- Dockerfile for Django
- Build on top of Alpine Linux
- Size:
~70-120MB
- Latest version:
1.10.3
- Latest Long-Term Support (LTS) version:
1.8.16
- Automated builds at Docker Hub
- Continuous integration
Tag | Django | Python | Download Size | Image Size |
---|---|---|---|---|
django:python3 |
1.10.3 |
3.5 |
116.8MB |
|
django:python3-onbuild |
1.10.3 onbuild |
3.5 |
84.6MB |
|
django:python3-lts |
1.8.16 LTS |
3.5 |
114.4MB |
|
django:python2 |
1.10.3 |
2.7 |
104.5MB |
|
django:python2-onbuild |
1.10.3 onbuild |
2.7 |
72.5MB |
|
django:python2-lts |
1.8.16 LTS |
2.7 |
102.1MB |
Django is a free and open source web application framework, written in Python, which follows the model-view-controller architectural pattern. Django's primary goal is to ease the creation of complex, database-driven websites with an emphasis on reusability and "pluggability" of components.
FROM rvernica/django:onbuild
Put this file in the root of your app, next to the requirements.txt
.
This image includes multiple ONBUILD
triggers which should cover most applications. The build will COPY . /usr/src/app
, RUN pip install
, EXPOSE 8000
, and set the default command to python manage.py runserver
.
You can then build and run the Docker image:
$ docker build --tag my-django-app .
$ docker run --name some-django-app --detach my-django-app
You can test it by visiting http://container-ip:8000
in a browser or, if you need access outside the host, on http://localhost:8000
with the following command:
$ docker run --name some-django-app --publish 8000:8000 --detach my-django-app
Of course, if you don't want to take advantage of magical and convenient ONBUILD
triggers, you can always just use docker run
directly to avoid having to add a Dockerfile
to your project.
$ docker run --name some-django-app --volume "$PWD":/usr/src/app --workdir /usr/src/app --publish 8000:8000 --detach rvernica/django bash -c "pip install -r requirements.txt && python manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8000"
If you want to generate the scaffolding for a new Django project, you can do the following:
$ docker run --interactive --tty --rm --user "$(id -u):$(id -g)" --volume "$PWD":/usr/src/app --workdir /usr/src/app rvernica/django django-admin.py startproject mysite
This will create a sub-directory named mysite
inside your current directory.
This Docker library is a fork of the Docker Official Image packaging for Django. The official image is currently deprecated and will receive no further updates starting 2017.