Docker-symfony gives you everything you need for developing Symfony application. This complete stack run with docker and docker-compose (1.7 or higher).
-
Create a
.env
from the.env.dist
file. Adapt it according to your symfony applicationcp .env.dist .env
-
Build/run containers with (with and without detached mode)
$ docker-compose build $ docker-compose up -d
-
Update your system host file (add symfony.dev)
# get containers IP address and update host (replace IP according to your configuration) $ docker inspect --format '{{ .NetworkSettings.Networks.dockersymfony_default.IPAddress }}' $(docker ps -f name=nginx -q) # unix only (on Windows, edit C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts) $ sudo echo "171.17.0.1 symfony.dev" >> /etc/hosts
Note: If it's empty, run
docker inspect $(docker ps -f name=nginx -q) | grep IPAddress
instead. -
Prepare Symfony app
-
Update app/config/parameters.yml
# path/to/your/symfony-project/app/config/parameters.yml parameters: database_host: mysqldb #... redis_host: redis
-
Composer install & create database
$ docker-compose exec php bash $ composer install # Symfony2 $ sf doctrine:database:create $ sf doctrine:schema:update --force $ sf doctrine:fixtures:load --no-interaction # Symfony3 $ sf3 doctrine:database:create $ sf3 doctrine:schema:update --force $ sf3 doctrine:fixtures:load --no-interaction
-
-
Enjoy :-)
Just run docker-compose -d
, then:
- Symfony app: visit symfony.dev
- Symfony dev mode: visit symfony.dev/app_dev.php
- Logs (Kibana): symfony.dev:81
- Logs (files location): logs/nginx and logs/symfony
Have a look at the docker-compose.yml
file, here are the docker-compose
built images:
db
: This is the MySQL database container,php
: This is the PHP-FPM container in which the application volume is mounted,nginx
: This is the Nginx webserver container in which application volume is mounted too,elk
: This is a ELK stack container which uses Logstash to collect logs, send them into Elasticsearch and visualize them with Kibana,redis
: This is a redis database container.
This results in the following running containers:
$ docker-compose ps
Name Command State Ports
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
dockersymfony_db_1 /entrypoint.sh mysqld Up 0.0.0.0:3306->3306/tcp
dockersymfony_elk_1 /usr/bin/supervisord -n -c ... Up 0.0.0.0:81->80/tcp
dockersymfony_nginx_1 nginx Up 443/tcp, 0.0.0.0:80->80/tcp
dockersymfony_php_1 php-fpm Up 0.0.0.0:9000->9000/tcp
dockersymfony_redis_1 /entrypoint.sh redis-server Up 0.0.0.0:6379->6379/tcp
# bash commands
$ docker-compose exec php bash
# Composer (e.g. composer update)
$ docker-compose exec php composer update
# SF commands (Tips: there is an alias inside php container)
$ docker-compose exec php php /var/www/symfony/app/console cache:clear # Symfony2
$ docker-compose exec php php /var/www/symfony/bin/console cache:clear # Symfony3
# Same command by using alias
$ docker-compose exec php bash
$ sf cache:clear
# MySQL commands
$ docker-compose exec db mysql -uroot -p"root"
# Redis commands
$ docker-compose exec redis redis-cli
# F***ing cache/logs folder
$ sudo chmod -R 777 app/cache app/logs # Symfony2
$ sudo chmod -R 777 var/cache var/logs # Symfony3
# Check CPU consumption
$ docker stats $(docker inspect -f "{{ .Name }}" $(docker ps -q))
# Delete all containers
$ docker rm $(docker ps -aq)
# Delete all images
$ docker rmi $(docker images -q)
- How I can add PHPMyAdmin?
Simply add this: (then go to symfony.dev:8080)
phpmyadmin:
image: phpmyadmin/phpmyadmin
ports:
- "8080:80"
links:
- db
-
Got this error:
ERROR: Couldn't connect to Docker daemon at http+docker://localunixsocket - is it running? If it's at a non-standard location, specify the URL with the DOCKER_HOST environment variable.
?
Rundocker-compose up -d
instead. -
Permission problem? See this doc (Setting up Permission)
First of all, thank you for contributing ♥
If you find any typo/misconfiguration/... please send me a PR or open an issue. You can also ping me on twitter.
Also, while creating your Pull Request on GitHub, please write a description which gives the context and/or explains why you are creating it.