I have set up a Docker Django/PostgreSQL app closely following the Django Quick Start instructions on the Docker site.
The first time I run Django's manage.py migrate, using the command sudo docker-compose run web python manage.py migrate
, it works as expected. The database is built inside the Docker PostgreSQL container just fine.
Changes made to the Django app itself are likewise reflected in the Docker Django container, the moment I save them. It's great!
But if I then change a model in Django, and try to update the Postgres database to match the model, no changes are detected so no migration happens no matter how many times I run makemigrations
or migrate
again.
Basically, every time I change the Django model, I have to delete the Docker containers (using sudo docker-compose rm
) and start afresh with a new migration.
I'm still trying to get my head around Docker, and there's an awful lot I don't understand about how it works, but this one is driving me nuts. Why doesn't migrate see my changes? What am I doing wrong?
You just have to log into your running docker container and run your commands.
- Build your stack :
docker-compose build -f path/to/docker-compose.yml
- Launch your stack :
docker-compose up -f path/to/docker-compose.yml
- Display docker running containers :
docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
3fcc49196a84 ex_nginx "nginx -g 'daemon off" 3 days ago Up 32 seconds 0.0.0.0:80->80/tcp, 443/tcp ex_nginx_1
66175bfd6ae6 ex_webapp "/docker-entrypoint.s" 3 days ago Up 32 seconds 0.0.0.0:32768->8000/tcp ex_webapp_1
# postgres docker container ...
- Get the CONTAINER ID of you django app and log into :
docker exec -t -i 66175bfd6ae6 bash
Now you are logged into, then go to the right folder : cd path/to/django_app
And now, each time you edit your models, run in your container : python manage.py makemigrations
and python manage.py migrate
I also recommend you to use a docker-entrypoint for your django docker container file to run automatically :
- collecstatic
- migrate
- runserver or start it with gunicorn or uWSGI
Here is an example (docker-entrypoint.sh
) :
#!/bin/bash
# Collect static files
echo "Collect static files"
python manage.py collectstatic --noinput
# Apply database migrations
echo "Apply database migrations"
python manage.py migrate
# Start server
echo "Starting server"
python manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8000
I use these method:
services:
web:
build: .
image: uzman
command: python manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8000
ports:
- "3000:3000"
- "8000:8000"
volumes:
- .:/code
depends_on:
- migration
- db
migration:
image: uzman
command: python manage.py migrate --noinput
volumes:
- .:/code
depends_on:
- db
Using docker
hierarchy we made, the service migration runs after set up the database and before to run the main service. Now when you run your service docker
will run migrations before runs the server; look that migration
server is applied over the same image that web server, it means that all migrations will be taken from your project, avoiding problems.
You avoid made entry point or whatever other thing with this way.
Threads a little old. But there another method not listed so far.
Have your stack running then fire off a one shot docker-compose run command. E.g
#assume django in container named web
docker-compose run web python3 manage.py migrate
https://docs.docker.com/compose/reference/run/
You can use docker exec
command
docker exec -it container_id python manage.py migrate