To create the image mdelapenya/tomcat-mysql
, execute the following command on the mdelapenya-docker-tomcat-mysql folder:
docker build -t mdelapenya/tomcat-mysql .
You can now push your new image to the registry:
docker push mdelapenya/tomcat-mysql
Start your image binding the external ports 8080 and 3306 in all interfaces to your container:
docker run -d -p 8080:8080 -p 3306:3306 mdelapenya/tomcat-mysql
Test your deployment:
curl http://localhost:8080/
Tomcat 7.0.77's home page should appear.
Copy the WAR file representing your application to /opt/apache-tomcat-7.0.77/webapps/
folder:
FROM mdelapenya/tomcat-mysql:7.0.77
COPY yourapp.war /opt/apache-tomcat-7.0.77/webapps/yourapp.war
After that, build the new Dockerfile
:
docker build -t username/my-tomcat-mysql-app .
And test it:
docker run -d -p 8080:80 -p 3306:3306 username/my-tomcat-mysql-app
Test your deployment:
curl http://localhost:8080/yourapp
That's it!
The bundled MySQL server has a root
user with no password for local connections.
Simply connect from your Java code with this user (using sql2o library):
String jdbcUrl = "jdbc-url-connection";
String jdbcUser = "jdbc-user";
String jdbcPassword = "jdbc-password";
return new Sql2o(jdbcUrl, jdbcUser, jdbcPassword);
## Connecting to the bundled MySQL server from outside the container
The first time that you run the container, a new user admin
with all privileges
will be created in MySQL with a random password. To get the password, check the logs
of the container by running:
docker logs $CONTAINER_ID
You will see an output like the following:
========================================================================
You can now connect to this MySQL Server using:
mysql -uadmin -p47nnf4FweaKu -h<host> -P<port>
Please remember to change the above password as soon as possible!
MySQL user 'root' has no password but only allows local connections
========================================================================
In this case, 47nnf4FweaKu
is the password allocated to the admin
user.
You can then connect to MySQL:
mysql -uadmin -p47nnf4FweaKu
Remember that the root
user does not allow connections from outside the container -
you should use this admin
user instead!
## Setting a specific password for the MySQL server admin account
If you want to use a preset password instead of a random generated one, you can
set the environment variable MYSQL_PASS
to your specific password when running the container:
docker run -d -p 80:80 -p 3306:3306 -e MYSQL_PASS="mypass" mdelapenya/liferay-portal-mysql
You can now test your new admin password:
mysql -uadmin -p"mypass"