This post is about my journey to finally achieve this goal, as you may guess it didn't work on the first attempt.
The Goal
One reason why I was looking at containers, it's because it's supposed to be working everywhere right? Well yes but sometimes with a little of effort. The goal here is to be able to run the same container on my main PC, my surface, a Linux VM and of course in Azure.
The context
I have a different setup on my main machine and on my surface. On my PC, I'm using VirtualBox for my VMs so I'm not running Docker for windows, but Docker Toolbox. This flavor (older version) of Docker will create a VM in VitualBox instead of Hyper-V. I couldn't use Docker for Windows like on my Surface, because the two virtualization softwares don't run side by side.
I also wanted to use only tools available on each of this platform, so I decided not to use Visual Studio IDE (the big one). Moreover, I wanted to understand what was happening so I didn't want too much magic involve. Visual Studio is a fantastic tool and I love it. :)
Installing Docker
I needed to install Docker on my Surface. I downloaded Docker Community Edition (CE), and because Hyper-V was already installed everything ran smoothly. On Windows, you need to share the "C" drive from the Docker setting. However, I was getting a strange "bug" when trying to share mine. It was asking my to login with AzureAD and was ignoring my request by letting the share drive unchecked.
Thanks to my new friend Tom Chantler, I did search for too long. See the thing is I'm using an AzureAD account to login, and something is not working right at the moment. As explained in Tom's post: Sharing your C drive with Docker for Windows when using Azure Active Directory, to walkaround this situation, I only had to create a new user account with the exact name as my AzureAD account, but without the AzureAD prefix (ex: AzureAD\FBoucher became FBoucher). Once that was done I could share the drive without any issue.
Let's get started with the documentation
The HelloWord container worked like a charm, so I was ready to create my Asp.Net Core website. My reflex was to go on docs.docker.com and follow the instruction from Create a Dockerfile for an ASP.NET Core application. I was probably doing something wrong, because it didn't work. So I decided to start from scratch and do every step manually... I always learn more that way.
Let's start by the beginning
Before moving everything in a container, we need a web application. This can be easily done from the terminal/ command prompt, with the commands:
dotnet new mvc -o dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo
cd dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo
dotnet restore
dotnet publish -c release -o app/ .
Here we create a new folder with a website using the mcv template. I then go in that new folder and restore the Nuget package. To test the we site locally simply use
dotnet run
. And finally, we build and publish the application into the subfolder app.Moving to Docker
Now that we have our app it's time to containerize it. We need to add some Docker instruction in a
dockerfile
. Add a new file name dockerfile
(no extension) to the root folder and copy/paste these commandes:
# dockerfile
FROM microsoft/dotnet:2.1-aspnetcore-runtime
WORKDIR /app COPY /app /app
ENTRYPOINT [ "dotnet" , "dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo.dll"]
To start Docker with Docker Tool just start the Docker Quickstart TerminalThis instruction will specify how to build our container. First, it will download the image
microsoft/aspnetcore
or microsoft/dotnet:2.1-aspnetcore-runtime
. We specify the work directory, then copy the app
folder to app
folder inside the container. Finally, we specify the entry point of our application telling it to start with dotnet
.Like Git and it's gitIgnore file docker has the same thing with
.dockerignore
(no extension). Add that file into your folder to ignore the bin and obj folder.
# .dockerignore
bin\ obj\
Now that the instructions about how to build our container are completed, we can build our container. Execute the following command:
docker build -t dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo .
This will build dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo from the current folder.
Running Docker container locally
Everything is in place, the only thing missing is to run it. If you want to run it locally just go with this command:
docker run -p 8181:80 dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo
On my machine, the port 80 is always used. So I remap the port 80 to 8181, feel free to change it at your convenience. The website will be available at localhost:8181
If you are running Docker Tool (older version of Docker), you need to get the IP of your VM. To get it do
docker-machine ip
Running in the cloud
To run our container into Azure you will need to publish it to the cloud first. It could be on DockerHub or in a private registry on Azure. I decided to go with Azure. First, we need to create a registry, then publish our container.
az group create --name dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo --location eastus
az acr create --resource-group dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo --name frankContainerDemo01 --sku Basic --admin-enabled true
az acr credential show -n frankContainerDemo01
The last command
az acr credential show
will provides information to tag our container with our repository name and also gives us the credential to be able to push. Of course, you could go to the portal.azure.com and get the information from the Registry's Access Keys blade.docker tag dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo frankcontainerdemo01.azurecr.io/dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo:v1
Let's connect our docker to our registry, and then push (upload) our container to Azure.
# The https:// is important...
docker login https://frankcontainerdemo01.azurecr.io -u frankContainerDemo01 -p <Password_Retreived>
docker push frankcontainerdemo01.azurecr.io/dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo:v1
Great the container is in Azure. Now let's create a quick webApp to see it. We could also use the Azure Container Instance (ACI) that would be only one command, but because the demo is a website, it won't make sense to use ACI for that.
To get an Application service, we need a Service plan, and then we will create an "empty" webapp. To do that we will specify the
runtime
without providing any code/binary/container. I wasn't able to create a webapp from a private Azure registry in one command, so this is why I'm doing it in two.az appservice plan create --name demoplan --resource-group dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo --sku S1 --is-linux
az webapp create -g dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo -p demoplan -n frankdockerdemo --runtime "DOTNETCORE|2.1"
On Windows, I got the following error message: '2.1' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file. The PowerShell command line escape "--%" solves the problem: az --% webapp create -g dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo -p demoplan -n frankdockerdemo --runtime "DOTNETCORE|2.1"
If you check the website right now you should have page saying that the site is up but empty. Let's update the container settings with our registry and container settings.
az webapp config container set -n frankdockerdemo -g dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo --docker-custom-image-name frankcontainerdemo01.azurecr.io/dotnetcoredockerappservicedemo:v1 --docker-registry-server-url https://frankcontainerdemo01.azurecr.io --docker-registry-server-user frankContainerDemo01 --docker-registry-server-password <Password_Retreived>
It's works of course!
Conclusion
It's only four steps: create the .Net Core application, package it into a Docker container, publish our container into our Azure Registry, and create an application service base on that container. However, because all this tech are cross-platform, sometimes you get some little tiny differences between the platform, and those could become time-consuming. It was a great little project that turned out to be a lot more than expected, but I learn so much!
I'm very happy with the result... expect more of Docker in the future!
In a video, please!
I also have a video of this post if you prefer.