set redis to bind to all interfaces available, in a containerized environment with one interface, (eth0) and a loopback (lo) redis will bind to both of the above. You should consider adding security measures via other directives in config file or using external tools like firewalls. because with this approach everyone can connect to your redis server.

The default setting is bind 127.0.0.1 and this setting will cause redis to only listen on loopback interface, and it will be only accessible from inside the container. (for security)

To run redis with custom configuration file:

sudo docker run -d --name redis-test -p 6379:6379  -v /path/to/redisconf/redis.conf:/redis.conf redis redis-server /redis.conf

Now to verify on docker host with redis-tools installed:

redis-cli                           
127.0.0.1:6379> 
127.0.0.1:6379> set farhad likes:stackoverflow
OK
127.0.0.1:6379> get farhad
"likes:stackoverflow"
127.0.0.1:6379> 

You can also connnect to your redis container from an external host via:

redis-cli -h 'IP-address-of-dockerhost-running-redis-container'

Solution 2:

This is simpler way to set up a Redis container.

Download image and run container

docker run -d --name some-redis -p 6379:6379 redis

If you don't have the image, this command will pull it. And then, if you need to access from redis-cli to console, can use:

docker exec -it some-redis bash

For enter to container console, and kind in the console:

root@72c388dc2cb8:/data# redis-cli

Output:

127.0.0.1:6379> 

This was enough for my use case (easy and fast local development).