This example provides a base setup for using PostgreSQL and pgAdmin. More details on how to customize the installation and the compose file can be found here (PostgreSQL) and here (pgAdmin).
Project structure:
.
├── .env
├── compose.yaml
└── README.md
services:
postgres:
image: postgres:latest
...
pgadmin:
image: dpage/pgadmin4:latest
Before deploying this setup, you need to configure the following values in the .env file.
- POSTGRES_USER
- POSTGRES_PW
- POSTGRES_DB (can be default value)
- PGADMIN_MAIL
- PGADMIN_PW
When deploying this setup, the pgAdmin web interface will be available at port 5050 (e.g. http://localhost:5050).
$ docker compose up
Starting postgres ... done
Starting pgadmin ... done
After logging in with your credentials of the .env file, you can add your database to pgAdmin.
- Right-click "Servers" in the top-left corner and select "Create" -> "Server..."
- Name your connection
- Change to the "Connection" tab and add the connection details:
- Hostname: "postgres" (this would normally be your IP address of the postgres database - however, docker can resolve this container ip by its name)
- Port: "5432"
- Maintenance Database: $POSTGRES_DB (see .env)
- Username: $POSTGRES_USER (see .env)
- Password: $POSTGRES_PW (see .env)
Check containers are running:
$ docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
849c5f48f784 postgres:latest "docker-entrypoint.s…" 9 minutes ago Up 9 minutes 0.0.0.0:5432->5432/tcp, :::5432->5432/tcp postgres
d3cde3b455ee dpage/pgadmin4:latest "/entrypoint.sh" 9 minutes ago Up 9 minutes 443/tcp, 0.0.0.0:5050->80/tcp, :::5050->80/tcp pgadmin
Stop the containers with
$ docker compose down
# To delete all data run:
$ docker compose down -v