Use context or path-based routing

This topic describes how to publish a service using context or path-based routing.


  1. Create an overlay network to isolate and secure service traffic:

    docker network create -d overlay demo
    

    Example output:

    1se1glh749q1i4pw0kf26mfx5
    
  2. Create the initial service:

    docker service create \
    --name demo \
    --network demo \
    --detach=false \
    --label com.docker.lb.hosts=demo.local \
    --label com.docker.lb.port=8080 \
    --label com.docker.lb.context_root=/app \
    --label com.docker.lb.context_root_rewrite=true \
    --env METADATA="demo-context-root" \
    mirantiseng/docker-demo
    

    Interlock detects when the service is available and publishes it.

    Note

    Interlock only supports one path per host for each service cluster. When a specific com.docker.lb.hosts label is applied, it cannot be applied again in the same service cluster.

  3. After the tasks are running and the proxy service is updated, the application is available at http://demo.local:

    curl -vs -H "Host: demo.local" http://127.0.0.1/app/
    

    Example output:

    *   Trying 127.0.0.1...
    * TCP_NODELAY set
    * Connected to 127.0.0.1 (127.0.0.1) port 80 (#0)
    > GET /app/ HTTP/1.1
    > Host: demo.local
    > User-Agent: curl/7.54.0
    > Accept: */*
    >
    < HTTP/1.1 200 OK
    < Server: nginx/1.13.6
    < Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2017 14:25:17 GMT
    < Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
    < Transfer-Encoding: chunked
    < Connection: keep-alive
    < x-request-id: 077d18b67831519defca158e6f009f82
    < x-proxy-id: 77c0c37d2c46
    < x-server-info: interlock/2.0.0-dev (732c77e7) linux/amd64
    < x-upstream-addr: 10.0.1.3:8080
    < x-upstream-response-time: 1510928717.306