--- title: Containerize a .NET application linkTitle: Containerize your app weight: 10 keywords: .net, containerize, initialize description: Learn how to containerize an ASP.NET application. aliases: - /language/dotnet/build-images/ - /language/dotnet/run-containers/ - /language/dotnet/containerize/ - /guides/language/dotnet/containerize/ --- ## Prerequisites * You have installed the latest version of [Docker Desktop](/get-started/get-docker.md). * You have a [git client](https://git-scm.com/downloads). The examples in this section use a command-line based git client, but you can use any client. ## Overview This section walks you through containerizing and running a .NET application. ## Get the sample applications In this guide, you will use a pre-built .NET application. The application is similar to the application built in the Docker Blog article, [Building a Multi-Container .NET App Using Docker Desktop](https://www.docker.com/blog/building-multi-container-net-app-using-docker-desktop/). Open a terminal, change directory to a directory that you want to work in, and run the following command to clone the repository. ```console $ git clone https://github.com/docker/docker-dotnet-sample ``` ## Initialize Docker assets Now that you have an application, you can use `docker init` to create the necessary Docker assets to containerize your application. Inside the `docker-dotnet-sample` directory, run the `docker init` command in a terminal. `docker init` provides some default configuration, but you'll need to answer a few questions about your application. Refer to the following example to answer the prompts from `docker init` and use the same answers for your prompts. ```console $ docker init Welcome to the Docker Init CLI! This utility will walk you through creating the following files with sensible defaults for your project: - .dockerignore - Dockerfile - compose.yaml - README.Docker.md Let's get started! ? What application platform does your project use? ASP.NET Core ? What's the name of your solution's main project? myWebApp ? What version of .NET do you want to use? 8.0 ? What local port do you want to use to access your server? 8080 ``` You should now have the following contents in your `docker-dotnet-sample` directory. ```text ├── docker-dotnet-sample/ │ ├── .git/ │ ├── src/ │ ├── .dockerignore │ ├── compose.yaml │ ├── Dockerfile │ ├── README.Docker.md │ └── README.md ``` To learn more about the files that `docker init` added, see the following: - [Dockerfile](/reference/dockerfile.md) - [.dockerignore](/reference/dockerfile.md#dockerignore-file) - [compose.yaml](/reference/compose-file/_index.md) ## Run the application Inside the `docker-dotnet-sample` directory, run the following command in a terminal. ```console $ docker compose up --build ``` Open a browser and view the application at [http://localhost:8080](http://localhost:8080). You should see a simple web application. In the terminal, press `ctrl`+`c` to stop the application. ### Run the application in the background You can run the application detached from the terminal by adding the `-d` option. Inside the `docker-dotnet-sample` directory, run the following command in a terminal. ```console $ docker compose up --build -d ``` Open a browser and view the application at [http://localhost:8080](http://localhost:8080). You should see a simple web application. In the terminal, run the following command to stop the application. ```console $ docker compose down ``` For more information about Compose commands, see the [Compose CLI reference](/reference/cli/docker/compose/_index.md). ## Summary In this section, you learned how you can containerize and run your .NET application using Docker. Related information: - [Dockerfile reference](/reference/dockerfile.md) - [.dockerignore file reference](/reference/dockerfile.md#dockerignore-file) - [Docker Compose overview](/manuals/compose/_index.md) ## Next steps In the next section, you'll learn how you can develop your application using Docker containers.