Reputation: 10226
I'm building an image for github's Linkurious project, based on an image already in the hub for the neo4j database. the neo image automatically runs the server on port 7474 and my image runs on port 8000.
when I run my image I publish both ports (could I do this with EXPOSE?):
docker run -d --publish=7474:7474 --publish=8000:8000 linkurious
but only my server seems to run. if I hit http://[ip]:7474/
I get nothing. is there something special I have to do to make sure they both run?
* Edit I *
here's my Dockerfile:
FROM neo4j/neo4j:latest
RUN apt-get -y update
RUN apt-get install -y git
RUN apt-get install -y npm
RUN apt-get install -y nodejs-legacy
RUN git clone git://github.com/Linkurious/linkurious.js.git
RUN cd linkurious.js && npm install && npm run build
CMD cd linkurious.js && npm start
* Edit II *
to perhaps help explain my quandary, I've asked a different question
Upvotes: 2
Views: 773
Reputation: 1323223
EXPOSE
is there to allow inter-containers communication (within the same docker daemon), with the docker run --link
option.
Port mapping is there to map EXPOSEd ports to the host, to allow client-to-container communication. So you need --publish
.
See also "Difference between “expose” and “publish” in docker".
See also an example with "Advanced Usecase with Docker: Connecting Containers"
Make sure though that the ip is the right one ($(docker-machine ip default)
).
If you are using a VM (meaning, you are not using docker directly on a Linux host, but on a Linux VM with VirtualBox), make sure the mapped ports 7474 and 8000 are port forwarded from the host to the VM.
VBoxManage controlvm boot2docker-vm natpf1 "name,tcp,,7474,,7474"
VBoxManage controlvm boot2docker-vm natpf1 "name,tcp,,8000,,8000"
In the OP's case, this is using neo4j: see "Neo4j with Docker", based on the neo4j/neo4j/ image and its Dockerfile:
ENTRYPOINT ["/docker-entrypoint.sh"]
CMD ["neo4j"]
It is not meant to be used for installing another service (like nodejs), where the CMD cd linkurious.js && npm start
would completely override the neo4j
base image CMD
(meaning neo4j
would never start).
It is meant to be run on its own:
# interactive with terminal
docker run -i -t --rm --name neo4j -v $HOME/neo4j-data:/data -p 8474:7474 neo4j/neo4j
# as daemon running in the background
docker run -d --name neo4j -v $HOME/neo4j-data:/data -p 8474:7474 neo4j/neo4j
And then used by another image, with a --link neo4j:neo4j
directive.
Upvotes: 3