How to access Docker container's web server from host

DockerBoot2docker

Docker Problem Overview


I'm running under boot2docker 1.3.1.

I have a Docker container running a web server via uwsgi --http :8080.

If I attach to the container I can browse the web site using lynx http://127.0.0.1:8080 so I know the server is working.

I ran my container with:

$ docker run -itP --expose 8080 uwsgi_app:0.2

It has the following details:

$ docker ps
CONTAINER ID        IMAGE               COMMAND             CREATED             STATUS              PORTS                     NAMES
5248ad86596d        uwsgi_app:0.2     "bash"              11 minutes ago      Up 11 minutes       0.0.0.0:49159->8080/tcp   cocky_hypatia
$ docker inspect --format '{{ .NetworkSettings.IPAddress }}' 5248ad86596d
172.17.0.107

I thought I could access that web site from my host by going to http://172.17.0.107:49159.

This does not work. I just see 'connecting...' in Chrome, getting nowhere.

What am I doing wrong?

Docker Solutions


Solution 1 - Docker

Extending Anentropic's answer: boot2docker is the old app for Mac and Windows, docker-machine is the new one.

Firstly, list your machines:

$ docker-machine ls

NAME      ACTIVE   DRIVER       STATE     URL                         SWARM
default   *        virtualbox   Running   tcp://192.168.99.100:2376

Then select one of the machines (the default one is called default) and:

$ docker-machine ip default

192.168.99.100

Solution 2 - Docker

Ok, stupid me, I found the answer in the docs for boot2docker https://docs.docker.com/installation/mac/#container-port-redirection

I needed to use the ip address of the boot2docker vm, rather than the ip of the container, i.e.

$ boot2docker ip
192.168.59.103

and I am able to browse my site from the host at http://192.168.59.103:49159/

I did not need to add any route on the host

Solution 3 - Docker

To find the IP address of your container, you should need NO additional installs:

docker inspect <container>

This provides a wealth of info. grep it for the IPAddress.

Solution 4 - Docker

You could use boot2docker port mapping option -L, as described here.

So, in your case it would be

boot2docker ssh -L 0.0.0.0:8080:localhost:8080

and then

docker run -it -p 8080:8080 uwsgi_app:0.2

That way, you do not have to use boot2docker's IP address: you can use localhost or your own IP address (and your docker container can be accessed from outside).

Solution 5 - Docker

Boot2docker is outdated, but you may still have this problem on Docker for Windows or Mac, even though the same container works on Linux. One symptom is that trying to access a page on the server inside the container gives the error "didn't send any data" as opposed to "could not connect."

If so, it may be because on Win/Mac the container host has its own IP, it's not localhost as it is on linux. Try running Django on IP 0.0.0.0, meaning accept connections from all IPs, like this:

python manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8000

Alternatively, if you need to make sure the server only responds to local requests (such as from your local proxy like nginx, apache, or gunicorn) you can use the host IP returned by hostname -i.

And make sure you are using the -p port forwarding option correctly in the docker run command.

Assuming all is well, you should be able to access your server at http://localhost in a browser running on the host machine.

Solution 6 - Docker

[EDIT: original version was ignoring the -P in question]

If you want to get to the containers without having to 'publish' the port (which changes its number) there is a good run-through here.

The key is this line:

sudo route -n add 172.17.0.0/16 172.16.0.11

which tells the Mac how to route to the private network inside the VirtualBox VM that the Docker containers are on.

Solution 7 - Docker

Had the same issue and in my case i was using AWS EC2 instance. I was trying with the container IP which did not work. Then I used the actual public IP of the AWS host as the IP, which worked.

Solution 8 - Docker

> docker build -t {imagename} .

docker build -t api-rest-test .

> docker run -dp {localport}:{exposeport} image:name

 docker run -dp 8080:8080 api-rest-test:latest

make sure you are using the same port for yourlocalport and exposeport

then you can access your rest service in your local machine http://localhost:8080

Solution 9 - Docker

How to troubleshoot the issue on hosting application on local host browser

For this launch the container with below command, in my case it was:

[root@centoslab3 ~]# docker ps -a
CONTAINER ID        IMAGE               COMMAND             CREATED             STATUS                      PORTS               NAMES
1b81d8a0e3e1        centos:baseweb      "/bin/bash"         8 minutes ago       Exited (0) 24 seconds ago                       webtest
[root@centoslab3 ~]# docker run --name=atul -v /root/dockertest:/var/www/html -i -t -p 5000:8000 centos:baseweb /bin/bash

In the httpd configuration:

[root@adb28b08c9ed /]# cd /etc/httpd/conf
[root@adb28b08c9ed conf]# ll
total 52
-rw-r--r--. 1 root root 34419 Sep 19 15:16 httpd.conf

edit the file with the port 8000 in listner and update the container ip and port under Servername.

Restart the httpd service and you are done.

Hope this helps

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QuestionAnentropicView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - DockerHankCaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - DockerAnentropicView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - DockerJellicleCatView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - DockerMagic WandView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - DockerJonathan StrayView Answer on Stackoverflow
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Solution 8 - Dockermuthukumar selvarajView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - DockerAtulView Answer on Stackoverflow