up
Usage: up [options] [SERVICE...] Options: -d Detached mode: Run containers in the background, print new container names. Incompatible with --abort-on-container-exit. --no-color Produce monochrome output. --no-deps Don't start linked services. --force-recreate Recreate containers even if their configuration and image haven't changed. Incompatible with --no-recreate. --no-recreate If containers already exist, don't recreate them. Incompatible with --force-recreate. --no-build Don't build an image, even if it's missing. --build Build images before starting containers. --abort-on-container-exit Stops all containers if any container was stopped. Incompatible with -d. -t, --timeout TIMEOUT Use this timeout in seconds for container shutdown when attached or when containers are already running. (default: 10) --remove-orphans Remove containers for services not defined in the Compose file
Builds, (re)creates, starts, and attaches to containers for a service.
Unless they are already running, this command also starts any linked services.
The docker-compose up
command aggregates the output of each container. When the command exits, all containers are stopped. Running docker-compose up -d
starts the containers in the background and leaves them running.
If there are existing containers for a service, and the service’s configuration or image was changed after the container’s creation, docker-compose up
picks up the changes by stopping and recreating the containers (preserving mounted volumes). To prevent Compose from picking up changes, use the --no-recreate
flag.
If you want to force Compose to stop and recreate all containers, use the --force-recreate
flag.
Please login to continue.