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08. Setting up and Deploying eShopOnContainers to Windows Containers
This is a draft page which will be evolving while our tests and dev regarding Windows Containers are completed. eShopOncontainers on Windows Containers is still under tests at the windows-containers-test branch.
For now, we're just adding the current "Windows Containers" support.
Windows Containers support:
Windows Server 2016 - Production Environments
- Install Docker Enterprise Edition (Docker EE)
- Designed to run apps in production
- Call Microsoft for support. If it's a Docker rather than Windows problem, they escalate to Docker and get it solved
Windows 10 - Dev Environments
- Install Docker Community Edition (Docker CE, formerly Docker for Windows)
- Support via forums/GitHub
- Can switch between Windows container development and Linux (in VM). There is no plan to drop either OS from Docker CE
- Designed for devs only. Not production
Docker might provide per incident support system for Docker Community Edition, or provide a "EE Desktop" for developers, but it's their call to do so. Not Microsoft's.
In Windows 10 you need to set Docker to use "Windows container" instead of Linux containers (in Windows Server 2016 Windows Containers are used by default). To do this, first you must have enabled container support in Windows 10. In "Turn Windows features on/off" select "Containers":
/img/win-containers/enable-windows-containers.png
Then right click in the Docker icon on the notification bar and select the option "Switch to Windows Containers". If you don't see this option and see the option "Switch to Linux Containers" you're already using windows containers.
The easiest way to start the windows containers is using Powershell and use call the cli-windows/start-windows-containers.ps1
script. This script will do three things:
- Compile all projects (calling
cli-windows/build-bits.ps1
) - Create windows images
- Start application
If don't want to compile all projects (because you have already published them) you can pass the parameter -buildBits $false
:
.\cli-windows\start-windows-containers.ps1 -buildBits $false
You can use docker-compose
directly to start the containers if you want:
docker-compose -f docker-compose-windows.yml -f docker-compose.override.yml -f docker-compose.override.windows.yml up
Note: You need to use these three files in docker-compose!
For RabbitMQ we are using the https://hub.docker.com/r/spring2/rabbitmq/ image, which provides a ready RabbitMQ to use. This RabbitMQ is configured to accept AMQP connections from the user admin:password
(this is different from the RabbitMQ Linux image which do not require any user/password when creating AMQP connections)
If you use start-windows-containers.ps1
script to launch the containers, then the containers are configured to use this login/password, so everything will work.
Note: Read this only if you use any other RabbitMQ image (or server) that have its own user/password needed.
We support any user/password needed using the environment variables ESHOP_SERVICE_BUS_USERNAME
and `ESHOP_SERVICE_BUS_PASSWORD. These variables are used to set a username and password when connecting to RabbitMQ. So:
- In Linux these variables can be unset (or empty)
- In Windows these variables should be set
To set this variables you have two options
- Just set them on your shell
- Edit the
.env
file and add these variables
If you have set this images and you want to launch the containers you can use:
.\cli-windows\start-windows-containers.ps1 -customEventBusLoginPassword $true
When passing the parameter -customEventBusLoginPassword $true
to the script you are forcing to use the login/password set in the environment variables instead the default one (the one needed for spring2/rabbitmq).
If you prefer to use docker-compose
you can do it. Just call it without the docker-compose.override.windows.yml
file:
docker-compose -f docker-compose-windows.yml -f docker-compose.override.yml up
- System requirements
- Development setup
- Databases & containers
- Architecture
- Application
- Code
- Logging and Monitoring
- Tests