Compose file version 2 reference
Reference and guidelines
These topics describe version 2 of the Compose file format.
Compose and Docker compatibility matrix
There are several versions of the Compose file format – 1, 2, 2.x, and 3.x The table below is a quick look. For full details on what each version includes and how to upgrade, see About versions and upgrading.
This table shows which Compose file versions support specific Docker releases.
Compose file format | Docker Engine release |
---|---|
3.7 | 18.06.0+ |
3.6 | 18.02.0+ |
3.5 | 17.12.0+ |
3.4 | 17.09.0+ |
3.3 | 17.06.0+ |
3.2 | 17.04.0+ |
3.1 | 1.13.1+ |
3.0 | 1.13.0+ |
2.4 | 17.12.0+ |
2.3 | 17.06.0+ |
2.2 | 1.13.0+ |
2.1 | 1.12.0+ |
2.0 | 1.10.0+ |
1.0 | 1.9.1.+ |
In addition to Compose file format versions shown in the table, the Compose itself is on a release schedule, as shown in Compose releases, but file format versions do not necessarily increment with each release. For example, Compose file format 3.0 was first introduced in Compose release 1.10.0, and versioned gradually in subsequent releases.
Service configuration reference
The Compose file is a YAML file defining services, networks and volumes. The default path for a Compose file is ./docker-compose.yml
.
Tip: You can use either a
.yml
or.yaml
extension for this file. They both work.
A container definition contains configuration which are applied to each container started for that service, much like passing command-line parameters to docker run
. Likewise, network and volume definitions are analogous to docker network create
and docker volume create
.
As with docker run
, options specified in the Dockerfile, such as CMD
, EXPOSE
, VOLUME
, ENV
, are respected by default - you don’t need to specify them again in docker-compose.yml
.
You can use environment variables in configuration values with a Bash-like ${VARIABLE}
syntax - see variable substitution for full details.
This section contains a list of all configuration options supported by a service definition in version 2.
blkio_config
A set of configuration options to set block IO limits for this service.
version: "2.4"
services:
foo:
image: busybox
blkio_config:
weight: 300
weight_device:
- path: /dev/sda
weight: 400
device_read_bps:
- path: /dev/sdb
rate: '12mb'
device_read_iops:
- path: /dev/sdb
rate: 120
device_write_bps:
- path: /dev/sdb
rate: '1024k'
device_write_iops:
- path: /dev/sdb
rate: 30
device_read_bps, device_write_bps
Set a limit in bytes per second for read / write operations on a given device. Each item in the list must have two keys:
-
path
, defining the symbolic path to the affected device -
rate
, either as an integer value representing the number of bytes or as a string expressing a byte value.
device_read_iops, device_write_iops
Set a limit in operations per second for read / write operations on a given device. Each item in the list must have two keys:
-
path
, defining the symbolic path to the affected device -
rate
, as an integer value representing the permitted number of operations per second.
weight
Modify the proportion of bandwidth allocated to this service relative to other services. Takes an integer value between 10 and 1000, with 500 being the default.
weight_device
Fine-tune bandwidth allocation by device. Each item in the list must have two keys:
-
path
, defining the symbolic path to the affected device -
weight
, an integer value between 10 and 1000
build
Configuration options that are applied at build time.
build
can be specified either as a string containing a path to the build context, or an object with the path specified under context and optionally dockerfile and args.
build: ./dir
build:
context: ./dir
dockerfile: Dockerfile-alternate
args:
buildno: 1
If you specify image
as well as build
, then Compose names the built image with the webapp
and optional tag
specified in image
:
build: ./dir
image: webapp:tag
This results in an image named webapp
and tagged tag
, built from ./dir
.
cache_from
Added in version 2.2 file format
A list of images that the engine uses for cache resolution.
build:
context: .
cache_from:
- alpine:latest
- corp/web_app:3.14
context
Version 2 file format and up. In version 1, just use build.
Either a path to a directory containing a Dockerfile, or a url to a git repository.
When the value supplied is a relative path, it is interpreted as relative to the location of the Compose file. This directory is also the build context that is sent to the Docker daemon.
Compose builds and tags it with a generated name, and use that image thereafter.
build:
context: ./dir
dockerfile
Alternate Dockerfile.
Compose uses an alternate file to build with. A build path must also be specified.
build:
context: .
dockerfile: Dockerfile-alternate
args
Version 2 file format and up.
Add build arguments, which are environment variables accessible only during the build process.
First, specify the arguments in your Dockerfile:
ARG buildno
ARG gitcommithash
RUN echo "Build number: $buildno"
RUN echo "Based on commit: $gitcommithash"
Then specify the arguments under the build
key. You can pass a mapping or a list:
build:
context: .
args:
buildno: 1
gitcommithash: cdc3b19
build:
context: .
args:
- buildno=1
- gitcommithash=cdc3b19
Note: In your Dockerfile, if you specify
ARG
before theFROM
instruction, If you need an argument to be available in both places, also specify it under theFROM
instruction. See Understand how ARGS and FROM interact for usage details.
You can omit the value when specifying a build argument, in which case its value at build time is the value in the environment where Compose is running.
args:
- buildno
- gitcommithash
Note: YAML boolean values (
true
,false
,yes
,no
,on
,off
) must be enclosed in quotes, so that the parser interprets them as strings.
extra_hosts
Add hostname mappings at build-time. Use the same values as the docker client --add-host
parameter.
extra_hosts:
- "somehost:162.242.195.82"
- "otherhost:50.31.209.229"
An entry with the ip address and hostname is created in /etc/hosts
inside containers for this build, e.g:
162.242.195.82 somehost
50.31.209.229 otherhost
isolation
Specify a build’s container isolation technology. On Linux, the only supported value is default
. On Windows, acceptable values are default
, process
and hyperv
. Refer to the Docker Engine docs for details.
If unspecified, Compose will use the isolation
value found in the service’s definition to determine the value to use for builds.
labels
Added in version 2.1 file format
Add metadata to the resulting image using Docker labels. You can use either an array or a dictionary.
It’s recommended that you use reverse-DNS notation to prevent your labels from conflicting with those used by other software.
build:
context: .
labels:
com.example.description: "Accounting webapp"
com.example.department: "Finance"
com.example.label-with-empty-value: ""
build:
context: .
labels:
- "com.example.description=Accounting webapp"
- "com.example.department=Finance"
- "com.example.label-with-empty-value"
network
Added in version 2.2 file format
Set the network containers connect to for the RUN
instructions during build.
build:
context: .
network: host
build:
context: .
network: custom_network_1
shm_size
Added in version 2.3 file format
Set the size of the /dev/shm
partition for this build’s containers. Specify as an integer value representing the number of bytes or as a string expressing a byte value.
build:
context: .
shm_size: '2gb'
build:
context: .
shm_size: 10000000
target
Added in version 2.3 file format
Build the specified stage as defined inside the Dockerfile
. See the multi-stage build docs for details.
build:
context: .
target: prod
cap_add, cap_drop
Add or drop container capabilities. See man 7 capabilities
for a full list.
cap_add:
- ALL
cap_drop:
- NET_ADMIN
- SYS_ADMIN
command
Override the default command.
command: bundle exec thin -p 3000
The command can also be a list, in a manner similar to dockerfile:
command: ["bundle", "exec", "thin", "-p", "3000"]
cgroup_parent
Specify an optional parent cgroup for the container.
cgroup_parent: m-executor-abcd
container_name
Specify a custom container name, rather than a generated default name.
container_name: my-web-container
Because Docker container names must be unique, you cannot scale a service beyond 1 container if you have specified a custom name. Attempting to do so results in an error.
cpu_rt_runtime, cpu_rt_period
Added in version 2.2 file format
Configure CPU allocation parameters using the Docker daemon realtime scheduler.
cpu_rt_runtime: '400ms'
cpu_rt_period: '1400us'
# Integer values will use microseconds as units
cpu_rt_runtime: 95000
cpu_rt_period: 11000
device_cgroup_rules
Add rules to the cgroup allowed devices list.
device_cgroup_rules:
- 'c 1:3 mr'
- 'a 7:* rmw'
devices
List of device mappings. Uses the same format as the --device
docker client create option.
devices:
- "/dev/ttyUSB0:/dev/ttyUSB0"
depends_on
Version 2 file format and up.
Express dependency between services, which has two effects:
docker-compose up
starts services in dependency order. In the following example,db
andredis
are started beforeweb
.docker-compose up SERVICE
automatically includeSERVICE
’s dependencies. In the following example,docker-compose up web
also create and startdb
andredis
.
Simple example:
version: "2.4"
services:
web:
build: .
depends_on:
- db
- redis
redis:
image: redis
db:
image: postgres
Note:
depends_on
does not wait fordb
andredis
to be “ready” before startingweb
- only until they have been started. If you need to wait for a service to be ready, see Controlling startup order for more on this problem and strategies for solving it.
A healthcheck indicates that you want a dependency to wait for another container to be “healthy” (as indicated by a successful state from the healthcheck) before starting.
Example:
version: "2.4"
services:
web:
build: .
depends_on:
db:
condition: service_healthy
redis:
condition: service_started
redis:
image: redis
db:
image: redis
healthcheck:
test: "exit 0"
In the above example, Compose waits for the redis
service to be started (legacy behavior) and the db
service to be healthy before starting web
.
See the healthcheck section for complementary information.
dns
Custom DNS servers. Can be a single value or a list.
dns: 8.8.8.8
dns:
- 8.8.8.8
- 9.9.9.9
dns_opt
List of custom DNS options to be added to the container’s resolv.conf
file.
dns_opt:
- use-vc
- no-tld-query
dns_search
Custom DNS search domains. Can be a single value or a list.
dns_search: example.com
dns_search:
- dc1.example.com
- dc2.example.com
tmpfs
Mount a temporary file system inside the container. Can be a single value or a list.
tmpfs: /run
tmpfs:
- /run
- /tmp
entrypoint
Override the default entrypoint.
entrypoint: /code/entrypoint.sh
The entrypoint can also be a list, in a manner similar to dockerfile:
entrypoint:
- php
- -d
- zend_extension=/usr/local/lib/php/extensions/no-debug-non-zts-20100525/xdebug.so
- -d
- memory_limit=-1
- vendor/bin/phpunit
Note: Setting
entrypoint
both overrides any default entrypoint set on the service’s image with theENTRYPOINT
Dockerfile instruction, and clears out any default command on the image - meaning that if there’s aCMD
instruction in the Dockerfile, it is ignored.
env_file
Add environment variables from a file. Can be a single value or a list.
If you have specified a Compose file with docker-compose -f FILE
, paths in env_file
are relative to the directory that file is in.
Environment variables declared in the environment section override these values – this holds true even if those values are empty or undefined.
env_file: .env
env_file:
- ./common.env
- ./apps/web.env
- /opt/secrets.env
Compose expects each line in an env file to be in VAR=VAL
format. Lines beginning with #
are processed as comments and are ignored. Blank lines are also ignored.
# Set Rails/Rack environment
RACK_ENV=development
Note: If your service specifies a build option, variables defined in environment files are not automatically visible during the build. Use the args sub-option of
build
to define build-time environment variables.
The value of VAL
is used as is and not modified at all. For example if the value is surrounded by quotes (as is often the case of shell variables), the quotes are included in the value passed to Compose.
Keep in mind that the order of files in the list is significant in determining the value assigned to a variable that shows up more than once. The files in the list are processed from the top down. For the same variable specified in file a.env
and assigned a different value in file b.env
, if b.env
is listed below (after), then the value from b.env
stands. For example, given the following declaration in docker-compose.yml
:
services:
some-service:
env_file:
- a.env
- b.env
And the following files:
# a.env VAR=1
and
# b.env VAR=hello
$VAR is hello
.
environment
Add environment variables. You can use either an array or a dictionary. Any boolean values; true, false, yes no, need to be enclosed in quotes to ensure they are not converted to True or False by the YML parser.
Environment variables with only a key are resolved to their values on the machine Compose is running on, which can be helpful for secret or host-specific values.
environment:
RACK_ENV: development
SHOW: 'true'
SESSION_SECRET:
environment:
- RACK_ENV=development
- SHOW=true
- SESSION_SECRET
Note: If your service specifies a build option, variables defined in
environment
are not automatically visible during the build. Use the args sub-option ofbuild
to define build-time environment variables.
expose
Expose ports without publishing them to the host machine - they’ll only be accessible to linked services. Only the internal port can be specified.
expose:
- "3000"
- "8000"
extends
Extend another service, in the current file or another, optionally overriding configuration.
You can use extends
on any service together with other configuration keys. The extends
value must be a dictionary defined with a required service
and an optional file
key.
extends:
file: common.yml
service: webapp
The service
the name of the service being extended, for example web
or database
. The file
is the location of a Compose configuration file defining that service.
If you omit the file
Compose looks for the service configuration in the current file. The file
value can be an absolute or relative path. If you specify a relative path, Compose treats it as relative to the location of the current file.
You can extend a service that itself extends another. You can extend indefinitely. Compose does not support circular references and docker-compose
returns an error if it encounters one.
For more on extends
, see the the extends documentation.
external_links
Link to containers started outside this docker-compose.yml
or even outside of Compose, especially for containers that provide shared or common services. external_links
follow semantics similar to links
when specifying both the container name and the link alias (CONTAINER:ALIAS
).
external_links:
- redis_1
- project_db_1:mysql
- project_db_1:postgresql
Note: For version 2 file format, the externally-created containers must be connected to at least one of the same networks as the service which is linking to them.
extra_hosts
Add hostname mappings. Use the same values as the docker client --add-host
parameter.
extra_hosts:
- "somehost:162.242.195.82"
- "otherhost:50.31.209.229"
An entry with the ip address and hostname is created in /etc/hosts
inside containers for this service, e.g:
162.242.195.82 somehost
50.31.209.229 otherhost
group_add
Specify additional groups (by name or number) which the user inside the container should be a member of. Groups must exist in both the container and the host system to be added. An example of where this is useful is when multiple containers (running as different users) need to all read or write the same file on the host system. That file can be owned by a group shared by all the containers, and specified in group_add
. See the Docker documentation for more details.
A full example:
version: "2.4"
services:
myservice:
image: alpine
group_add:
- mail
Running id
inside the created container shows that the user belongs to the mail
group, which would not have been the case if group_add
were not used.
healthcheck
Version 2.1 file format and up.
Configure a check that’s run to determine whether or not containers for this service are “healthy”. See the docs for the HEALTHCHECK Dockerfile instruction for details on how healthchecks work.
healthcheck:
test: ["CMD", "curl", "-f", "http://localhost"]
interval: 1m30s
timeout: 10s
retries: 3
start_period: 40s
interval
, timeout
and start_period
are specified as durations.
test
must be either a string or a list. If it’s a list, the first item must be either NONE
, CMD
or CMD-SHELL
. If it’s a string, it’s equivalent to specifying CMD-SHELL
followed by that string.
# Hit the local web app
test: ["CMD", "curl", "-f", "http://localhost"]
# As above, but wrapped in /bin/sh. Both forms below are equivalent.
test: ["CMD-SHELL", "curl -f http://localhost && echo 'cool, it works'"]
test: curl -f https://localhost && echo 'cool, it works'
To disable any default healthcheck set by the image, you can use disable: true
. This is equivalent to specifying test: ["NONE"]
.
healthcheck:
disable: true
Note: The
start_period
option is a more recent feature and is only available with the 2.3 file format.
image
Specify the image to start the container from. Can either be a repository/tag or a partial image ID.
image: redis
image: ubuntu:14.04
image: tutum/influxdb
image: example-registry.com:4000/postgresql
image: a4bc65fd
If the image does not exist, Compose attempts to pull it, unless you have also specified build, in which case it builds it using the specified options and tags it with the specified tag.
init
Run an init inside the container that forwards signals and reaps processes. Set this option to true
to enable this feature for the service.
version: "2.4"
services:
web:
image: alpine:latest
init: true
The default init binary that is used is Tini, and is installed in
/usr/libexec/docker-init
on the daemon host. You can configure the daemon to use a custom init binary through theinit-path
configuration option.
isolation
Specify a container’s isolation technology. On Linux, the only supported value is default
. On Windows, acceptable values are default
, process
and hyperv
. Refer to the Docker Engine docs for details.
labels
Add metadata to containers using Docker labels. You can use either an array or a dictionary.
It’s recommended that you use reverse-DNS notation to prevent your labels from conflicting with those used by other software.
labels:
com.example.description: "Accounting webapp"
com.example.department: "Finance"
com.example.label-with-empty-value: ""
labels:
- "com.example.description=Accounting webapp"
- "com.example.department=Finance"
- "com.example.label-with-empty-value"
links
Link to containers in another service. Either specify both the service name and a link alias ("SERVICE:ALIAS"
), or just the service name.
Links are a legacy option. We recommend using networks instead.
web:
links:
- "db"
- "db:database"
- "redis"
Containers for the linked service are reachable at a hostname identical to the alias, or the service name if no alias was specified.
Links also express dependency between services in the same way as depends_on, so they determine the order of service startup.
Note: If you define both links and networks, services with links between them must share at least one network in common in order to communicate. We recommend using networks instead.
logging
Logging configuration for the service.
logging:
driver: syslog
options:
syslog-address: "tcp://192.168.0.42:123"
The driver
name specifies a logging driver for the service’s containers, as with the --log-driver
option for docker run (documented here).
The default value is json-file.
driver: "json-file"
driver: "syslog"
driver: "none"
Note: Only the
json-file
andjournald
drivers make the logs available directly fromdocker-compose up
anddocker-compose logs
. Using any other driver does not print any logs.
Specify logging options for the logging driver with the options
key, as with the --log-opt
option for docker run
.
Logging options are key-value pairs. An example of syslog
options:
driver: "syslog"
options:
syslog-address: "tcp://192.168.0.42:123"
network_mode
Version 2 file format and up. Replaces the version 1 net option.
Network mode. Use the same values as the docker client --net
parameter, plus the special form service:[service name]
.
network_mode: "bridge"
network_mode: "host"
network_mode: "none"
network_mode: "service:[service name]"
network_mode: "container:[container name/id]"
networks
Version 2 file format and up. Replaces the version 1 net option.
Networks to join, referencing entries under the top-level networks
key.
services:
some-service:
networks:
- some-network
- other-network
aliases
Aliases (alternative hostnames) for this service on the network. Other containers on the same network can use either the service name or this alias to connect to one of the service’s containers.
Since aliases
is network-scoped, the same service can have different aliases on different networks.
Note: A network-wide alias can be shared by multiple containers, and even by multiple services. If it is, then exactly which container the name resolves to is not guaranteed.
The general format is shown here.
services:
some-service:
networks:
some-network:
aliases:
- alias1
- alias3
other-network:
aliases:
- alias2
In the example below, three services are provided (web
, worker
, and db
), along with two networks (new
and legacy
). The db
service is reachable at the hostname db
or database
on the new
network, and at db
or mysql
on the legacy
network.
version: "2.4"
services:
web:
build: ./web
networks:
- new
worker:
build: ./worker
networks:
- legacy
db:
image: mysql
networks:
new:
aliases:
- database
legacy:
aliases:
- mysql
networks:
new:
legacy:
ipv4_address, ipv6_address
Specify a static IP address for containers for this service when joining the network.
The corresponding network configuration in the top-level networks section must have an ipam
block with subnet and gateway configurations covering each static address. If IPv6 addressing is desired, the enable_ipv6
option must be set.
An example:
version: "2.4"
services:
app:
image: busybox
command: ifconfig
networks:
app_net:
ipv4_address: 172.16.238.10
ipv6_address: 2001:3984:3989::10
networks:
app_net:
driver: bridge
enable_ipv6: true
ipam:
driver: default
config:
- subnet: 172.16.238.0/24
gateway: 172.16.238.1
- subnet: 2001:3984:3989::/64
gateway: 2001:3984:3989::1
link_local_ips
Specify a list of link-local IPs. Link-local IPs are special IPs which belong to a well known subnet and are purely managed by the operator, usually dependent on the architecture where they are deployed. Therefore they are not managed by docker (IPAM driver).
Example usage:
version: "2.4"
services:
app:
image: busybox
command: top
networks:
app_net:
link_local_ips:
- 57.123.22.11
- 57.123.22.13
networks:
app_net:
driver: bridge
priority
Specify a priority to indicate in which order Compose should connect the service’s containers to its networks. If unspecified, the default value is 0
.
In the following example, the app
service connects to app_net_1
first as it has the highest priority. It then connects to app_net_3
, then app_net_2
, which uses the default priority value of 0
.
version: "2.4"
services:
app:
image: busybox
command: top
networks:
app_net_1:
priority: 1000
app_net_2:
app_net_3:
priority: 100
networks:
app_net_1:
app_net_2:
app_net_3:
Note: If multiple networks have the same priority, the connection order is undefined.
pid
pid: "host"
pid: "container:custom_container_1"
pid: "service:foobar"
If set to one of the following forms: container:<container_name>
, service:<service_name>
, the service shares the PID address space of the designated container or service.
If set to “host”, the service’s PID mode is the host PID mode. This turns on sharing between container and the host operating system the PID address space. Containers launched with this flag can access and manipulate other containers in the bare-metal machine’s namespace and vice versa.
Note: the
service:
andcontainer:
forms require version 2.1 or above
pids_limit
Tunes a container’s PIDs limit. Set to -1
for unlimited PIDs.
pids_limit: 10
platform
Target platform containers for this service will run on, using the os[/arch[/variant]]
syntax, e.g.
platform: osx
platform: windows/amd64
platform: linux/arm64/v8
This parameter determines which version of the image will be pulled and/or on which platform the service’s build will be performed.
ports
Expose ports. Either specify both ports (HOST:CONTAINER
), or just the container port (an ephemeral host port is chosen).
Note: When mapping ports in the
HOST:CONTAINER
format, you may experience erroneous results when using a container port lower than 60, because YAML parses numbers in the formatxx:yy
as a base-60 value. For this reason, we recommend always explicitly specifying your port mappings as strings.
ports:
- "3000"
- "3000-3005"
- "8000:8000"
- "9090-9091:8080-8081"
- "49100:22"
- "127.0.0.1:8001:8001"
- "127.0.0.1:5000-5010:5000-5010"
- "6060:6060/udp"
- "12400-12500:1240"
runtime
Specify which runtime to use for the service’s containers. Default runtime and available runtimes are listed in the output of docker info
.
web:
image: busybox:latest
command: true
runtime: runc
scale
Specify the default number of containers to deploy for this service. Whenever you run docker-compose up
, Compose creates or removes containers to match the specified number. This value can be overridden using the --scale
flag.
web:
image: busybox:latest
command: echo 'scaled'
scale: 3
security_opt
Override the default labeling scheme for each container.
security_opt:
- label:user:USER
- label:role:ROLE
stop_grace_period
Specify how long to wait when attempting to stop a container if it doesn’t handle SIGTERM (or whatever stop signal has been specified with stop_signal
), before sending SIGKILL. Specified as a duration.
stop_grace_period: 1s
stop_grace_period: 1m30s
By default, stop
waits 10 seconds for the container to exit before sending SIGKILL.
stop_signal
Sets an alternative signal to stop the container. By default stop
uses SIGTERM. Setting an alternative signal using stop_signal
causes stop
to send that signal instead.
stop_signal: SIGUSR1
storage_opt
Set storage driver options for this service.
storage_opt:
size: '1G'
sysctls
Kernel parameters to set in the container. You can use either an array or a dictionary.
sysctls:
net.core.somaxconn: 1024
net.ipv4.tcp_syncookies: 0
sysctls:
- net.core.somaxconn=1024
- net.ipv4.tcp_syncookies=0
ulimits
Override the default ulimits for a container. You can either specify a single limit as an integer or soft/hard limits as a mapping.
ulimits:
nproc: 65535
nofile:
soft: 20000
hard: 40000
userns_mode
userns_mode: "host"
Disables the user namespace for this service, if Docker daemon is configured with user namespaces. See dockerd for more information.
volumes
Mount host folders or named volumes. Named volumes need to be specified with the top-level volumes
key.
You can mount a relative path on the host, which expands relative to the directory of the Compose configuration file being used. Relative paths should always begin with .
or ..
.
Short syntax
The short syntax uses the generic [SOURCE:]TARGET[:MODE]
format, where SOURCE
can be either a host path or volume name. TARGET
is the container path where the volume is mounted. Standard modes are ro
for read-only and rw
for read-write (default).
volumes:
# Just specify a path and let the Engine create a volume
- /var/lib/mysql
# Specify an absolute path mapping
- /opt/data:/var/lib/mysql
# Path on the host, relative to the Compose file
- ./cache:/tmp/cache
# User-relative path
- ~/configs:/etc/configs/:ro
# Named volume
- datavolume:/var/lib/mysql
Long syntax
The long form syntax allows the configuration of additional fields that can’t be expressed in the short form.
-
type
: the mount typevolume
,bind
,tmpfs
ornpipe
-
source
: the source of the mount, a path on the host for a bind mount, or the name of a volume defined in the top-levelvolumes
key. Not applicable for a tmpfs mount. -
target
: the path in the container where the volume is mounted -
read_only
: flag to set the volume as read-only -
bind
: configure additional bind options-
propagation
: the propagation mode used for the bind
-
-
volume
: configure additional volume options-
nocopy
: flag to disable copying of data from a container when a volume is created
-
-
tmpfs
: configure additional tmpfs options-
size
: the size for the tmpfs mount in bytes
-
version: "2.4" services: web: image: nginx:alpine ports: - "80:80" volumes: - type: volume source: mydata target: /data volume: nocopy: true - type: bind source: ./static target: /opt/app/static networks: webnet: volumes: mydata:
Note: When creating bind mounts, using the long syntax requires the referenced folder to be created beforehand. Using the short syntax creates the folder on the fly if it doesn’t exist. See the bind mounts documentation for more information.
volume_driver
Specify a default volume driver to be used for all declared volumes on this service.
volume_driver: mydriver
Note: In version 2 files, this option only applies to anonymous volumes (those specified in the image, or specified under
volumes
without an explicit named volume or host path). To configure the driver for a named volume, use thedriver
key under the entry in the top-levelvolumes
option.
See Docker Volumes and Volume Plugins for more information.
volumes_from
Mount all of the volumes from another service or container, optionally specifying read-only access (ro
) or read-write (rw
). If no access level is specified, then read-write is used.
volumes_from:
- service_name
- service_name:ro
- container:container_name
- container:container_name:rw
Notes
The
container:...
formats are only supported in the version 2 file format.In version 1, you can use container names without marking them as such:
service_name
service_name:ro
container_name
container_name:rw
restart
no
is the default restart policy, and it doesn’t restart a container under any circumstance. When always
is specified, the container always restarts. The on-failure
policy restarts a container if the exit code indicates an on-failure error.
- restart: no
- restart: always
- restart: on-failure
cpu_count, cpu_percent, cpu_shares, cpu_period, cpu_quota, cpus, cpuset, domainname, hostname, ipc, mac_address, mem_limit, memswap_limit, mem_swappiness, mem_reservation, oom_kill_disable, oom_score_adj, privileged, read_only, shm_size, stdin_open, tty, user, working_dir
Each of these is a single value, analogous to its docker run counterpart.
Note: The following options were added in version 2.2:
cpu_count
,cpu_percent
,cpus
. The following options were added in version 2.1:oom_kill_disable
,cpu_period
cpu_count: 2
cpu_percent: 50
cpus: 0.5
cpu_shares: 73
cpu_quota: 50000
cpu_period: 20ms
cpuset: 0,1
user: postgresql
working_dir: /code
domainname: foo.com
hostname: foo
ipc: host
mac_address: 02:42:ac:11:65:43
mem_limit: 1000000000
memswap_limit: 2000000000
mem_reservation: 512m
privileged: true
oom_score_adj: 500
oom_kill_disable: true
read_only: true
shm_size: 64M
stdin_open: true
tty: true
Specifying durations
Some configuration options, such as the interval
and timeout
sub-options for healthcheck
, accept a duration as a string in a format that looks like this:
2.5s
10s
1m30s
2h32m
5h34m56s
The supported units are us
, ms
, s
, m
and h
.
Specifying byte values
Some configuration options, such as the device_read_bps
sub-option for blkio_config
, accept a byte value as a string in a format that looks like this:
2b
1024kb
2048k
300m
1gb
The supported units are b
, k
, m
and g
, and their alternative notation kb
, mb
and gb
. Decimal values are not supported at this time.
Volume configuration reference
While it is possible to declare volumes on the fly as part of the service declaration, this section allows you to create named volumes that can be reused across multiple services (without relying on volumes_from
), and are easily retrieved and inspected using the docker command line or API. See the docker volume subcommand documentation for more information.
Here’s an example of a two-service setup where a database’s data directory is shared with another service as a volume so that it can be periodically backed up:
version: "2.4"
services:
db:
image: db
volumes:
- data-volume:/var/lib/db
backup:
image: backup-service
volumes:
- data-volume:/var/lib/backup/data
volumes:
data-volume:
An entry under the top-level volumes
key can be empty, in which case it uses the default driver configured by the Engine (in most cases, this is the local
driver). Optionally, you can configure it with the following keys:
driver
Specify which volume driver should be used for this volume. Defaults to whatever driver the Docker Engine has been configured to use, which in most cases is local
. If the driver is not available, the Engine returns an error when docker-compose up
tries to create the volume.
driver: foobar
driver_opts
Specify a list of options as key-value pairs to pass to the driver for this volume. Those options are driver-dependent - consult the driver’s documentation for more information. Optional.
driver_opts:
foo: "bar"
baz: 1
external
If set to true
, specifies that this volume has been created outside of Compose. docker-compose up
does not attempt to create it, and raises an error if it doesn’t exist.
For version 2.0 of the format, external
cannot be used in conjunction with other volume configuration keys (driver
, driver_opts
, labels
). This limitation no longer exists for version 2.1 and above.
In the example below, instead of attempting to create a volume called [projectname]_data
, Compose looks for an existing volume simply called data
and mount it into the db
service’s containers.
version: "2.4"
services:
db:
image: postgres
volumes:
- data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
volumes:
data:
external: true
You can also specify the name of the volume separately from the name used to refer to it within the Compose file:
volumes:
data:
external:
name: actual-name-of-volume
Note: In newer versions of Compose, the
external.name
property is deprecated in favor of simply using thename
property.
labels
Add metadata to containers using Docker labels. You can use either an array or a dictionary.
It’s recommended that you use reverse-DNS notation to prevent your labels from conflicting with those used by other software.
labels:
com.example.description: "Database volume"
com.example.department: "IT/Ops"
com.example.label-with-empty-value: ""
labels:
- "com.example.description=Database volume"
- "com.example.department=IT/Ops"
- "com.example.label-with-empty-value"
name
Set a custom name for this volume.
version: "2.4"
volumes:
data:
name: my-app-data
It can also be used in conjunction with the external
property:
version: "2.4"
volumes:
data:
external: true
name: my-app-data
Network configuration reference
The top-level networks
key lets you specify networks to be created. For a full explanation of Compose’s use of Docker networking features, see the Networking guide.
driver
Specify which driver should be used for this network.
The default driver depends on how the Docker Engine you’re using is configured, but in most instances it is bridge
on a single host and overlay
on a Swarm.
The Docker Engine returns an error if the driver is not available.
driver: overlay
Starting in Compose file format 2.1, overlay networks are always created as attachable
, and this is not configurable. This means that standalone containers can connect to overlay networks.
driver_opts
Specify a list of options as key-value pairs to pass to the driver for this network. Those options are driver-dependent - consult the driver’s documentation for more information. Optional.
driver_opts:
foo: "bar"
baz: 1
enable_ipv6
Enable IPv6 networking on this network.
ipam
Specify custom IPAM config. This is an object with several properties, each of which is optional:
-
driver
: Custom IPAM driver, instead of the default. -
config
: A list with zero or more config blocks, each containing any of the following keys:-
subnet
: Subnet in CIDR format that represents a network segment -
ip_range
: Range of IPs from which to allocate container IPs -
gateway
: IPv4 or IPv6 gateway for the master subnet -
aux_addresses
: Auxiliary IPv4 or IPv6 addresses used by Network driver, as a mapping from hostname to IP
-
-
options
: Driver-specific options as a key-value mapping.
A full example:
ipam:
driver: default
config:
- subnet: 172.28.0.0/16
ip_range: 172.28.5.0/24
gateway: 172.28.5.254
aux_addresses:
host1: 172.28.1.5
host2: 172.28.1.6
host3: 172.28.1.7
options:
foo: bar
baz: "0"
internal
By default, Docker also connects a bridge network to it to provide external connectivity. If you want to create an externally isolated overlay network, you can set this option to true
.
labels
Add metadata to containers using Docker labels. You can use either an array or a dictionary.
It’s recommended that you use reverse-DNS notation to prevent your labels from conflicting with those used by other software.
labels:
com.example.description: "Financial transaction network"
com.example.department: "Finance"
com.example.label-with-empty-value: ""
labels:
- "com.example.description=Financial transaction network"
- "com.example.department=Finance"
- "com.example.label-with-empty-value"
external
If set to true
, specifies that this network has been created outside of Compose. docker-compose up
does not attempt to create it, and raises an error if it doesn’t exist.
For version 2.0 of the format, external
cannot be used in conjunction with other network configuration keys (driver
, driver_opts
, ipam
, internal
). This limitation no longer exists for version 2.1 and above.
In the example below, proxy
is the gateway to the outside world. Instead of attempting to create a network called [projectname]_outside
, Compose looks for an existing network simply called outside
and connect the proxy
service’s containers to it.
version: "2.4"
services:
proxy:
build: ./proxy
networks:
- outside
- default
app:
build: ./app
networks:
- default
networks:
outside:
external: true
You can also specify the name of the network separately from the name used to refer to it within the Compose file:
networks:
outside:
external:
name: actual-name-of-network
Not supported for version 2 docker-compose
files. Use network_mode instead.
name
Set a custom name for this network.
version: "2.4"
networks:
network1:
name: my-app-net
It can also be used in conjunction with the external
property:
version: "2.4"
networks:
network1:
external: true
name: my-app-net
Variable substitution
Your configuration options can contain environment variables. Compose uses the variable values from the shell environment in which docker-compose
is run. For example, suppose the shell contains POSTGRES_VERSION=9.3
and you supply this configuration:
db:
image: "postgres:${POSTGRES_VERSION}"
When you run docker-compose up
with this configuration, Compose looks for the POSTGRES_VERSION
environment variable in the shell and substitutes its value in. For this example, Compose resolves the image
to postgres:9.3
before running the configuration.
If an environment variable is not set, Compose substitutes with an empty string. In the example above, if POSTGRES_VERSION
is not set, the value for the image
option is postgres:
.
You can set default values for environment variables using a .env
file, which Compose automatically looks for. Values set in the shell environment override those set in the .env
file.
Important: The
.env file
feature only works when you use thedocker-compose up
command and does not work withdocker stack deploy
.
Both $VARIABLE
and ${VARIABLE}
syntax are supported. Additionally when using the 2.1 file format, it is possible to provide inline default values using typical shell syntax:
-
${VARIABLE:-default}
evaluates todefault
ifVARIABLE
is unset or empty in the environment. -
${VARIABLE-default}
evaluates todefault
only ifVARIABLE
is unset in the environment.
Similarly, the following syntax allows you to specify mandatory variables:
-
${VARIABLE:?err}
exits with an error message containingerr
ifVARIABLE
is unset or empty in the environment. -
${VARIABLE?err}
exits with an error message containingerr
ifVARIABLE
is unset in the environment.
Other extended shell-style features, such as ${VARIABLE/foo/bar}
, are not supported.
You can use a $$
(double-dollar sign) when your configuration needs a literal dollar sign. This also prevents Compose from interpolating a value, so a $$
allows you to refer to environment variables that you don’t want processed by Compose.
web:
build: .
command: "$$VAR_NOT_INTERPOLATED_BY_COMPOSE"
If you forget and use a single dollar sign ($
), Compose interprets the value as an environment variable and warns you:
The VAR_NOT_INTERPOLATED_BY_COMPOSE is not set. Substituting an empty string.
Extension fields
It is possible to re-use configuration fragments using extension fields. Those special fields can be of any format as long as they are located at the root of your Compose file and their name start with the x-
character sequence.
Note
Starting with the 3.7 format (for the 3.x series) and 2.4 format (for the 2.x series), extension fields are also allowed at the root of service, volume, network, config and secret definitions.
version: '3.4'
x-custom:
items:
- a
- b
options:
max-size: '12m'
name: "custom"
The contents of those fields are ignored by Compose, but they can be inserted in your resource definitions using YAML anchors. For example, if you want several of your services to use the same logging configuration:
logging:
options:
max-size: '12m'
max-file: '5'
driver: json-file
You may write your Compose file as follows:
version: '3.4'
x-logging:
&default-logging
options:
max-size: '12m'
max-file: '5'
driver: json-file
services:
web:
image: myapp/web:latest
logging: *default-logging
db:
image: mysql:latest
logging: *default-logging
It is also possible to partially override values in extension fields using the YAML merge type. For example:
version: '3.4'
x-volumes:
&default-volume
driver: foobar-storage
services:
web:
image: myapp/web:latest
volumes: ["vol1", "vol2", "vol3"]
volumes:
vol1: *default-volume
vol2:
<< : *default-volume
name: volume02
vol3:
<< : *default-volume
driver: default
name: volume-local
Compose documentation
- User guide
- Installing Compose
- Compose file versions and upgrading
- Get started with Django
- Get started with Rails
- Get started with WordPress
- Command line reference
fig, composition, compose version 3, docker
© 2019 Docker, Inc.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
Docker and the Docker logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Docker, Inc. in the United States and/or other countries.
Docker, Inc. and other parties may also have trademark rights in other terms used herein.
https://docs.docker.com/v18.09/compose/compose-file/compose-file-v2/