Hi guys! I have several docker containers running on my home server set up with separated compose files for each of them, including a Pihole one that serves as my home DNS. I created a network for it and a fixed IP but I couldn’t find a way to set fixed IPs to the other containers that use the Pihole network. Well everything works but every now and then I have problems because the Pihole cant start first and grab the fixed IP and some other container gets its IP so nothing works because everything depends on the Pihole to work. My Pihole compose is like this:

`networks: casa:

driver: bridge
ipam:
  config:
    - subnet: "172.10.0.0/20"

networks:

  casa:
    ipv4_address: 172.10.0.2`

My Jellyfin container as an example is like this:

`_networks: - pihole_casa dns: - 172.10.0.2

networks: pihole_casa: external: true__`

I read the documentation about setting fixed IP but all I got was using one single compose file and with 12 containers that seems like a messy solution… I couldn’t set fixed IPs with different compose files. Do you guys have any suggestion about it?

Thanks!

TLDR: I want to set fixed IPs to containers in different compose files so all of them use Pihole as DNS and don´t steal Pihole’s IP in the startup

  • tvcvt@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    1 year ago

    I think what you’re describing can be accomplished with docker-compose’s depends_on option. I’m not certain how it works across compose files, but that would be the first place I’d look.

    • fernandu00@lemmy.mlOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      1 year ago

      Yeah…seems like the depends_on works with multiple services in one single compose file…and putting 10 services in tha same compose file is messy

      • narc0tic_bird@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        1 year ago

        You can split services into multiple YAML files (i.e. docker-compose.database.yml and docker-compose.backend.yml or whatever) and then use docker compose up -d docker-compose.database.yml docker-compose.backend.yml. Compose treats this like it would one file internally (i.e. the services are connected to each other via an internal network by default).