Getting Started Docker Mysql Nodejs Save

Running a nodejs application with mysql database as microservices using docker

Project README

getting started with docker-mysql-nodejs

Running a nodejs application with mysql database using docker and microservice architecture

Our end goal

  • Launch mysql server in a docker container.
  • Launch our simple node app in a separate container.
  • Link these two containers and test our integrated mysql-nodejs app.

Watch this tutorial at https://youtu.be/tIbMSqTEpfY

Prerequisite

  • must have docker set up and running on your system

Launching mysql in a container

  1. Create a directory for our tutorial mkdir getting-started-docker-mysql-nodejs

  2. Move to this directory cd getting-started-docker-mysql-nodejs/

  3. Create a directory for our mysql microservice mkdir mysql-microservice

  4. Move to this directory cd mysql-microservice/

  5. Create a Dockerfile with following content (name of file will be Dockerfile)

    ## Pull the mysql:5.7 image
    FROM mysql:5.7
    
    ## The maintainer name and email
    MAINTAINER Your Name <[email protected]>
    
    # database = test and password for root = password
    ENV MYSQL_DATABASE=test \
        MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=password
    
    # when container will be started, we'll have `test` database created with this schema
    COPY ./test-dump.sql /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/
    
    
  6. We'll initialize our test database with a sample schema. Download test-dump.sql and put it inside mysql-microservice folder along with Dockerfile

  7. Create a data directory where mysql will store its content mkdir data. We will specify this directory while running our mysql container. On Linux default storage directory is /var/lib/mysql but in this tutorial we'll use a custom storage directory.

  8. Build the image with Dockerfile docker build -t test-mysql . Note that we are inside mysql-microservice directory. test-mysql would be name of our image

  9. You can check your newly built image using docker images Building the image using Dockerfile

  10. Run the newly created docker image as container

    docker run  -d \
    --publish 6603:3306 \
    --volume=/home/varunkumar/getting-started-docker-mysql-nodejs/mysql-microservice/data:/var/lib/mysql \
    --name=test-mysql-microservice test-mysql
    
  11. With above command we started our container in detach mode -d and mapped host(your machine) port 6603 with container port 3306 (mysql server) --publish 6603:3306. We are also using our custom data storage directory by specifying host path volume --volume. Replace /home/varunkumar/getting-started-docker-mysql-nodejs/mysql-microservice/data path to absolute path of data directory which you created on your system. We are also naming our container as test-mysql-microservice --name

  12. Check logs to see if everything went smooth docker logs test-mysql-microservice

  13. Check your container state docker ps Running the docker image

  14. We have successfully launched a mysql container

Connecting to newly launched mysql container from host (optional)

To verify that our test-mysql-microservice container is up and running, we'll connect to it. Follow below steps if you have mysql (mysql-client) installed on your system.

  1. Check the ip of your system. On Linux use ifconfig. Lets say that ip is 192.168.43.147

  2. Connect to test-mysql-microservice container with following params- user-root, host=192.168.43.147, port=6603, database=test and password=password. Remember that we have specified root username and password in Dockerfile. Also our container is initialized with test-dump.sql (a schema with database name test)

  3. mysql -u root -p -h 192.168.43.147 -P 6603 -D test Use password=password when prompt and hit enter

  4. If connected successfully you can see a sample table students show tables exit when done. Connecting to mysql container from host

Launching nodejs app in a container

  1. Right now we are in mysql-microservice directory. We go to project root directory cd ..

  2. create directory for node microservice mkdir nodejs-microservice

  3. Move to this directory cd nodejs-microservice/

  4. Create a Dockerfile with following content (name of file will be Dockerfile)

    # Use Node v8 as the base image.
    FROM node:8
    
    # create and set app directory
    RUN mkdir -p /usr/src/app
    WORKDIR /usr/src/app
    
    # Install app dependencies
    # A wildcard is used to ensure both package.json AND package-lock.json are copied
    # where available (npm@5+)
    COPY package*.json ./
    RUN npm install
    
    # Copy app source from current host directory to container working directory
    COPY . .
    
    # Run app
    CMD ["npm", "start"]
    
    
  5. We need a package.json file for our node-microservice app as well as source code. For this tutorial, I've already created one. Download package.json as well as index.js and put it inside nodejs-microservice folder along with Dockerfile.

  6. Build the image with Dockerfile docker build -t test-nodejs . Note that we are inside nodejs-microservice directory. test-nodejs would be name of our image

  7. You can check your newly built image using docker images Building the image using Dockerfile

  8. Run the newly created docker image as container

    docker run  -d \
    --publish 4000:4000 \
    -e MYSQL_USER='root' \
    -e MYSQL_PASSWORD='password' \
    -e MYSQL_DATABASE='test' \
    -e MYSQL_HOST='172.17.0.2' \
    --link test-mysql-microservice:db \
    --name=test-nodejs-microservice test-nodejs
    

Running the image using Dockerfile

  1. Explaination of above command-
  • -d run in detach mode
  • --publish map the host port 4000 to the container port 4000
  • -e pass environment variables to nodejs app necessary to make mysql connection (check index.js file)
  • --link test-mysql-microservice:db link to the container named test-mysql-microservice and refer to it as db
  • --name naming our container as test-nodejs-microservice
  1. How to know your MYSQL_HOST- Note that I am using 172.17.0.2 ip-address as MYSQL_HOST. This is the IpAddress of our test-mysql-microservice container. You must replace this value to your container's ipAddress. Use docker inspect test-mysql-microservice | grep IPAddress

Testing our complete app

If everything is good so far then congratulations :smile: You have a complete app running with two microservices. To test this you can use CURL command from your host machine

  1. Get homepage of your app curl -X GET localhost:4000

  2. Get list of all students from test database curl -X POST 192.168.43.147:4000/get-students Here 192.168.43.147 is my host IpAddress ifconfig | grep inet

  3. Add a new student to your test db curl --header "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"rollNo": 1130360, "name": "Abhishek Goswami"}' -X POST localhost:4000/add-student

  4. Again fetch all students to see updated results curl -X POST 192.168.43.147:4000/get-students

  5. Modify source code of nodejs app, build image, run container and test again.

Queries/Comments

You can contact me at [email protected] or create github issues.

Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Getting Started Docker Mysql Nodejs" Project. README Source: varunon9/getting-started-docker-mysql-nodejs
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