204 lines
7.8 KiB
Markdown
204 lines
7.8 KiB
Markdown
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---
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description: Create a Docker Compose application using ASP.NET Core and SQL Server on Linux in Docker.
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keywords: dotnet, .NET, Core, example, ASP.NET Core, SQL Server, mssql
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title: "Quickstart: Compose and ASP.NET Core with SQL Server"
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---
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This quick-start guide demonstrates how to use Docker Engine on Linux and Docker
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Compose to set up and run the sample ASP.NET Core application using the
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[.NET Core SDK image](https://hub.docker.com/_/microsoft-dotnet-core-sdk)
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with the
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[SQL Server on Linux image](https://hub.docker.com/_/microsoft-mssql-server).
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You just need to have [Docker Engine](../get-docker.md)
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and [Docker Compose](install.md) installed on your
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platform of choice: Linux, Mac or Windows.
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For this sample, we create a sample .NET Core Web Application using the
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`microsoft/dotnet:2.1-sdk` Docker image. After that, we create a `Dockerfile`,
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configure this app to use our SQL Server database, and then create a
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`docker-compose.yml` that defines the behavior of all of these components.
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> **Note**: This sample is made for Docker Engine on Linux. For Windows
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> Containers, visit
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> [Docker Labs for Windows Containers](https://github.com/docker/labs/tree/master/windows).
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1. Create a new directory for your application.
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This directory is the context of your docker-compose project. For
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[Docker Desktop for Windows](../docker-for-windows/index.md#file-sharing) and
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[Docker Desktop for Mac](../docker-for-mac/index.md#file-sharing), you
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need to set up file sharing for the volume that you need to map.
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1. Within your directory, use the `dotnet:2.1-sdk` Docker image to generate a
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sample web application within the container under the `/app` directory and
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into your host machine in the working directory:
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```bash
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$ docker run -v ${PWD}:/app --workdir /app microsoft/dotnet:2.1-sdk dotnet new mvc --auth Individual
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```
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> **Note**: If running in Docker Desktop for Windows, make sure to use Powershell
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or specify the absolute path of your app directory.
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1. Create a `Dockerfile` within your app directory and add the following content:
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```dockerfile
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FROM microsoft/dotnet:2.1-sdk
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COPY . /app
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WORKDIR /app
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RUN ["dotnet", "restore"]
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RUN ["dotnet", "build"]
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EXPOSE 80/tcp
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RUN chmod +x ./entrypoint.sh
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CMD /bin/bash ./entrypoint.sh
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```
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This file defines how to build the web app image. It uses the
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[.NET Core SDK image](https://hub.docker.com/_/microsoft-dotnet-core-sdk),
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maps the volume with the generated code, restores the dependencies, builds the
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project and exposes port 80. After that, it calls an `entrypoint` script
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that we create in the next step.
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1. The `Dockerfile` makes use of an entrypoint to your webapp Docker
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image. Create this script in a file called `entrypoint.sh` and paste the
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contents below.
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> **Note**: Make sure to use UNIX line delimiters. The script doesn't work if
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> you use Windows-based delimiters (Carriage return and line feed).
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```bash
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#!/bin/bash
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set -e
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run_cmd="dotnet run --server.urls http://*:80"
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until dotnet ef database update; do
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>&2 echo "SQL Server is starting up"
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sleep 1
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done
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>&2 echo "SQL Server is up - executing command"
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exec $run_cmd
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```
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This script restores the database after it starts up, and then runs
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the application. This allows some time for the SQL Server database image to
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start up.
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1. Create a `docker-compose.yml` file. Write the following in the file, and
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make sure to replace the password in the `SA_PASSWORD` environment variable
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under `db` below. This file defines the way the images interact as
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independent services.
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> **Note**: The SQL Server container requires a secure password to startup:
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> Minimum length 8 characters, including uppercase and lowercase letters,
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> base 10 digits and/or non-alphanumeric symbols.
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```yaml
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version: "{{ site.compose_file_v3 }}"
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services:
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web:
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build: .
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ports:
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- "8000:80"
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depends_on:
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- db
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db:
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image: "mcr.microsoft.com/mssql/server"
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environment:
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SA_PASSWORD: "Your_password123"
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ACCEPT_EULA: "Y"
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```
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This file defines the `web` and `db` micro-services, their relationship, the
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ports they are using, and their specific environment variables.
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> **Note**: You may receive an error if you choose the wrong Compose file
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> version. Be sure to choose a version that is compatible with your system.
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1. Go to `Startup.cs` and locate the function called `ConfigureServices` (Hint:
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it should be under line 42). Replace the entire function to use the following
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code (watch out for the brackets!).
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> **Note**: Make sure to update the `Password` field in the `connection`
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> variable below to the one you defined in the `docker-compose.yml` file.
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```csharp
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[...]
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public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
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{
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// Database connection string.
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// Make sure to update the Password value below from "Your_password123" to your actual password.
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var connection = @"Server=db;Database=master;User=sa;Password=Your_password123;";
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// This line uses 'UseSqlServer' in the 'options' parameter
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// with the connection string defined above.
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services.AddDbContext<ApplicationDbContext>(
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options => options.UseSqlServer(connection));
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services.AddIdentity<ApplicationUser, IdentityRole>()
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.AddEntityFrameworkStores<ApplicationDbContext>()
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.AddDefaultTokenProviders();
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services.AddMvc();
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// Add application services.
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services.AddTransient<IEmailSender, AuthMessageSender>();
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services.AddTransient<ISmsSender, AuthMessageSender>();
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}
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[...]
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```
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1. Go to `app.csproj`. You see a line like:
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```
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<PackageReference Include="Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Sqlite" Version="1.1.2" />
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```
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The generated project uses sqlite by default. To use SQL Server, add this line to
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`app.csproj`:
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```
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<PackageReference Include="Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.SqlServer" Version="1.1.2" />
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```
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The Sqlite dependency was at version 1.1.2 at the time of this writing. Use the same
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version for the SQL Server dependency.
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1. Ready! You can now run the `docker-compose build` command.
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```bash
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$ docker-compose build
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```
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1. Make sure you allocate at least 2GB of memory to Docker Engine. Here is how
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to do it on
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[Docker Desktop for Mac](../docker-for-mac/index.md#advanced) and
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[Docker Desktop for Windows](../docker-for-windows/index.md#advanced).
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This is necessary to run the SQL Server on Linux container.
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1. Run the `docker-compose up` command. After a few seconds, you should be able
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to open [localhost:8000](http://localhost:8000) and see the ASP.NET core
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sample website. The application is listening on port 80 by default, but we
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mapped it to port 8000 in the `docker-compose.yml`.
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```bash
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$ docker-compose up
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```
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Go ahead and try out the website! This sample uses the SQL Server
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database image in the back-end for authentication.
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Ready! You now have an ASP.NET Core application running against SQL Server in
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Docker Compose! This sample made use of some of the most popular Microsoft
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products for Linux. To learn more about Windows Containers, check out
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[Docker Labs for Windows Containers](https://github.com/docker/labs/tree/master/windows)
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to try out .NET Framework and more SQL Server tutorials.
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## Next steps
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- [Build your app using SQL Server](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/sql-server/developer-get-started/?utm_medium=Referral&utm_source=docs.docker.com)
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- [SQL Server on Docker Hub](https://hub.docker.com/r/microsoft/mssql-server/)
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- [ASP.NET Core](https://www.asp.net/core)
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- [ASP.NET Core Docker image](https://hub.docker.com/r/microsoft/aspnetcore/) on DockerHub
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