I am trying to set up an environment for Laravel, and in that process I want to change my document root into a public folder. I made this work in a Dockerfile, but in reality I much rather want it in a docker-compose.yml file.
I feel that I have implemented the required environment commands from their documentation
My code looks as
docker-compose.yml:
version: '3'
services:
laravel:
image: php:7.1-apache
ports:
- 8080:80
env_file: ./.env
environment:
- "APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT=/var/www/html/public"
- "sed -ri -e 's!/var/www/html!${APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT}!g' /etc/apache2/sites-available/*.conf"
- "sed -ri -e 's!/var/www/!${APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT}!g' /etc/apache2/apache2.conf /etc/apache2/conf-available/*.conf"
volumes:
- ./src/:/var/www/html/
.env
APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT=/var/www/html/public
I first tried without the .env file, but then it gave me an error stating that the APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT variable was not set. Which is why I have the external .env file.
Can anybody lead me in a direction for improving this yml, so I have a different document root for my Apache?
Thank you in advance.
3
Answers
I found a solution for this issue. basically, it worked when I created a Dockerfile with build commands. So the following structure fixed the issue:
docker-compose.yml
Dockerfile
Just remember to run docker-compose build before running the image (if anybody else have the same problem).
You are running the sed command in “Environment section”. Instead, you can use the “command” section to execute your sed command. These commands will run after entrypoint of Docker. So, your updated docker-compose.yaml will look something like as follow:
Please update your docker-compose.yaml file and then let me know if it solves your problem
For testing temporary solutions, you can manually change the apache .conf file.
When your container is running, enter the bash:
Edit the content of the .conf file:
(if vim is not found, run
apt-get update
andapt-get install vim
)Finally reload apache: