localhost not working docker windows 10

北城余情 提交于 2019-11-29 07:32:54

In order to access the example posted on Docker Docs, that you pointed out as not working, follow the below steps,

1 - List all the running docker containers

docker ps -a

After you run this command you should be able to view all your docker containers that are currently running and you should see a container with the name webserver listed there, if you have followed the docker docs example correctly.

2 - Get the IP address where your webserver container is running. To do that run the following command.

 docker inspect -f "{{ .NetworkSettings.Networks.nat.IPAddress }}" webserver

You should now get the IP address which the webserver container is running, hope you are familiar with this step as it was even available within the building Microsoft sample app example that you attached with the question.

Access the IP address you get once running the above command and you should see the desired output.

Answering to your first question (accessing docker container with localhost in docker for windows), in Windows host you cannot access the container with localhost due to a limitation in the default NAT network stack. A more detailed explanation for this issue can be obtained by visiting this link. Seems like the docker documentation is not yet updated but this issue only exists in Windows hosts.

There is an issue reported for this as well - Follow this link to see that.

Hope this helps you out.

EDIT

The solution for this issue seems to be coming in a future Windows release. Yet that release comes out this limitation is available in Windows host. Follow this link -> https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/Virtualization-Documentation/issues/181

Most likely a different application already runs at port 80. You'll have to forward your web site to a different port, eg:

docker run -d -p 5000:80 --name myapp myasp

And point your browser to http://localhost:5000.

When you start a container you specify which inner ports will be exposed as ports on the host through the -p option. -p 80:80 exposes the inner port 80 used by web sites to the host's port 80.

Docker won't complain though if another application already listens at port 80, like IIS, another web application or any tool with a web interface that runs on 80 by default.

The solution is to:

  1. Make sure nothing else runs on port 80 or
  2. Forward to a different port.

Forwarding to a different port is a lot easier.

To ensure that you can connect to a port, use the telnet command, eg :

telnet localhost 5000

If you get a blank window immediatelly, it means a server is up and running on this port. If you get a message and timeout after a while, it means nobody is running. You anc use this both to check for free ports and ensure you can connect to your container web app.

PS I run into this just a week ago, as I was trying to set up a SQL Server container for tests. I run 1 default and 2 named instances already, and docker didn't complain at all when I tried to create the container. Took me a while to realize what was wrong.

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