Websockets

Estimated reading time: 1 minute

In this example we will publish a service and configure support for websockets.

First we will create an overlay network so that service traffic is isolated and secure:

$> docker network create -d overlay demo
1se1glh749q1i4pw0kf26mfx5

Next we will create the service with websocket endpoints:

$> 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.websocket_endpoints=/ws \
    ehazlett/websocket-chat

Note: for this to work you must have an entry for demo.local in your local hosts (i.e. /etc/hosts) file. This uses the browser for websocket communication so you will need to have an entry or use a routable domain.

Interlock will detect once the service is available and publish it. Once the tasks are running and the proxy service has been updated the application should be available via http://demo.local. Open two instances of your browser and you should see text on both instances as you type.

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