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+page_title: Using Compose in production
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+page_description: Guide to using Docker Compose in production
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+page_keywords: documentation, docs, docker, compose, orchestration, containers, production
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+
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+
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+## Using Compose in production
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+
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+While **Compose is not yet considered production-ready**, you can try using it
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+for production deployments if you're feeling brave. Production-readiness is an
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+active, ongoing project - see the
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+[roadmap](https://github.com/docker/compose/blob/master/ROADMAP.md) for details
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+on how it's coming along and what needs to be done.
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+
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+When deploying to production, you'll almost certainly want to make changes to
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+your app configuration that are more appropriate to a live environment. This may
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+include:
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+
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+- Removing any volume bindings for application code, so that code stays inside
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+ the container and can't be changed from outside
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+- Binding to different ports on the host
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+- Setting environment variables differently (e.g. to decrease the verbosity of
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+ logging, or to enable email sending)
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+- Specifying a restart policy (e.g. `restart: always`) to avoid downtime
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+- Adding extra services (e.g. a log aggregator)
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+
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+For this reason, you'll probably want to define a separate Compose file, say
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+`production.yml`, which specifies production-appropriate configuration.
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+
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+<!-- TODO: uncomment when the `extends` guide is merged
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+> **Note:** The [extends](extends.md) keyword is useful for maintaining multiple
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+> Compose files which re-use common services without having to manually copy and
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+> paste.
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+-->
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+
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+Once you've got an alternate configuration file, you can make Compose use it
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+by setting the `COMPOSE_FILE` environment variable:
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+
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+ $ COMPOSE_FILE=production.yml
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+ $ docker-compose up -d
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+
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+> **Note:** You can also use the file for a one-off command without setting
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+> an environment variable by passing the `-f` flag, e.g.
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+> `docker-compose -f production.yml up -d`.
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+
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+### Deploying changes
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+
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+When you make changes to your app code, you'll need to rebuild your image and
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+recreate your app containers. If the service you want to redeploy is called
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+`web`, this will look like:
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+
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+ $ docker-compose build web
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+ $ docker-compose up --no-deps -d web
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+
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+This will first rebuild the image for `web` and then stop, destroy and recreate
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+*just* the `web` service. The `--no-deps` flag prevents Compose from also
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+recreating any services which `web` depends on.
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+
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+### Run Compose on a single server
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+
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+You can use Compose to deploy an app to a remote Docker host by setting the
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+`DOCKER_HOST`, `DOCKER_TLS_VERIFY` and `DOCKER_CERT_PATH` environment variables
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+appropriately. [Docker Machine](https://docs.docker.com/machine) makes managing
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+local and remote Docker hosts very easy, and is recommended even if you're not
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+deploying remotely.
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+
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+Once you've set up your environment variables, all the normal `docker-compose`
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+commands will work with no extra configuration.
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+
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+### Run Compose on a Swarm cluster
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+
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+[Docker Swarm](https://docs.docker.com/swarm), a Docker-native clustering
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+system, exposes the same API as a single Docker host, which means you can use
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+Compose against a Swarm instance and run your apps across multiple hosts.
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+
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+Compose/Swarm integration is still in the experimental stage, and Swarm is still
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+in beta, but if you're interested to try it out, check out the
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+[integration guide](https://github.com/docker/compose/blob/master/SWARM.md).
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