![]() So far, the PostgreSQL server is active and running on the 5432 port. To back up the data, we also mounted the /var/lib/postgresql/data directory to the /data directory of the host machine of the postgres container. We exposed the 5432 port on the host using the “-p 5432:5432” in the docker run command. By default, the PostgreSQL database runs on the 5432 port. The above command uses environment variables POSTGRES_USER and POSTGRES_PASSWORD to set the username and password for the PostgreSQL database. Now we'll run the Docker container using the postgres:latest image with the below command: $ docker run -itd -e POSTGRES_USER=baeldung -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=baeldung -p 5432:5432 -v /data:/var/lib/postgresql/data -name postgresql postgresĥaeda2b20a708296d22db4451d0ca57e8d23acbfe337be0dc9b526a33b302cf5 ![]() Status: Downloaded newer image for postgres:14.2 We can also pull a particular version of the postgres image using the below command: $ docker pull postgres:14.2ĭigest: sha256:e3d8179786b8f16d066b313f381484a92efb175d1ce8355dc180fee1d5fa70ec In the above command, we pulled the postgres latest stable image. Status: Downloaded newer image for postgres:latest ![]() To run a PostgreSQL using Docker, we first need to pull the postgres public image available on Docker Hub: $ docker pull postgresĭigest: sha256:ab0be6280ada8549f45e6662ab4f00b7f601886fcd55c5976565d4636d87c8b2 ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |