1

I am trying to create a build of a webapp I have created using Docker, but I have had no success. I've tried to follow two different tutorials but neither worked for me

Following Tutorial 1: The build seemed to complete without any problems but I could not find the image file anywhere, and 'sudo docker ps -a' returned nothing.

Following through thtutorial 2: I am now getting another error, that the requirements file is not found. I looked up solutions to that here, but it seems I am doing the correct thing by adding it to the build with the 'ADD requirements.txt /webapp' command. I checked that I spelled requirements right, haha. Now I do see it in 'sudo docker ps -a', but I dont see any image file and presumably it would not work if I did, since it could not find the requirements.

I'm quite confused as to what is wrong and how I should properly build a docker. How to I get it to find the requirements file, and then upon completing the "Build" command, actually have an image. Where is this image stored?

Below is the setup I have after following the second tutorial.

Dockerfile

FROM ubuntu:latest

#Update OS
RUN sed -i 's/# \(.*multiverse$\)/\1/g' /etc/apt/sources.list
RUN apt-get update
RUN apt-get -y upgrade

# Install Python
RUN apt-get install -y python-dev python-pip

# Add requirements.txt
ADD requirements.txt /webapp

# Install uwsgi Python web server
RUN pip install uwsgi

# Install app requirements
RUN pip install -r requirements.txt

# Create app directory
ADD . /webapp

# Set the default directory for our environment
ENV HOME /webapp
WORKDIR /webapp

# Expose port 8000 for uwsgi
EXPOSE 8000


ENTRYPOINT ["uwsgi", "--http", "0.0.0.0:8000", "--module", "app:app", "--processes", "1", "--threads", "8"]
CMD ["app.py"]

Requirements

Flask==0.12.1
itsdangerous==0.24
Jinja2==2.8
MarkupSafe==0.23
Werkzeug==0.11.5
SQLite3==3.18.0

Directory Structure (if it matters)

app.py
image_data.db
README.txt
requirements.txt
Dockerfile
templates
 - index.html
static/
 - image.js
 - main.css
 img/
   - camera.png
 images/
   - empty

Current output of ' sudo docker ps -a'

CONTAINER ID        IMAGE               COMMAND                  CREATED             STATUS                      PORTS               NAMES
663d4e096938        8f5126108354        "/bin/sh -c 'pip i..."   17 minutes ago      Exited (1) 17 minutes ago                       admiring_agnesi

1 Answer 1

2

The requirements.txt should be in the same directory as your dockerfile exists. I see from the dockerfile that the requirements.txt is added to webapp but the

RUN pip install -r requirements.txt

is trying to find it in the current directory; You probably need to copy rquirement.txt to the current directory like

ADD requirements.txt .

Lets see if that works. I did not test it.

You can see the images by

docker images 

and then run it like

docker run -t image_name
6
  • if you display images using docker images, does that mean the image created is not an actual file that you can see in your directory? If so, where/how does the image get stored?
    – Brian C
    Commented Apr 24, 2017 at 18:32
  • @BrianC: Images are stored in /var/lib/docker. It's recommended that you don't go messing around with anything in that directory unless you want to risk breaking Docker.
    – jwodder
    Commented Apr 24, 2017 at 18:37
  • 1
    It is in /var/lib/docker as mentioned by @jwodder. You can find out more about it here: stackoverflow.com/questions/19234831/… Commented Apr 24, 2017 at 19:49
  • So that worked in that it now compiles, I did a build using docker build -t imgcomparer . but running docker run -t imgcomparer gives errors like Unable to find image 'imgcomparer:latest' locally. I was able to get it run by instead using the ID shown by docker images. So it runs with the cmd docker run -t 7b4f475bd3fe... (or I think it does, It says root@bbbca1d2760f:/# in the powershell window) but now I don't get any response if I navigate to the address I specified in Docker (0.0.0.0:8000). Would it matter that the flask python file put it to the address 172.0.0.1:8000?
    – Brian C
    Commented Apr 24, 2017 at 23:35
  • @BrianC Actually I think you should set it to 127.0.0.1:xxxxx if you are on localhost in Ubuntu. I know that works for Django; should be the same for Flask. Commented Apr 25, 2017 at 0:11

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.