github.com/endophage/docker@v1.4.2-0.20161027011718-242853499895/docs/reference/commandline/service_create.md (about)

     1  ---
     2  title: "service create"
     3  description: "The service create command description and usage"
     4  keywords: ["service, create"]
     5  ---
     6  
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    15  
    16  # service create
    17  
    18  ```Markdown
    19  Usage:  docker service create [OPTIONS] IMAGE [COMMAND] [ARG...]
    20  
    21  Create a new service
    22  
    23  Options:
    24        --constraint value                 Placement constraints (default [])
    25        --container-label value            Service container labels (default [])
    26        --endpoint-mode string             Endpoint mode (vip or dnsrr)
    27    -e, --env value                        Set environment variables (default [])
    28        --group-add value                  Add additional user groups to the container (default [])
    29        --help                             Print usage
    30    -l, --label value                      Service labels (default [])
    31        --limit-cpu value                  Limit CPUs (default 0.000)
    32        --limit-memory value               Limit Memory (default 0 B)
    33        --log-driver string                Logging driver for service
    34        --log-opt value                    Logging driver options (default [])
    35        --mode string                      Service mode (replicated or global) (default "replicated")
    36        --mount value                      Attach a mount to the service
    37        --name string                      Service name
    38        --network value                    Network attachments (default [])
    39    -p, --publish value                    Publish a port as a node port (default [])
    40        --replicas value                   Number of tasks (default none)
    41        --reserve-cpu value                Reserve CPUs (default 0.000)
    42        --reserve-memory value             Reserve Memory (default 0 B)
    43        --restart-condition string         Restart when condition is met (none, on-failure, or any)
    44        --restart-delay value              Delay between restart attempts (default none)
    45        --restart-max-attempts value       Maximum number of restarts before giving up (default none)
    46        --restart-window value             Window used to evaluate the restart policy (default none)
    47        --stop-grace-period value          Time to wait before force killing a container (default none)
    48        --update-delay duration            Delay between updates
    49        --update-failure-action string     Action on update failure (pause|continue) (default "pause")
    50        --update-max-failure-ratio value   Failure rate to tolerate during an update
    51        --update-monitor duration          Duration after each task update to monitor for failure (default 0s)
    52        --update-parallelism uint          Maximum number of tasks updated simultaneously (0 to update all at once) (default 1)
    53    -u, --user string                      Username or UID (format: <name|uid>[:<group|gid>])
    54        --with-registry-auth               Send registry authentication details to Swarm agents
    55    -w, --workdir string                   Working directory inside the container
    56  ```
    57  
    58  Creates a service as described by the specified parameters. You must run this
    59  command on a manager node.
    60  
    61  ## Examples
    62  
    63  ### Create a service
    64  
    65  ```bash
    66  $ docker service create --name redis redis:3.0.6
    67  dmu1ept4cxcfe8k8lhtux3ro3
    68  
    69  $ docker service ls
    70  ID            NAME   REPLICAS  IMAGE        COMMAND
    71  dmu1ept4cxcf  redis  1/1       redis:3.0.6
    72  ```
    73  
    74  ### Create a service with 5 replica tasks (--replicas)
    75  
    76  Use the `--replicas` flag to set the number of replica tasks for a replicated
    77  service. The following command creates a `redis` service with `5` replica tasks:
    78  
    79  ```bash
    80  $ docker service create --name redis --replicas=5 redis:3.0.6
    81  4cdgfyky7ozwh3htjfw0d12qv
    82  ```
    83  
    84  The above command sets the *desired* number of tasks for the service. Even
    85  though the command returns immediately, actual scaling of the service may take
    86  some time. The `REPLICAS` column shows both the *actual* and *desired* number
    87  of replica tasks for the service.
    88  
    89  In the following example the desired state is  `5` replicas, but the current
    90  number of `RUNNING` tasks is `3`:
    91  
    92  ```bash
    93  $ docker service ls
    94  ID            NAME    REPLICAS  IMAGE        COMMAND
    95  4cdgfyky7ozw  redis   3/5       redis:3.0.7
    96  ```
    97  
    98  Once all the tasks are created and `RUNNING`, the actual number of tasks is
    99  equal to the desired number:
   100  
   101  ```bash
   102  $ docker service ls
   103  ID            NAME    REPLICAS  IMAGE        COMMAND
   104  4cdgfyky7ozw  redis   5/5       redis:3.0.7
   105  ```
   106  
   107  ### Create a service with a rolling update policy
   108  
   109  ```bash
   110  $ docker service create \
   111    --replicas 10 \
   112    --name redis \
   113    --update-delay 10s \
   114    --update-parallelism 2 \
   115    redis:3.0.6
   116  ```
   117  
   118  When you run a [service update](service_update.md), the scheduler updates a
   119  maximum of 2 tasks at a time, with `10s` between updates. For more information,
   120  refer to the [rolling updates
   121  tutorial](https://docs.docker.com/engine/swarm/swarm-tutorial/rolling-update/).
   122  
   123  ### Set environment variables (-e, --env)
   124  
   125  This sets environmental variables for all tasks in a service. For example:
   126  
   127  ```bash
   128  $ docker service create --name redis_2 --replicas 5 --env MYVAR=foo redis:3.0.6
   129  ```
   130  
   131  ### Set metadata on a service (-l, --label)
   132  
   133  A label is a `key=value` pair that applies metadata to a service. To label a
   134  service with two labels:
   135  
   136  ```bash
   137  $ docker service create \
   138    --name redis_2 \
   139    --label com.example.foo="bar"
   140    --label bar=baz \
   141    redis:3.0.6
   142  ```
   143  
   144  For more information about labels, refer to [apply custom
   145  metadata](https://docs.docker.com/engine/userguide/labels-custom-metadata/).
   146  
   147  ### Add bind-mounts or volumes
   148  
   149  Docker supports two different kinds of mounts, which allow containers to read to
   150  or write from files or directories on other containers or the host operating
   151  system. These types are _data volumes_ (often referred to simply as volumes) and
   152  _bind-mounts_.
   153  
   154  A **bind-mount** makes a file or directory on the host available to the
   155  container it is mounted within. A bind-mount may be either read-only or
   156  read-write. For example, a container might share its host's DNS information by
   157  means of a bind-mount of the host's `/etc/resolv.conf` or a container might
   158  write logs to its host's `/var/log/myContainerLogs` directory. If you use
   159  bind-mounts and your host and containers have different notions of permissions,
   160  access controls, or other such details, you will run into portability issues.
   161  
   162  A **named volume** is a mechanism for decoupling persistent data needed by your
   163  container from the image used to create the container and from the host machine.
   164  Named volumes are created and managed by Docker, and a named volume persists
   165  even when no container is currently using it. Data in named volumes can be
   166  shared between a container and the host machine, as well as between multiple
   167  containers. Docker uses a _volume driver_ to create, manage, and mount volumes.
   168  You can back up or restore volumes using Docker commands.
   169  
   170  Consider a situation where your image starts a lightweight web server. You could
   171  use that image as a base image, copy in your website's HTML files, and package
   172  that into another image. Each time your website changed, you'd need to update
   173  the new image and redeploy all of the containers serving your website. A better
   174  solution is to store the website in a named volume which is attached to each of
   175  your web server containers when they start. To update the website, you just
   176  update the named volume.
   177  
   178  For more information about named volumes, see
   179  [Data Volumes](https://docs.docker.com/engine/tutorials/dockervolumes/).
   180  
   181  The following table describes options which apply to both bind-mounts and named
   182  volumes in a service:
   183  
   184  | Option                                   | Required                  | Description
   185  |:-----------------------------------------|:--------------------------|:-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   186  | **type**                                 |                           | The type of mount, can be either `volume`, or `bind`. Defaults to `volume` if no type is specified.<ul><li>`volume`: mounts a [managed volume](volume_create.md) into the container.</li><li>`bind`: bind-mounts a directory or file from the host into the container.</li></ul>
   187  | **src** or **source**                    | for `type=bind`&nbsp;only | <ul><li>`type=volume`: `src` is an optional way to specify the name of the volume (for example, `src=my-volume`). If the named volume does not exist, it is automatically created. If no `src` is specified, the volume is assigned a random name which is guaranteed to be unique on the host, but may not be unique cluster-wide. A randomly-named volume has the same lifecycle as its container and is destroyed when the *container* is destroyed (which is upon `service update`, or when scaling or re-balancing the service).</li><li>`type=bind`: `src` is required, and specifies an absolute path to the file or directory to bind-mount (for example, `src=/path/on/host/`).  An error is produced if the file or directory does not exist.</li></ul>
   188  | **dst** or **destination** or **target** | yes                       | Mount path inside the container, for example `/some/path/in/container/`. If the path does not exist in the container's filesystem, the Engine creates a directory at the specified location before mounting the volume or bind-mount.
   189  | **readonly** or **ro**                   |                           | The Engine mounts binds and volumes `read-write` unless `readonly` option is given when mounting the bind or volume.<br /><br /><ul><li>`true` or `1` or no value: Mounts the bind or volume read-only.</li><li>`false` or `0`: Mounts the bind or volume read-write.</li></ul>
   190  
   191  #### Bind Propagation
   192  
   193  Bind propagation refers to whether or not mounts created within a given
   194  bind-mount or named volume can be propagated to replicas of that mount. Consider
   195  a mount point `/mnt`, which is also mounted on `/tmp`. The propation settings
   196  control whether a mount on `/tmp/a` would also be available on `/mnt/a`. Each
   197  propagation setting has a recursive counterpoint. In the case of recursion,
   198  consider that `/tmp/a` is also mounted as `/foo`. The propagation settings
   199  control whether `/mnt/a` and/or `/tmp/a` would exist.
   200  
   201  The `bind-propagation` option defaults to `rprivate` for both bind-mounts and
   202  volume mounts, and is only configurable for bind-mounts. In other words, named
   203  volumes do not support bind propagation.
   204  
   205  - **`shared`**: Sub-mounts of the original mount are exposed to replica mounts,
   206                  and sub-mounts of replica mounts are also propagated to the
   207                  original mount.
   208  - **`slave`**: similar to a shared mount, but only in one direction. If the
   209                 original mount exposes a sub-mount, the replica mount can see it.
   210                 However, if the replica mount exposes a sub-mount, the original
   211                 mount cannot see it.
   212  - **`private`**: The mount is private. Sub-mounts within it are not exposed to
   213                   replica mounts, and sub-mounts of replica mounts are not
   214                   exposed to the original mount.
   215  - **`rshared`**: The same as shared, but the propagation also extends to and from
   216                   mount points nested within any of the original or replica mount
   217                   points.
   218  - **`rslave`**: The same as `slave`, but the propagation also extends to and from
   219                   mount points nested within any of the original or replica mount
   220                   points.
   221  - **`rprivate`**: The default. The same as `private`, meaning that no mount points
   222                    anywhere within the original or replica mount points propagate
   223                    in either direction.
   224  
   225  For more information about bind propagation, see the
   226  [Linux kernel documentation for shared subtree](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesystems/sharedsubtree.txt).
   227  
   228  #### Options for Named Volumes
   229  The following options can only be used for named volumes (`type=volume`);
   230  
   231  | Option                | Description
   232  |:----------------------|:--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   233  | **volume-driver**     | Name of the volume-driver plugin to use for the volume. Defaults to ``"local"``, to use the local volume driver to create the volume if the volume does not exist.
   234  | **volume-label**      | One or more custom metadata ("labels") to apply to the volume upon creation. For example, `volume-label=mylabel=hello-world,my-other-label=hello-mars`. For more information about labels, refer to [apply custom metadata](https://docs.docker.com/engine/userguide/labels-custom-metadata/).
   235  | **volume-nocopy**     | By default, if you attach an empty volume to a container, and files or directories already existed at the mount-path in the container (`dst`), the Engine copies those files and directories into the volume, allowing the host to access them. Set `volume-nocopy` to disables copying files from the container's filesystem to the volume and mount the empty volume.<br /><br />A value is optional:<ul><li>`true` or `1`: Default if you do not provide a value. Disables copying.</li><li>`false` or `0`: Enables copying.</li></ul>
   236  | **volume-opt**        | Options specific to a given volume driver, which will be passed to the driver when creating the volume. Options are provided as a comma-separated list of key/value pairs, for example, `volume-opt=some-option=some-value,some-other-option=some-other-value`. For available options for a given driver, refer to that driver's documentation.
   237  
   238  #### Differences between "--mount" and "--volume"
   239  
   240  The `--mount` flag supports most options that are supported by the `-v`
   241  or `--volume` flag for `docker run`, with some important exceptions:
   242  
   243  - The `--mount` flag allows you to specify a volume driver and volume driver
   244      options *per volume*, without creating the volumes in advance. In contrast,
   245      `docker run` allows you to specify a single volume driver which is shared
   246      by all volumes, using the `--volume-driver` flag.
   247  
   248  - The `--mount` flag allows you to specify custom metadata ("labels") for a volume,
   249      before the volume is created.
   250  
   251  - When you use `--mount` with `type=bind`, the host-path must refer to an *existing*
   252      path on the host. The path will not be created for you and the service will fail
   253      with an error if the path does not exist.
   254  
   255  - The `--mount` flag does not allow you to relabel a volume with `Z` or `z` flags,
   256      which are used for `selinux` labeling.
   257  
   258  #### Create a service using a named volume
   259  
   260  The following example creates a service that uses a named volume:
   261  
   262  ```bash
   263  $ docker service create \
   264    --name my-service \
   265    --replicas 3 \
   266    --mount type=volume,source=my-volume,destination=/path/in/container,volume-label="color=red",volume-label="shape=round" \
   267    nginx:alpine
   268  ```
   269  
   270  For each replica of the service, the engine requests a volume named "my-volume"
   271  from the default ("local") volume driver where the task is deployed. If the
   272  volume does not exist, the engine creates a new volume and applies the "color"
   273  and "shape" labels.
   274  
   275  When the task is started, the volume is mounted on `/path/in/container/` inside
   276  the container.
   277  
   278  Be aware that the default ("local") volume is a locally scoped volume driver.
   279  This means that depending on where a task is deployed, either that task gets a
   280  *new* volume named "my-volume", or shares the same "my-volume" with other tasks
   281  of the same service. Multiple containers writing to a single shared volume can
   282  cause data corruption if the software running inside the container is not
   283  designed to handle concurrent processes writing to the same location. Also take
   284  into account that containers can be re-scheduled by the Swarm orchestrator and
   285  be deployed on a different node.
   286  
   287  #### Create a service that uses an anonymous volume
   288  
   289  The following command creates a service with three replicas with an anonymous
   290  volume on `/path/in/container`:
   291  
   292  ```bash
   293  $ docker service create \
   294    --name my-service \
   295    --replicas 3 \
   296    --mount type=volume,destination=/path/in/container \
   297    nginx:alpine
   298  ```
   299  
   300  In this example, no name (`source`) is specified for the volume, so a new volume
   301  is created for each task. This guarantees that each task gets its own volume,
   302  and volumes are not shared between tasks. Anonymous volumes are removed after
   303  the task using them is complete.
   304  
   305  #### Create a service that uses a bind-mounted host directory
   306  
   307  The following example bind-mounts a host directory at `/path/in/container` in
   308  the containers backing the service:
   309  
   310  ```bash
   311  $ docker service create \
   312    --name my-service \
   313    --mount type=bind,source=/path/on/host,destination=/path/in/container \
   314    nginx:alpine
   315  ```
   316  
   317  ### Set service mode (--mode)
   318  
   319  The service mode determines whether this is a _replicated_ service or a _global_
   320  service. A replicated service runs as many tasks as specified, while a global
   321  service runs on each active node in the swarm.
   322  
   323  The following command creates a global service:
   324  
   325  ```bash
   326  $ docker service create \
   327   --name redis_2 \
   328   --mode global \
   329   redis:3.0.6
   330  ```
   331  
   332  ### Specify service constraints (--constraint)
   333  
   334  You can limit the set of nodes where a task can be scheduled by defining
   335  constraint expressions. Multiple constraints find nodes that satisfy every
   336  expression (AND match). Constraints can match node or Docker Engine labels as
   337  follows:
   338  
   339  | node attribute  | matches                   | example                                         |
   340  |:----------------|:--------------------------|:------------------------------------------------|
   341  | node.id         | node ID                   | `node.id == 2ivku8v2gvtg4`                      |
   342  | node.hostname   | node hostname             | `node.hostname != node-2`                       |
   343  | node.role       | node role: manager        | `node.role == manager`                          |
   344  | node.labels     | user defined node labels  | `node.labels.security == high`                  |
   345  | engine.labels   | Docker Engine's labels    | `engine.labels.operatingsystem == ubuntu 14.04` |
   346  
   347  `engine.labels` apply to Docker Engine labels like operating system,
   348  drivers, etc. Swarm administrators add `node.labels` for operational purposes by
   349  using the [`docker node update`](node_update.md) command.
   350  
   351  For example, the following limits tasks for the redis service to nodes where the
   352  node type label equals queue:
   353  
   354  ```bash
   355  $ docker service create \
   356    --name redis_2 \
   357    --constraint 'node.labels.type == queue' \
   358    redis:3.0.6
   359  ```
   360  
   361  ### Attach a service to an existing network (--network)
   362  
   363  You can use overlay networks to connect one or more services within the swarm.
   364  
   365  First, create an overlay network on a manager node the docker network create
   366  command:
   367  
   368  ```bash
   369  $ docker network create --driver overlay my-network
   370  
   371  etjpu59cykrptrgw0z0hk5snf
   372  ```
   373  
   374  After you create an overlay network in swarm mode, all manager nodes have
   375  access to the network.
   376  
   377  When you create a service and pass the --network flag to attach the service to
   378  the overlay network:
   379  
   380  ```bash
   381  $ docker service create \
   382    --replicas 3 \
   383    --network my-network \
   384    --name my-web \
   385    nginx
   386  
   387  716thylsndqma81j6kkkb5aus
   388  ```
   389  
   390  The swarm extends my-network to each node running the service.
   391  
   392  Containers on the same network can access each other using
   393  [service discovery](https://docs.docker.com/engine/swarm/networking/#use-swarm-mode-service-discovery).
   394  
   395  ### Publish service ports externally to the swarm (-p, --publish)
   396  
   397  You can publish service ports to make them available externally to the swarm
   398  using the `--publish` flag:
   399  
   400  ```bash
   401  $ docker service create --publish <TARGET-PORT>:<SERVICE-PORT> nginx
   402  ```
   403  
   404  For example:
   405  
   406  ```bash
   407  $ docker service create --name my_web --replicas 3 --publish 8080:80 nginx
   408  ```
   409  
   410  When you publish a service port, the swarm routing mesh makes the service
   411  accessible at the target port on every node regardless if there is a task for
   412  the service running on the node. For more information refer to
   413  [Use swarm mode routing mesh](https://docs.docker.com/engine/swarm/ingress/).
   414  
   415  ## Related information
   416  
   417  * [service inspect](service_inspect.md)
   418  * [service ls](service_ls.md)
   419  * [service rm](service_rm.md)
   420  * [service scale](service_scale.md)
   421  * [service ps](service_ps.md)
   422  * [service update](service_update.md)
   423  
   424  <style>table tr > td:first-child { white-space: nowrap;}</style>