--- description: How to use Docker Compose's extends keyword to share configuration between files and projects keywords: fig, composition, compose, docker, orchestration, documentation, docs title: Extend your Compose file aliases: - /compose/extends/ --- Docker Compose's [`extends` attribute](../compose-file/05-services.md#extends) lets you share common configurations among different files, or even different projects entirely. Extending services is useful if you have several services that reuse a common set of configuration options. With `extends` you can define a common set of service options in one place and refer to it from anywhere. You can refer to another Compose file and select a service you want to also use in your own application, with the ability to override some attributes for your own needs. > [!IMPORTANT] > > When you use multiple Compose files, you must make sure all paths in the files are relative to the base Compose file (i.e. the Compose file in your main-project folder). This is required because extend files need not be valid Compose files. Extend files can contain small fragments of configuration. Tracking which fragment of a service is relative to which path is difficult and confusing, so to keep paths easier to understand, all paths must be defined relative to the base file. ## How it works ### Extending services from another file Take the following example: ```yaml services: web: extends: file: common-services.yml service: webapp ``` This instructs Compose to re-use only the properties of the `webapp` service defined in the `common-services.yml` file. The `webapp` service itself is not part of the final project. If `common-services.yml` looks like this: ```yaml services: webapp: build: . ports: - "8000:8000" volumes: - "/data" ``` You get exactly the same result as if you wrote `docker-compose.yml` with the same `build`, `ports`, and `volumes` configuration values defined directly under `web`. To include the service `webapp` in the final project when extending services from another file, you need to explicitly include both services in your current Compose file. For example (note this is a non-normative example): ```yaml services: web: build: alpine command: echo extends: file: common-services.yml service: webapp webapp: extends: file: common-services.yml service: webapp ``` Alternatively, you can use [include](include.md). ### Extending services within the same file If you define services in the same Compose file and extend one service from another, both the original service and the extended service will be part of your final configuration. For example: ```yaml services: web: build: alpine extends: webapp webapp: environment: - DEBUG=1 ``` ### Extending services within the same file and from another file You can go further and define, or re-define, configuration locally in `compose.yaml`: ```yaml services: web: extends: file: common-services.yml service: webapp environment: - DEBUG=1 cpu_shares: 5 important_web: extends: web cpu_shares: 10 ``` ## Additional example Extending an individual service is useful when you have multiple services that have a common configuration. The example below is a Compose app with two services, a web application and a queue worker. Both services use the same codebase and share many configuration options. The `common.yaml` file defines the common configuration: ```yaml services: app: build: . environment: CONFIG_FILE_PATH: /code/config API_KEY: xxxyyy cpu_shares: 5 ``` The `docker-compose.yaml` defines the concrete services which use the common configuration: ```yaml services: webapp: extends: file: common.yaml service: app command: /code/run_web_app ports: - 8080:8080 depends_on: - queue - db queue_worker: extends: file: common.yaml service: app command: /code/run_worker depends_on: - queue ``` ## Exceptions and limitations `volumes_from` and `depends_on` are never shared between services using `extends`. These exceptions exist to avoid implicit dependencies; you always define `volumes_from` locally. This ensures dependencies between services are clearly visible when reading the current file. Defining these locally also ensures that changes to the referenced file don't break anything. `extends` is useful if you only need a single service to be shared and you are familiar with the file you're extending to, so you can tweak the configuration. But this isn’t an acceptable solution when you want to re-use someone else's unfamiliar configurations and you don’t know about its own dependencies. ## Relative paths When using `extends` with a `file` attribute which points to another folder, relative paths declared by the service being extended are converted so they still point to the same file when used by the extending service. This is illustrated in the following example: Base Compose file: ```yaml services: webapp: image: example extends: file: ../commons/compose.yaml service: base ``` The `commons/compose.yaml` file: ```yaml services: base: env_file: ./container.env ``` The resulting service refers to the original `container.env` file within the `commons` directory. This can be confirmed with `docker compose config` which inspects the actual model: ```yaml services: webapp: image: example env_file: - ../commons/container.env ``` ## Reference information - [`extends`](../compose-file/05-services.md#extends)