The Compose file is a YAML file defining services, networks, and volumes for a Docker application.
The Compose file formats are now described in these references, specific to each version.
Reference file | What changed in this version |
---|---|
Version 3 (most current, and recommended) | Version 3 updates |
Version 2 | Version 2 updates |
Version 1 | Version 1 updates |
The topics below explain the differences among the versions, Docker Engine compatibility, and how to upgrade.
There are several versions of the Compose file format – 1, 2, 2.x, and 3.x
This table shows which Compose file versions support specific Docker releases.
Compose file format | Docker Engine release |
---|---|
3.7 | 18.06.0+ |
3.6 | 18.02.0+ |
3.5 | 17.12.0+ |
3.4 | 17.09.0+ |
3.3 | 17.06.0+ |
3.2 | 17.04.0+ |
3.1 | 1.13.1+ |
3.0 | 1.13.0+ |
2.4 | 17.12.0+ |
2.3 | 17.06.0+ |
2.2 | 1.13.0+ |
2.1 | 1.12.0+ |
2.0 | 1.10.0+ |
1.0 | 1.9.1.+ |
In addition to Compose file format versions shown in the table, the Compose itself is on a release schedule, as shown in Compose releases, but file format versions do not necessarily increment with each release. For example, Compose file format 3.0 was first introduced in Compose release 1.10.0, and versioned gradually in subsequent releases.
Looking for more detail on Docker and Compose compatibility?
We recommend keeping up-to-date with newer releases as much as possible. However, if you are using an older version of Docker and want to determine which Compose release is compatible, refer to the Compose release notes. Each set of release notes gives details on which versions of Docker Engine are supported, along with compatible Compose file format versions. (See also, the discussion in issue #3404.)
For details on versions and how to upgrade, see Versioning and Upgrading.
There are currently three versions of the Compose file format:
Version 1, the legacy format. This is specified by omitting a version
key at the root of the YAML.
Version 2.x. This is specified with a version: '2'
or version: '2.1'
, etc., entry at the root of the YAML.
Version 3.x, the latest and recommended version, designed to be cross-compatible between Compose and the Docker Engine’s swarm mode. This is specified with a version: '3'
or version: '3.1'
, etc., entry at the root of the YAML.
v2 and v3 Declaration
Note: When specifying the Compose file version to use, make sure to specify both the major and minor numbers. If no minor version is given,
0
is used by default and not the latest minor version.
The Compatibility Matrix shows Compose file versions mapped to Docker Engine releases.
To move your project to a later version, see the Upgrading section.
Note: If you’re using multiple Compose files or extending services, each file must be of the same version - you cannot, for example, mix version 1 and 2 in a single project.
Several things differ depending on which version you use:
These differences are explained below.
Compose files that do not declare a version are considered “version 1”. In those files, all the services are declared at the root of the document.
Version 1 is supported by Compose up to 1.6.x. It will be deprecated in a future Compose release.
Version 1 files cannot declare named volumes, networks or build arguments.
Compose does not take advantage of networking when you use version 1: every container is placed on the default bridge
network and is reachable from every other container at its IP address. You need to use links to enable discovery between containers.
Example:
web:
build: .
ports:
- "5000:5000"
volumes:
- .:/code
links:
- redis
redis:
image: redis
Compose files using the version 2 syntax must indicate the version number at the root of the document. All services must be declared under the services
key.
Version 2 files are supported by Compose 1.6.0+ and require a Docker Engine of version 1.10.0+.
Named volumes can be declared under the volumes
key, and networks can be declared under the networks
key.
By default, every container joins an application-wide default network, and is discoverable at a hostname that’s the same as the service name. This means links are largely unnecessary. For more details, see Networking in Compose.
Note: When specifying the Compose file version to use, make sure to specify both the major and minor numbers. If no minor version is given,
0
is used by default and not the latest minor version. As a result, features added in later versions will not be supported. For example:version: "2"is equivalent to:
version: "2.0"
Simple example:
version: "2.4"
services:
web:
build: .
ports:
- "5000:5000"
volumes:
- .:/code
redis:
image: redis
A more extended example, defining volumes and networks:
version: "2.4"
services:
web:
build: .
ports:
- "5000:5000"
volumes:
- .:/code
networks:
- front-tier
- back-tier
redis:
image: redis
volumes:
- redis-data:/var/lib/redis
networks:
- back-tier
volumes:
redis-data:
driver: local
networks:
front-tier:
driver: bridge
back-tier:
driver: bridge
Several other options were added to support networking, such as:
The depends_on
option can be used in place of links to indicate dependencies between services and startup order.
version: "2.4"
services:
web:
build: .
depends_on:
- db
- redis
redis:
image: redis
db:
image: postgres
Variable substitution also was added in Version 2.
An upgrade of version 2 that introduces new parameters only available with Docker Engine version 1.12.0+. Version 2.1 files are supported by Compose 1.9.0+.
Introduces the following additional parameters:
link_local_ips
isolation
in build configurations and service definitionslabels
for volumes and networks
name
for volumes
userns_mode
healthcheck
sysctls
pids_limit
oom_kill_disable
cpu_period
An upgrade of version 2.1 that introduces new parameters only available with Docker Engine version 1.13.0+. Version 2.2 files are supported by Compose 1.13.0+. This version also allows you to specify default scale numbers inside the service’s configuration.
Introduces the following additional parameters:
An upgrade of version 2.2 that introduces new parameters only available with Docker Engine version 17.06.0+. Version 2.3 files are supported by Compose 1.16.0+.
Introduces the following additional parameters:
target
, extra_hosts
and shm_size
for build configurations
start_period
for healthchecks
runtime
for service definitionsdevice_cgroup_rules
An upgrade of version 2.3 that introduces new parameters only available with Docker Engine version 17.12.0+. Version 2.4 files are supported by Compose 1.21.0+.
Introduces the following additional parameters:
platform
for service definitionsDesigned to be cross-compatible between Compose and the Docker Engine’s swarm mode, version 3 removes several options and adds several more.
Removed: volume_driver
, volumes_from
, cpu_shares
, cpu_quota
, cpuset
, mem_limit
, memswap_limit
, extends
, group_add
. See the upgrading guide for how to migrate away from these. (For more information on extends
, see Extending services.)
Added: deploy
Note: When specifying the Compose file version to use, make sure to specify both the major and minor numbers. If no minor version is given,
0
is used by default and not the latest minor version. As a result, features added in later versions will not be supported. For example:version: "3"is equivalent to:
version: "3.0"
An upgrade of version 3 that introduces new parameters only available with Docker Engine version 17.06.0+, and higher.
Introduces the following additional parameters:
An upgrade of version 3 that introduces new parameters. It is only available with Docker Engine version 17.09.0 and higher.
Introduces the following additional parameters:
target
and network
in build configurations
start_period
for healthchecks
order
for update configurations
name
for volumes
An upgrade of version 3 that introduces new parameters. It is only available with Docker Engine version 17.12.0 and higher.
Introduces the following additional parameters:
isolation
in service definitionsname
for networks, secrets and configsshm_size
in build configurations
An upgrade of version 3 that introduces new parameters. It is only available with Docker Engine version 18.02.0 and higher.
Introduces the following additional parameters:
tmpfs
size for tmpfs
-type mountsAn upgrade of version 3 that introduces new parameters. It is only available with Docker Engine version 18.06.0 and higher.
Introduces the following additional parameters:
init
in service definitionsrollback_config
in deploy configurationsBetween versions 2.x and 3.x, the structure of the Compose file is the same, but several options have been removed:
volume_driver
: Instead of setting the volume driver on the service, define a volume using the top-level volumes
option and specify the driver there.
version: "3.7"
services:
db:
image: postgres
volumes:
- data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
volumes:
data:
driver: mydriver
volumes_from
: To share a volume between services, define it using the top-level volumes
option and reference it from each service that shares it using the service-level volumes
option.
cpu_shares
, cpu_quota
, cpuset
, mem_limit
, memswap_limit
: These have been replaced by the resources key under deploy
. deploy
configuration only takes effect when using docker stack deploy
, and is ignored by docker-compose
.
extends
: This option has been removed for version: "3.x"
Compose files. (For more information, see Extending services.)group_add
: This option has been removed for version: "3.x"
Compose files.pids_limit
: This option has not been introduced in version: "3.x"
Compose files.link_local_ips
in networks
: This option has not been introduced in version: "3.x"
Compose files.In the majority of cases, moving from version 1 to 2 is a very simple process:
services:
key at the top.version: '2'
line at the top of the file.It’s more complicated if you’re using particular configuration features:
dockerfile
: This now lives under the build
key:
build:
context: .
dockerfile: Dockerfile-alternate
log_driver
, log_opt
: These now live under the logging
key:
logging:
driver: syslog
options:
syslog-address: "tcp://192.168.0.42:123"
links
with environment variables: As documented in the environment variables reference, environment variables created by links have been deprecated for some time. In the new Docker network system, they have been removed. You should either connect directly to the appropriate hostname or set the relevant environment variable yourself, using the link hostname:
web:
links:
- db
environment:
- DB_PORT=tcp://db:5432
external_links
: Compose uses Docker networks when running version 2 projects, so links behave slightly differently. In particular, two containers must be connected to at least one network in common in order to communicate, even if explicitly linked together.
Either connect the external container to your app’s default network, or connect both the external container and your service’s containers to an external network.
net
: This is now replaced by network_mode:
net: host -> network_mode: host
net: bridge -> network_mode: bridge
net: none -> network_mode: none
If you’re using net: "container:[service name]"
, you must now use network_mode: "service:[service name]"
instead.
net: "container:web" -> network_mode: "service:web"
If you’re using net: "container:[container name/id]"
, the value does not need to change.
net: "container:cont-name" -> network_mode: "container:cont-name"
net: "container:abc12345" -> network_mode: "container:abc12345"
volumes
with named volumes: these must now be explicitly declared in a top-level volumes
section of your Compose file. If a service mounts a named volume called data
, you must declare a data
volume in your top-level volumes
section. The whole file might look like this:
version: "2.4"
services:
db:
image: postgres
volumes:
- data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
volumes:
data: {}
By default, Compose creates a volume whose name is prefixed with your project name. If you want it to just be called data
, declare it as external:
volumes:
data:
external: true
docker-compose
1.20.0 introduces a new --compatibility
flag designed to help developers transition to version 3 more easily. When enabled, docker-compose
reads the deploy
section of each service’s definition and attempts to translate it into the equivalent version 2 parameter. Currently, the following deploy keys are translated:
condition
and max_attempts
All other keys are ignored and produce a warning if present. You can review the configuration that will be used to deploy by using the --compatibility
flag with the config
command.
Do not use this in production!
We recommend against using
--compatibility
mode in production. Because the resulting configuration is only an approximate using non-Swarm mode properties, it may produce unexpected results.
fig, composition, compose, versions, upgrading, docker
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