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How To Extend Docker Compose File

Written by @ifomin | Published on 2020/3/5

TL;DR
How To Extend Docker Compose File: How To Use Multiple Docker compose files on different servers? There is a page in official documentation that describes this: https://://://docs.docker.com/compose/extends/ The most versatile option is option 3, which is the most convenient and convenient. It comes down to the following options: docker-compose.yml.override.yML or docker-commpose.prod.yml. Override syntax: Docker compose reads two files, aand an optional override syntax.
How to use different/multiple docker compose files on different servers ?
There is a page in official documentation that describes this: https://docs.docker.com/compose/extends/
However, this page only describes first 2 options, and completely skips option 3, which is the most versatile and convenient.
It comes down to the following options:

1. docker-compose.override.yml

By default, when you execute -
docker-compose up
- Docker compose reads two files, a docker-compose.yml and an optional docker-compose.override.yml.
So I might have only docker-compose.yml on my local machine, and docker-compose.yml + docker-compose.override.yml - on my dev/prod servers.
This is not very convenient, and will be difficult to have correct docker-compose.override.yml in my repository, especially when my servers will have differences in setup.

2. Override syntax:

docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml -f docker-compose.prod.yml up -d
This is much better, and I can keep multiple different override files, like docker-compose.prod.yml, docker-compose.dev.yml, etc
But there are 2 problems with the above approach:
  • files are combined at runtime, so I do not see resulting merged docker-compose.yml file, and can not verify correctness of the merge
  • this syntax does not work in docker swarm mode

3. Docker compose config command

docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml -f docker-compose.prod.yml config > docker-compose.stack.yml
This works the same exact way as the above 2 options, except it provides me with the resulting yml file -
docker-compose.stack.yml
, which I can review and check for correctness. Also now I can use this approach in docker swarm.
Now I can use it like:
docker-compose -f docker-compose.stack.yml up -d
Or in swarm:
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.stack.yml mystack
Stay Tuned!

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Written by
@ifomin
Full stack web developer, tech lead, project manager

Topics and
tags
docker|docker-compose|docker-compose-file|devops|software-development|docker-compose-extend|devops-docker|docker-swarm|web-monetization|hackernoon-es
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