--- title: How to use secrets in Docker Compose linkTitle: Secrets in Compose weight: 60 description: How to use secrets in Compose and their benefits keywords: secrets, compose, security, environment variables tags: [Secrets] aliases: - /compose/use-secrets/ --- A secret is any piece of data, such as a password, certificate, or API key, that shouldn’t be transmitted over a network or stored unencrypted in a Dockerfile or in your application’s source code. {{% include "compose/secrets.md" %}} Environment variables are often available to all processes, and it can be difficult to track access. They can also be printed in logs when debugging errors without your knowledge. Using secrets mitigates these risks. ## Use secrets Secrets are mounted as a file in `/run/secrets/` inside the container. Getting a secret into a container is a two-step process. First, define the secret using the [top-level secrets element in your Compose file](/reference/compose-file/secrets.md). Next, update your service definitions to reference the secrets they require with the [secrets attribute](/reference/compose-file/services.md#secrets). Compose grants access to secrets on a per-service basis. Unlike the other methods, this permits granular access control within a service container via standard filesystem permissions. ## Examples ### Simple In the following example, the frontend service is given access to the `my_secret` secret. In the container, `/run/secrets/my_secret` is set to the contents of the file `./my_secret.txt`. ```yaml services: myapp: image: myapp:latest secrets: - my_secret secrets: my_secret: file: ./my_secret.txt ``` ### Advanced ```yaml services: db: image: mysql:latest volumes: - db_data:/var/lib/mysql environment: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD_FILE: /run/secrets/db_root_password MYSQL_DATABASE: wordpress MYSQL_USER: wordpress MYSQL_PASSWORD_FILE: /run/secrets/db_password secrets: - db_root_password - db_password wordpress: depends_on: - db image: wordpress:latest ports: - "8000:80" environment: WORDPRESS_DB_HOST: db:3306 WORDPRESS_DB_USER: wordpress WORDPRESS_DB_PASSWORD_FILE: /run/secrets/db_password secrets: - db_password secrets: db_password: file: db_password.txt db_root_password: file: db_root_password.txt volumes: db_data: ``` In the advanced example above: - The `secrets` attribute under each service defines the secrets you want to inject into the specific container. - The top-level `secrets` section defines the variables `db_password` and `db_root_password` and provides the `file` that populates their values. - The deployment of each container means Docker creates a temporary filesystem mount under `/run/secrets/` with their specific values. > [!NOTE] > > The `_FILE` environment variables demonstrated here are a convention used by some images, including Docker Official Images like [mysql](https://hub.docker.com/_/mysql) and [postgres](https://hub.docker.com/_/postgres). ### Build secrets In the following example, the `npm_token` secret is made available at build time. Its value is taken from the `NPM_TOKEN` environment variable. ```yaml services: myapp: build: secrets: - npm_token context: . secrets: npm_token: environment: NPM_TOKEN ``` ## Resources - [Secrets top-level element](/reference/compose-file/secrets.md) - [Secrets attribute for services top-level element](/reference/compose-file/services.md#secrets) - [Build secrets](https://docs.docker.com/build/building/secrets/)