--- description: Get started with Docker Compose keywords: documentation, docs, docker, compose, orchestration, containers title: Get started with Docker Compose --- On this page you build a simple Python web application running on Docker Compose. The application uses the Flask framework and maintains a hit counter in Redis. While the sample uses Python, the concepts demonstrated here should be understandable even if you're not familiar with it. ## Prerequisites Make sure you have already [installed both Docker Engine and Docker Compose](install.md). You don't need to install Python or Redis, as both are provided by Docker images. ## Step 1: Setup 1. Create a directory for the project: $ mkdir composetest $ cd composetest 2. Create a file called `app.py` in your project directory and paste this in: from flask import Flask from redis import Redis app = Flask(__name__) redis = Redis(host='redis', port=6379) @app.route('/') def hello(): count = redis.incr('hits') return 'Hello World! I have been seen {} times.\n'.format(count) if __name__ == "__main__": app.run(host="0.0.0.0", debug=True) 3. Create another file called `requirements.txt` in your project directory and paste this in: flask redis These define the application's dependencies. ## Step 2: Create a Dockerfile In this step, you write a Dockerfile that builds a Docker image. The image contains all the dependencies the Python application requires, including Python itself. In your project directory, create a file named `Dockerfile` and paste the following: FROM python:3.4-alpine ADD . /code WORKDIR /code RUN pip install -r requirements.txt CMD ["python", "app.py"] This tells Docker to: * Build an image starting with the Python 3.4 image. * Add the current directory `.` into the path `/code` in the image. * Set the working directory to `/code`. * Install the Python dependencies. * Set the default command for the container to `python app.py` For more information on how to write Dockerfiles, see the [Docker user guide](/engine/tutorials/dockerimages.md#building-an-image-from-a-dockerfile) and the [Dockerfile reference](/engine/reference/builder.md). ## Step 3: Define services in a Compose file Create a file called `docker-compose.yml` in your project directory and paste the following: version: '2' services: web: build: . ports: - "5000:5000" volumes: - .:/code redis: image: "redis:alpine" This Compose file defines two services, `web` and `redis`. The web service: * Uses an image that's built from the `Dockerfile` in the current directory. * Forwards the exposed port 5000 on the container to port 5000 on the host machine. * Mounts the project directory on the host to `/code` inside the container, allowing you to modify the code without having to rebuild the image. The `redis` service uses a public [Redis](https://registry.hub.docker.com/_/redis/) image pulled from the Docker Hub registry. >**Tip**: If your project is outside of the `Users` directory (`cd ~`), then you need to share the drive or location of the Dockerfile and volume you are using. If you get runtime errors indicating an application file is not found, a volume mount is denied, or a service cannot start, try enabling file or drive sharing. Volume mounting requires shared drives for projects that live outside of `C:\Users` (Windows) or `/Users` (Mac), and is required for _any_ project on Docker for Windows that uses [Linux containers](/docker-for-windows/index.md#switch-between-windows-and-linux-containers-beta-feature). For more information, see [Shared Drives](../docker-for-windows/index.md#shared-drives) on Docker for Windows, [File sharing](../docker-for-mac/index.md#file-sharing) on Docker for Mac, and the general examples on how to [Manage data in containers](../engine/tutorials/dockervolumes.md). ## Step 4: Build and run your app with Compose 1. From your project directory, start up your application. $ docker-compose up Pulling image redis... Building web... Starting composetest_redis_1... Starting composetest_web_1... redis_1 | [8] 02 Jan 18:43:35.576 # Server started, Redis version 2.8.3 web_1 | * Running on http://0.0.0.0:5000/ web_1 | * Restarting with stat Compose pulls a Redis image, builds an image for your code, and start the services you defined. 2. Enter `http://0.0.0.0:5000/` in a browser to see the application running. If you're using Docker on Linux natively, then the web app should now be listening on port 5000 on your Docker daemon host. If `http://0.0.0.0:5000` doesn't resolve, you can also try `http://localhost:5000`. If you're using Docker Machine on a Mac, use `docker-machine ip MACHINE_VM` to get the IP address of your Docker host. Then, `open http://MACHINE_VM_IP:5000` in a browser. You should see a message in your browser saying: `Hello World! I have been seen 1 times.` 3. Refresh the page. The number should increment. >**Tip**: You can list local images with `docker image ls` and inspect them with `docker inspect `. Listing images at this point should return `redis` and `web`. ## Step 5: Update the application Because the application code is mounted into the container using a volume, you can make changes to its code and see the changes instantly, without having to rebuild the image. 1. Change the greeting in `app.py` and save it. For example: return 'Hello from Docker! I have been seen {} times.\n'.format(count) 2. Refresh the app in your browser. The greeting should be updated, and the counter should still be incrementing. ## Step 6: Experiment with some other commands If you want to run your services in the background, you can pass the `-d` flag (for "detached" mode) to `docker-compose up` and use `docker-compose ps` to see what is currently running: $ docker-compose up -d Starting composetest_redis_1... Starting composetest_web_1... $ docker-compose ps Name Command State Ports ------------------------------------------------------------------- composetest_redis_1 /usr/local/bin/run Up composetest_web_1 /bin/sh -c python app.py Up 5000->5000/tcp The `docker-compose run` command allows you to run one-off commands for your services. For example, to see what environment variables are available to the `web` service: $ docker-compose run web env See `docker-compose --help` to see other available commands. You can also install [command completion](completion.md) for the bash and zsh shell, which will also show you available commands. If you started Compose with `docker-compose up -d`, you'll probably want to stop your services once you've finished with them: $ docker-compose stop You can bring everything down, removing the containers entirely, with the `down` command. Pass `--volumes` to also remove the data volume used by the Redis container: $ docker-compose down --volumes At this point, you have seen the basics of how Compose works. ## Where to go next - Next, try the quick start guide for [Django](django.md), [Rails](rails.md), or [WordPress](wordpress.md). - [Explore the full list of Compose commands](./reference/index.md) - [Compose configuration file reference](compose-file/index.md)