Add a new stack
Last updated
Last updated
There are four ways to deploy a new stack from Portainer:
Option | Overview |
---|---|
Web editor | Use our web editor to define the services for the stack using a docker-compose format. |
Upload | If you have a |
Git Repository | You can use a docker-compose format file hosted in a Git repository. |
Custom template | If you have created a custom stack template, you can deploy using this option. |
From the menu select Stacks, click Add stack, give the stack a descriptive name then select Web editor. Use the web editor to define the services.
As part of the stack creation you can enable a stack webhook, allowing you to remotely trigger redeployments of the stack from your repository, for example. You can read more on this in our documentation on stack webhooks.
As an optional step, you can also use the web editor to define environment variables. You can use these to define values in your compose file that would vary between deployments (for example, hostnames, database names, etc).
Environment variables can be set individually within Portainer or you can use Load variables from .env file to upload a file containing your environment variables. Environment variables you define (either individually or via a .env file) will be available to use in your compose file using an environment
definition:
Alternatively, on Docker Standalone environments you can add stack.env
as an env_file
definition to add all the environment variables that you have defined individually as well as those included in an uploaded .env file:
Note: Using env_file
to define a file does not work in Docker Swarm due to the lack of env_file
support in docker stack deploy
(used on Swarm environments to deploy your stack). On Docker Swarm, you will need to define each environment variable manually.
Note the compose file is not changed when environment variables are used - this allows variables to be updated within Portainer without editing the compose file itself. You will still see the ${MY_ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE}
style entry in the compose file.
When you're ready, click Deploy the stack.
In Portainer you can create stacks from Compose YML files. To do this, from the menu select Stacks, click Add stack, then give the stack a descriptive name.
Select Upload then select the Compose file from your computer.
As part of the stack creation you can enable a stack webhook, allowing you to remotely trigger redeployments of the stack from your repository, for example. You can read more on this in our documentation on stack webhooks.
As an optional step, enter any environment variables. You can use these to define values in your compose file that would vary between deployments (for example, hostnames, database names, etc).
Environment variables can be set individually within Portainer or you can use Load variables from .env file to upload a file containing your environment variables. Environment variables you define (either individually or via a .env file) will be available to use in your compose file using an environment
definition:
Alternatively, you can add stack.env
as an env_file
definition to add all the environment variables that you have defined individually as well as those included in an uploaded .env file:
Note the compose file is not changed when environment variables are used - this allows variables to be updated within Portainer without editing the compose file itself which would take it out of sync with your local copy. You will still see the ${MY_ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE}
style entry in the compose file.
When you're ready click Deploy the stack.
If your Compose file is hosted in a Git repository, you can deploy from there. From the menu select Stacks, click Add stack, then give the stack a descriptive name.
Select Git Repository then enter information about your Git repo.
Any Git-compatible repository should work here. Substitute the details as required.
Field/Option | Overview |
---|---|
Repository URL | Enter the repository URL. |
Repository Reference | Enter the branch. |
Compose Path | This is the path to the Compose file from the root of the repository. Click add file to add additional files to be parsed by the build (for example, an environment-specific compose file). |
Authentication | Toggle this on if your Git repository requires authentication. |
Username | Enter your Git username. |
Personal Access Token | Enter your personal access token or password. |
If you have 2FA configured in GitHub, your passcode is your password.
New in version 2.10 is the ability to automatically update your stack deployed from Git. To enable this, toggle on Automatic updates and configure your settings.
For more detail on how automatic updates function under the hood, have a look at this FAQ entry.
Field/Option | Overview |
Mechanism | Select the method to use when checking for updates: |
Polling: Periodically poll the Git repository from Portainer to check for updates to the repository. Webhook: Generate a webhook URL to add to your Git repository to trigger the update on demand (for example via GitHub actions). | |
Fetch interval | If Polling is selected, how often Portainer will check the Git repository for updates. |
Webhook | When Webhook is selected, displays the webhook URL to use in your integration. Click Copy link to copy the webhook URL to the clipboard. |
Field/Option | Overview |
---|---|
Pull latest image | Enable this setting to always pull the latest version of container images when updating the stack. This is equivalent to the |
Force Redeployment | Enable this setting to force the redeployment of your stack at the specified interval (or when the webhook is triggered), overwriting any changes that have been made in the local environment, even if there has been no update to the stack in Git. This is useful if you want to ensure that your Git repository is the source of truth for your stacks and are happy with the local stack being replaced. If this option is left disabled, automatic updates will only trigger if Portainer detects a change in the remote Git repository. |
As an optional step, you can also set environment variables. You can use these to define values in your compose file that would vary between deployments (for example, hostnames, database names, etc).
Environment variables can be set individually within Portainer or you can use Load variables from .env file to upload a file containing your environment variables. Environment variables you define (either individually or via a .env file) will be available to use in your compose file using an environment
definition:
Alternatively, you can add stack.env
as an env_file
definition to add all the environment variables that you have defined individually as well as those included in an uploaded .env file:
Note the compose file is not changed when environment variables are used - this allows variables to be updated within Portainer without editing the compose file itself which would take it out of sync with the Git repository. You will still see the ${MY_ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE}
style entry in the compose file.
Enter environment variables if required then click Deploy the stack.