Docker images¶
There are docker files available to quickly get a version of wger up and
running. They are all located under extras/docker
if you want to build
them yourself.
Note that you need to build from the project’s source folder, e.g:
docker build -f extras/docker/development/Dockerfile -t wger/devel .
docker build -f extras/docker/apache/Dockerfile --tag wger/apache .
Apache¶
This image runs the application using WSGI and apache.
Get the image:
docker pull wger/apache
Run a container and start the application:
docker run -ti --name wger.apache --publish 8000:80 wger/apache
Then just open http://localhost:8000 and log in as: admin, password adminadmin
Development¶
This image installs the application using virtualenv, uses a sqlite database and serves it with django’s development server.
Get the image:
docker pull wger/devel
Run a container and start the application:
docker run -ti --name wger.devel --publish 8000:8000 wger/devel
(in docker) source ~/venv/bin/activate
(in docker) python manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8000
Then just open http://localhost:8000 and log in as: admin, password adminadmin
As an alternative you might want to map a local folder to the container. This is interesting if e.g. you want to keep the wger source code on your host machine and use docker only to serve it. Then do this:
docker run -ti \
--name wger.test1 \
--publish 8005:8000 \
--volume /path/to/local/wger/:/home/wger/src \
wger/devel
It will mount the local path on top of the folder in the container. For this to
work you obviously need to manually checkout the code to /path/to/local/wger/
and create a settings file as well.