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Dockerizing a Node.js web app

Dockerizing a Node.js web app

作者: hnscdg | 来源:发表于2018-04-27 15:44 被阅读0次

    废话不多说,首先直接搬砖

    The goal of this example is to show you how to get a Node.js application into a Docker container. The guide is intended for development, and not for a production deployment. The guide also assumes you have a working Docker installation and a basic understanding of how a Node.js application is structured.

    In the first part of this guide we will create a simple web application in Node.js, then we will build a Docker image for that application, and lastly we will run the image as a container.

    Docker allows you to package an application with all of its dependencies into a standardized unit, called a container, for software development. A container is a stripped-to-basics version of a Linux operating system. An image is software you load into a container.

    Create the Node.js app

    First, create a new directory where all the files would live. In this directory create a package.json file that describes your app and its dependencies:

    {
      "name": "docker_web_app",
      "version": "1.0.0",
      "description": "Node.js on Docker",
      "author": "First Last <first.last@example.com>",
      "main": "server.js",
      "scripts": {
        "start": "node server.js"
      },
      "dependencies": {
        "express": "^4.16.1"
      }
    }
    
    

    With your new package.json file, run npm install. If you are using npm version 5 or later, this will generate a package-lock.json file which will be copied to your Docker image.

    Then, create a server.js file that defines a web app using the Express.js framework:

    'use strict';
    
    const express = require('express');
    
    // Constants
    const PORT = 8080;
    const HOST = '0.0.0.0';
    
    // App
    const app = express();
    app.get('/', (req, res) => {
      res.send('Hello world\n');
    });
    
    app.listen(PORT, HOST);
    console.log(`Running on http://${HOST}:${PORT}`);
    
    

    In the next steps, we'll look at how you can run this app inside a Docker container using the official Docker image. First, you'll need to build a Docker image of your app.

    Creating a Dockerfile

    Create an empty file called Dockerfile:(这一步我一直touch报错,没办法先注释掉了,以后再找解决方法)

    touch Dockerfile
    
    

    Open the Dockerfile in your favorite text editor

    The first thing we need to do is define from what image we want to build from. Here we will use the latest LTS (long term support) version carbon of node available from the Docker Hub:

    FROM node:carbon
    
    

    Next we create a directory to hold the application code inside the image, this will be the working directory for your application:

    # Create app directory
    WORKDIR /usr/src/app
    
    

    This image comes with Node.js and NPM already installed so the next thing we need to do is to install your app dependencies using the npm binary. Please note that if you are using npmversion 4 or earlier a package-lock.json file will not be generated.

    # Install app dependencies
    # A wildcard is used to ensure both package.json AND package-lock.json are copied
    # where available (npm@5+)
    COPY package*.json ./
    
    RUN npm install
    # If you are building your code for production
    # RUN npm install --only=production
    
    

    Note that, rather than copying the entire working directory, we are only copying the package.json file. This allows us to take advantage of cached Docker layers. bitJudo has a good explanation of this here.

    To bundle your app's source code inside the Docker image, use the COPY instruction:

    # Bundle app source
    COPY . .
    
    

    Your app binds to port 8080 so you'll use the EXPOSE instruction to have it mapped by the docker daemon:

    EXPOSE 8080
    
    

    Last but not least, define the command to run your app using CMD which defines your runtime. Here we will use the basic npm start which will run node server.js to start your server:

    CMD [ "npm", "start" ]
    
    

    Your Dockerfile should now look like this:

    FROM node:carbon
    
    # Create app directory
    WORKDIR /usr/src/app
    
    # Install app dependencies
    # A wildcard is used to ensure both package.json AND package-lock.json are copied
    # where available (npm@5+)
    COPY package*.json ./
    
    RUN npm install
    # If you are building your code for production
    # RUN npm install --only=production
    
    # Bundle app source
    COPY . .
    
    EXPOSE 8080
    CMD [ "npm", "start" ]
    
    

    .dockerignore file

    Create a .dockerignore file in the same directory as your Dockerfile with following content:

    node_modules
    npm-debug.log
    
    

    This will prevent your local modules and debug logs from being copied onto your Docker image and possibly overwriting modules installed within your image.

    Building your image

    Go to the directory that has your Dockerfile and run the following command to build the Docker image. The -t flag lets you tag your image so it's easier to find later using the docker images command:

    $ docker build -t <your username>/node-web-app .
    
    

    Your image will now be listed by Docker:

    $ docker images
    
    # Example
    REPOSITORY                      TAG        ID              CREATED
    node                            carbon     1934b0b038d1    5 days ago
    <your username>/node-web-app    latest     d64d3505b0d2    1 minute ago
    
    

    Run the image

    Running your image with -d runs the container in detached mode, leaving the container running in the background. The -p flag redirects a public port to a private port inside the container. Run the image you previously built:

    $ docker run -p 49160:8080 -d <your username>/node-web-app
    
    

    Print the output of your app:

    # Get container ID
    $ docker ps
    
    # Print app output
    $ docker logs <container id>
    
    # Example
    Running on http://localhost:8080
    
    

    If you need to go inside the container you can use the exec command:

    # Enter the container
    $ docker exec -it <container id> /bin/bash
    
    

    Test

    To test your app, get the port of your app that Docker mapped:

    $ docker ps
    
    # Example
    ID            IMAGE                                COMMAND    ...   PORTS
    ecce33b30ebf  <your username>/node-web-app:latest  npm start  ...   49160->8080
    
    

    In the example above, Docker mapped the 8080 port inside of the container to the port 49160 on your machine.

    Now you can call your app using curl (install if needed via: sudo apt-get install curl):

    $ curl -i localhost:49160
    
    HTTP/1.1 200 OK
    X-Powered-By: Express
    Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
    Content-Length: 12
    ETag: W/"c-M6tWOb/Y57lesdjQuHeB1P/qTV0"
    Date: Mon, 13 Nov 2017 20:53:59 GMT
    Connection: keep-alive
    
    Hello world
    
    

    We hope this tutorial helped you get up and running a simple Node.js application on Docker.

    You can find more information about Docker and Node.js on Docker in the following places:

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