WordPress runs on a variety of platforms, but last time I was developing I was using a MAMP stack - Mac Apache MySQL & PHP. It's been a while since I was working on WordPress sites and I no longer have MAMP installed on my machine, however I do have Docker running. Since I can create a LAMP stack (Linux... AMP) running on my Mac. This is a bit closer to what the site would be running on in the real world, plus I can deploy the Docker app to something like a DigitalOcean Droplet quickly.
Let's start by creating a folder for this to contain all the configs and data.
1mkdir wordpress-docker && cd wordpress-docker
Then add a Docker Compose file, which is used to define and run multiple containers easily.
1touch docker-compose.yml
Next we need to configure the file itself, so in your favorite editor open up docker-compose.yml
. A few things are configured in the Docker Compose:
- The version of Docker Compose to use
- The services (containers) we are configuring. These consist of the database and the code.
- The image for each container to use
- What ports to open and bind to the host (your machine). This allows each container to speak to the other when needed
- An env file, where variables like database passwords can be stored so they can be exempt from being committed to source
- And in the case of the
wp
container a link to the database container so it can be accessed by name asmysql
since thewordpress
container image uses this to connect.
1version: "2" services: db: image: mariadb ports: - "8081:3306" env_file: - .env wp: image: wordpress volumes: - ./html/:/var/www/html ports: - "8080:80" env_file: - .env links: - db:mysql
Create a .env
files for the variables (You could also use 2 .env
files, one for each container). Note that both passwords MUST be the same!
1 MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=SuperSecretTellNobody! WORDPRESS_DB_PASSWORD=SuperSecretTellNobody!
That's it for config, now it's time to start your Docker containers. The following command will start to download and build the images and then boot them up. Running it with -d
runs it in the background once
1docker-compose up -d
Once it's booted up and is ready to go you will see something like this:
1Starting wordpress-docker_db_1 ... done Starting wordpress-docker_wp_1 ... done
In your browser head over to http://localhost:8080/
and you'll be welcomed by the initial setup screens.
If you take a look in your directory you'll have a ./html
sub-directory that contains all your WordPress files just like a normal WordPress install.
Note: You can stop docker by running docker compose down