WordPress development with Docker and Docker Compose.
I used this projects in my WordPress development:
Contents:
Make sure you have the latest versions of Docker and Docker Compose installed on your machine.
Clone this repository or copy the files from this repository into a new folder. In the docker-compose.yml file you may change the IP address, Port for the Host and Port to the Container.
Change the environment file .env
Edit the .env file to change it:
IP addressWordPress Host PortWordPress Container PortMySQL IP addressMySQL Root UserMySQL Root PasswordMySQL Database NameMySQL Host PortMySQL Container PortPMA PortPMA Host PortPMA Container Port
Open a terminal and cd to the folder in which docker-compose.yml is saved and run:
docker-compose up
The containers are now built and running. You should be able to access the WordPress installation with the configured IP in the browser address. By default it is http://127.0.0.1.
For convenience you may add a new entry into your hosts file.
You can start the containers with the up command in daemon mode (by adding -d as an argument) or by using the start command:
docker-compose start
docker-compose stop
To stop and remove all the containers use thedown command:
docker-compose down
Use -v if you need to remove the database volume which is used to persist the database:
docker-compose down -v
Configure the volume to load the plugin in the container in the docker-compose.yml:
volumes:
- ./<path for the plugin>/:/var/www/html/wp-content/plugins/plugin-name
The docker compose configuration also provides a service for using the WordPress CLI.
Sample command to install WordPress:
docker-compose run --rm wpcli core install --url=http://localhost --title=test --admin_user=admin [email protected]
Or to list installed plugins:
docker-compose run --rm wpcli plugin list
For an easier usage you may consider adding an alias for the CLI:
alias wp="docker-compose run --rm wpcli"
This way you can use the CLI command above as follows:
wp plugin list
You can also visit http://127.0.0.1:8080 to access phpMyAdmin after starting the containers.
The default username is root, and the password is the same as supplied in the .env file.