--- title: Containerize a Python application linkTitle: Containerize your app weight: 10 keywords: python, flask, containerize, initialize description: Learn how to containerize a Python application. aliases: - /language/python/build-images/ - /language/python/run-containers/ - /language/python/containerize/ - /guides/language/python/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 Python application. ## Get the sample application The sample application uses the popular [FastAPI](https://fastapi.tiangolo.com) framework. Clone the sample application to use with this guide. 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/estebanx64/python-docker-example ``` ## Initialize Docker assets Now that you have an application, you can create the necessary Docker assets to containerize your application. You can use Docker Desktop's built-in Docker Init feature to help streamline the process, or you can manually create the assets. {{< tabs >}} {{< tab name="Use Docker Init" >}} Inside the `python-docker-example` directory, run the `docker init` command. `docker init` provides some default configuration, but you'll need to answer a few questions about your application. For example, this application uses FastAPI to run. 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? Python ? What version of Python do you want to use? 3.11.4 ? What port do you want your app to listen on? 8000 ? What is the command to run your app? python3 -m uvicorn app:app --host=0.0.0.0 --port=8000 ``` Create a file named `.gitignore` with the following contents. ```text {collapse=true,title=".gitignore"} # Byte-compiled / optimized / DLL files __pycache__/ *.py[cod] *$py.class # C extensions *.so # Distribution / packaging .Python build/ develop-eggs/ dist/ downloads/ eggs/ .eggs/ lib/ lib64/ parts/ sdist/ var/ wheels/ share/python-wheels/ *.egg-info/ .installed.cfg *.egg MANIFEST # Unit test / coverage reports htmlcov/ .tox/ .nox/ .coverage .coverage.* .cache nosetests.xml coverage.xml *.cover *.py,cover .hypothesis/ .pytest_cache/ cover/ # PEP 582; used by e.g. github.com/David-OConnor/pyflow and github.com/pdm-project/pdm __pypackages__/ # Environments .env .venv env/ venv/ ENV/ env.bak/ venv.bak/ ``` {{< /tab >}} {{< tab name="Manually create assets" >}} If you don't have Docker Desktop installed or prefer creating the assets manually, you can create the following files in your project directory. Create a file named `Dockerfile` with the following contents. ```dockerfile {collapse=true,title=Dockerfile} # syntax=docker/dockerfile:1 # Comments are provided throughout this file to help you get started. # If you need more help, visit the Dockerfile reference guide at # https://docs.docker.com/go/dockerfile-reference/ # Want to help us make this template better? Share your feedback here: https://forms.gle/ybq9Krt8jtBL3iCk7 ARG PYTHON_VERSION=3.11.4 FROM python:${PYTHON_VERSION}-slim AS base # Prevents Python from writing pyc files. ENV PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE=1 # Keeps Python from buffering stdout and stderr to avoid situations where # the application crashes without emitting any logs due to buffering. ENV PYTHONUNBUFFERED=1 WORKDIR /app # Create a non-privileged user that the app will run under. # See https://docs.docker.com/go/dockerfile-user-best-practices/ ARG UID=10001 RUN adduser \ --disabled-password \ --gecos "" \ --home "/nonexistent" \ --shell "/sbin/nologin" \ --no-create-home \ --uid "${UID}" \ appuser # Download dependencies as a separate step to take advantage of Docker's caching. # Leverage a cache mount to /root/.cache/pip to speed up subsequent builds. # Leverage a bind mount to requirements.txt to avoid having to copy them into # into this layer. RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/root/.cache/pip \ --mount=type=bind,source=requirements.txt,target=requirements.txt \ python -m pip install -r requirements.txt # Switch to the non-privileged user to run the application. USER appuser # Copy the source code into the container. COPY . . # Expose the port that the application listens on. EXPOSE 8000 # Run the application. CMD python3 -m uvicorn app:app --host=0.0.0.0 --port=8000 ``` Create a file named `compose.yaml` with the following contents. ```yaml {collapse=true,title=compose.yaml} # Comments are provided throughout this file to help you get started. # If you need more help, visit the Docker Compose reference guide at # https://docs.docker.com/go/compose-spec-reference/ # Here the instructions define your application as a service called "server". # This service is built from the Dockerfile in the current directory. # You can add other services your application may depend on here, such as a # database or a cache. For examples, see the Awesome Compose repository: # https://github.com/docker/awesome-compose services: server: build: context: . ports: - 8000:8000 ``` Create a file named `.dockerignore` with the following contents. ```text {collapse=true,title=".dockerignore"} # Include any files or directories that you don't want to be copied to your # container here (e.g., local build artifacts, temporary files, etc.). # # For more help, visit the .dockerignore file reference guide at # https://docs.docker.com/go/build-context-dockerignore/ **/.DS_Store **/__pycache__ **/.venv **/.classpath **/.dockerignore **/.env **/.git **/.gitignore **/.project **/.settings **/.toolstarget **/.vs **/.vscode **/*.*proj.user **/*.dbmdl **/*.jfm **/bin **/charts **/docker-compose* **/compose.y*ml **/Dockerfile* **/node_modules **/npm-debug.log **/obj **/secrets.dev.yaml **/values.dev.yaml LICENSE README.md ``` Create a file named `.gitignore` with the following contents. ```text {collapse=true,title=".gitignore"} # Byte-compiled / optimized / DLL files __pycache__/ *.py[cod] *$py.class # C extensions *.so # Distribution / packaging .Python build/ develop-eggs/ dist/ downloads/ eggs/ .eggs/ lib/ lib64/ parts/ sdist/ var/ wheels/ share/python-wheels/ *.egg-info/ .installed.cfg *.egg MANIFEST # Unit test / coverage reports htmlcov/ .tox/ .nox/ .coverage .coverage.* .cache nosetests.xml coverage.xml *.cover *.py,cover .hypothesis/ .pytest_cache/ cover/ # PEP 582; used by e.g. github.com/David-OConnor/pyflow and github.com/pdm-project/pdm __pypackages__/ # Environments .env .venv env/ venv/ ENV/ env.bak/ venv.bak/ ``` {{< /tab >}} {{< /tabs >}} You should now have the following contents in your `python-docker-example` directory. ```text ├── python-docker-example/ │ ├── app.py │ ├── requirements.txt │ ├── .dockerignore │ ├── .gitignore │ ├── compose.yaml │ ├── Dockerfile │ └── README.md ``` To learn more about the files, see the following: - [Dockerfile](/reference/dockerfile.md) - [.dockerignore](/reference/dockerfile.md#dockerignore-file) - [.gitignore](https://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore) - [compose.yaml](/reference/compose-file/_index.md) ## Run the application Inside the `python-docker-example` directory, run the following command in a terminal. ```console $ docker compose up --build ``` Open a browser and view the application at [http://localhost:8000](http://localhost:8000). You should see a simple FastAPI 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 `python-docker-example` directory, run the following command in a terminal. ```console $ docker compose up --build -d ``` Open a browser and view the application at [http://localhost:8000](http://localhost:8000). To see the OpenAPI docs you can go to [http://localhost:8000/docs](http://localhost:8000/docs). You should see a simple FastAPI 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 Python application using Docker. Related information: - [Docker Compose overview](/manuals/compose/_index.md) ## Next steps In the next section, you'll learn how you can develop your application using containers.