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Building Docker Images and Deploying Applications

Building Docker Images and Deploying Applications
Hostman Team
Technical writer
Docker
18.06.2025
Reading time: 7 min

Containerizing applications offers a convenient and flexible way to quickly deploy software, including web servers, databases, monitoring systems, and others. Containers are also widely used in microservices architectures. Docker is ideal for these purposes, as it greatly simplifies working with containerized apps. Introduced in 2013, Docker has seen continuous support and usage ever since.

In this tutorial, you’ll learn how to create Docker images for three different applications written in different programming languages and how to run Docker containers from these images.

Prerequisites

To work with the Docker platform, you’ll need:

  • A VPS or virtual machine with any Linux distribution preinstalled. In this tutorial, we use Ubuntu 22.04.
  • Docker installed. You can find the Docker installation guide for Ubuntu 22.04 in our tutorials. Alternatively, you can use a prebuilt cloud server image with Docker — just select it in the “Marketplace” tab when creating a server.

What Is a Docker Image?

At the core of Docker’s concept is the image. A Docker image is a template—an executable file—you can use to start a Docker container. It contains everything needed to launch a ready-to-run application: source code, configuration files, third-party software, utilities, and libraries.

Docker image architecture is layer-based. Each layer represents an action performed during the image build process, such as creating files and directories or installing software. Docker uses the OverlayFS file system, which merges multiple mount points into one, resulting in a unified directory structure.

You can move Docker images between systems and use them in multiple locations, much like .exe executables in Windows systems.

Creating Custom Docker Images

Let’s walk through how to create Docker images for Flask, Node.js, and Go applications.

Creating a Docker Image for a Flask Application

To create images, a Dockerfile is used. Dockerfile is a plain text file without an extension that defines the steps to build a container image. You can find more details about Dockerfile instructions in the official documentation.

We’ll create a Docker image with a web application built with Flask and run the container. The application will show a basic HTML page that displays the current date.

1. Install Required Packages

Install the pip package manager and python3-venv for managing virtual environments:

apt -y install python3-pip python3-venv

2. Create the Project Directory

mkdir dockerfile-flask && cd dockerfile-flask

3. Create and Activate a Virtual Environment

python -m venv env
source env/bin/activate

After activation, you'll see (env) in your prompt, indicating the virtual environment is active. Packages installed via pip will now only affect this environment.

4. Install Flask and Dependencies

pip install flask
pip install MarkupSafe==2.1.5

5. Create the Flask Application

Create a file named app.py that will store the source code of our application:

from flask import Flask
import datetime

app = Flask(__name__)

@app.route('/')
def display_current_date():
    current_date = datetime.datetime.now().date()
    return f"Current date is: {current_date}"

if __name__ == '__main__':
    app.run(debug=True)

6. Run and Test the Application

flask run --host=0.0.0.0 --port=80

In your browser, visit your server’s IP address (port 80 doesn’t need to be specified as it’s the default one). You should see today’s date.

7. Freeze Dependencies

Now, we need to save all the dependencies (just the flask package in our case) to a requirements.txt file, which stores all packages used in the project and installed via pip.

pip freeze > requirements.txt

Your project structure should now look like this:

dockerfile-flask/
├── app.py
├── env/
├── requirements.txt

Now we can proceed to creating a Docker image.

8. Create the Dockerfile

Create a file named Dockerfile with the following contents:

FROM python:3.8-slim-buster
WORKDIR /app
COPY requirements.txt requirements.txt
RUN pip3 install -r requirements.txt
COPY . .
CMD [ "python3", "-m", "flask", "run", "--host=0.0.0.0", "--port=80" ]

Explanation:

  • FROM python:3.8-slim-buster: Use Python 3.8 base image on a lightweight Debian Buster base.
  • WORKDIR /app: Set the working directory inside the container (similar to the mkdir command in Linux systems)
  • COPY requirements.txt requirements.txt: Copy the dependency list into the image.
  • RUN pip3 install -r requirements.txt: The RUN directive runs the commands in the image. In this case, it’s used to install dependencies.
  • COPY . .: Copy all project files into the container.
  • CMD [...]: CMD defines the commands and app parameters to be used when the container starts.

9. Use a .dockerignore File

Create a .dockerignore file to exclude unnecessary directories. It helps to decrease the image size.

In our case, we have two directories that we don’t need to launch the app. Add them to the .dockerignore file:

env
__pycache__

10. Build the Docker Image

When building the image, we need to use a tag that would work as an identifier for the image. We’ll use the flask-app:01 tag.

docker build -t flask-app:01 .

The dot at the end means the Dockerfile is located in the same directory where we run the command.

Check the created image:

docker images

11. Run the Docker Container

docker run -d -p 80:80 flask-app:01
  • -d: Run the container in the background.

  • -p: Forward host port 80 to container port 80.

Check running containers:

docker ps

The STATUS column should show “Up”. 

Open your browser and navigate to your server's IP address to view the app.

Creating a Docker Image for a Node.js Application

Our simple Node.js app will display the message: “This app was created using Node.js!”

Make sure you have Node.js installed on your system.

1. Create the Project Directory

mkdir dockerfile-nodejs && cd dockerfile-nodejs

2. Initialize the Project

npm init --yes

3. Install Express

npm install express --save

4. Create the Application File

Create app.js with the following code:

const express = require("express");
const app = express();

app.get("/", function(req, res) {
    return res.send("This app was created using Node.js!");
});

app.listen(3000, '0.0.0.0', function(){
    console.log('Listening on port 3000');
});

5. Test the Application

node app.js

Open http://<your-server-ip>:3000 in a browser to verify it works.

6. Create the Dockerfile

FROM node:20
WORKDIR /app
COPY package.json /app
RUN npm install
COPY . /app
CMD ["node", "app.js"]

7. Add .dockerignore

Create .dockerignore and the following line:

**/node_modules/

8. Build the Image

docker build -t nodejs-app:01 .

9. Start the Container from Image

docker run -d -p 80:3000 nodejs-app:01

Visit http://<your-server-ip> in your browser. The app should be running.

Creating a Docker Image for a Go Application

This Go application will display: “Hello from GO!”

Make sure you have Go installed in your system.

1. Create the Project Directory

mkdir dockerfile-go && cd dockerfile-go

2. Initialize the Go Module

go mod init go-test-app

3. Create the Application File

Create main.go with this code of our application:

package main

import "fmt"

func main() {
    fmt.Println("Hello from GO!")
}

Verify it works:

go run .

4. Create the Dockerfile

FROM golang:1.23-alpine
WORKDIR /app
COPY go.mod ./
RUN go mod download
COPY *.go ./
RUN go build -o /go-test
CMD [ "/go-test" ]
  • COPY go.mod ./: Adds dependencies file.
  • RUN go mod download: Installs dependencies.
  • COPY *.go ./: Adds source code.
  • RUN go build -o /go-test: Compiles the binary.

5. Build the Image

docker build -t go:01 .

6. Run the Container

docker run go:01

You should see the output: Hello from GO!

Conclusion

In this guide, we walked through building custom Docker images for three applications written in different programming languages. Docker allows you to package any application and deploy it with ease.

Docker
18.06.2025
Reading time: 7 min

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