I am very new to using docker. I have been used to using dedicated VM’s and hosting the applications within the servers OS.
When hosting multiple applications/services that require the same port, is it best practice to spin up a whole new docker server or how should I go about the conflicts?
Ie. Hosting multiple web applications that utilize 443.
Thank you!
Use a single reverse proxy on that one port… it can then route the requests to the various back ends.
You probably want something that’s Docker-native like Traefik or Caddy.
Thank you! I am using Caddy and was able to define a unique random port for the other containers and access this via reverse proxy!
If the containers are all in the same network. You dont need to expose a port.
Lets assume you create a docker network called
reverse_proxy
and add all your contaiers that you want to be accessed by the reverse proxy to that network (including caddy).Then you can address all containers through the hostname in you caddy file and the port would be the default configurated port from the container.
So in the end you just expose the caddy container and nothing more.
That wouldn’t work if multiple containers use the same port (eg. 8000), right?
Without a docker network, I can just map
8001:8000
and don’t have that issue.Yes, it’d work just fine because each container listens on port 8000 of their own IP address, not the docker server’s IP address. Caddy/Traefik just redirects traffic to that port.
Okay, thanks! Maybe I’ll try it in the future.
I’ve just posted a little example. I’d recommend doing it this way. No more thinking about what port is allready exposed etc
I didn’t know this, very handy thanks
In addition to Caddy being apart of the
reverse_proxy
network. Would I also have to add it to theBridge
network so that I can utilize the machine IP that docker is hosted on for port forwarding 443?Caddy would have the bridge proxy network and the port 443 exposed.
version: "3.7" networks: proxy-network: external: true # needs to be created manually bevor running (docker create network proxy-network) services: caddy: image: caddy container_name: caddy restart: unless-stopped ports: - 80:80 - 443:443 volumes: - ./data:/data - ./config:/config - ./Caddyfile:/etc/caddy/Caddyfile:ro networks: - proxy-network
Other services:
version: "3.7" networks: proxy-network: external: true services: app: image: app container_name: app restart: unless-stopped volumes: - ./app-data:/data networks: - proxy-network
Caddy can now talk to the app with the apps container_name.
Caddyfile:
homepage.domain.de { reverse_proxy app:80 }
So the reverse proxy network is an extra network only for containers that need to be exposed.