How to rebuild and update a container without downtime with docker-compose?
I enjoy a lot using docker-compose.
Eg. on my server, when I want to update my app with minor changes, I only need to git pull origin master && docker-compose restart
, works perfectly.
But sometimes, I need to rebuild (eg. I added an npm dependency, need to run npm install
again).
In this case, I do docker-compose build --no-cache && docker-compose restart
.
I would expect this to :
- create a new instance of my container
- stop the existing container (after the newer has finished building)
- start the new one
- optionally remove the old one, but this could be done manually
But in practice it seems to restart the former one again.
Is it the expected behavior?
How can I handle a rebuild and start the new one after it is built?
Maybe I missed a specific command? Or would it make sense to have it?
from the manual docker-compose restart
If you make changes to your docker-compose.yml configuration these changes will not be reflected after running this command.
you should be able to do
$docker-compose up -d --no-deps --build <service_name>
The --no-deps
will not start linked services.
The problem is that restart
will restart your current containers, which is not what you want.
As an example, I just did this
- change the docker file for one of the images
- call
docker-compose build
to build the images - call
docker-compose down
1 anddocker-compose up
-
docker-compose restart
will NOT work here - using
docker-compose start
instead also does not work
-
To be honest, i'm not completly sure you need to do a down
first, but that should be easy to check.1 The bottomline is that you need to call up
. You will see the containers of unchanged images restarting, but for the changed image you'll see recreating
.
The advantage of this over just calling up --build
is that you can see the building-process first before you restart.
1: from the comments; down is not needed, you can just call up --build
. Down has some "down"-sides, including possible being destructive to your (volume-)data.
Use the --build
flag to the up
command, along with the -d
flag to run your containers in the background:
docker-compose up -d --build
This will rebuild all images defined in your compose file, then restart any containers whose images have changed.
-d
assumes that you don't want to keep everything running in your shell foreground. This makes it act more like restart
, but it's not required.
Don't manage your application environment directly. Use deployment tool like Rancher / Kubernetes. Using one you will be able to upgrade your dockerized application without any downtime and even downgrade it should you need to.
Running Rancher is as easy as running another docker container as this tool is available in the Docker Hub.
You can use Swarm. Init swarm first by docker swarm init
command and use healthcheck
in docker-compose.yml.
Then run below command:
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml project_name
instead of
docker-compose up -d
.
When docker-compose.yml file is updated only run this command again:
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml project_name
Docker Swarm will create new version of services and stop old version after that.