Quickstart with Docker¶
Table of contents
Introduction¶
This guide will help you get the Hasura GraphQL engine and Postgres running as Docker containers using Docker Compose. This is the easiest way to set up Hasura GraphQL engine on your local environment.
In case you’d like to run Hasura on an existing Postgres database, follow this guide to deploy the Hasura GraphQL engine as a standalone docker container and connect it to your Postgres instance.
Prerequisites¶
Step 1: Get the docker-compose file¶
The hasura/graphql-engine/install-manifests repo contains all installation manifests required to deploy Hasura anywhere. Get the docker compose file from there:
# in a new directory run
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/hasura/graphql-engine/stable/install-manifests/docker-compose/docker-compose.yaml
# or run
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/hasura/graphql-engine/stable/install-manifests/docker-compose/docker-compose.yaml -o docker-compose.yml
Step 2: Run Hasura GraphQL engine & Postgres¶
$ docker-compose up -d
Check if the containers are running:
$ docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE ... CREATED STATUS PORTS ...
097f58433a2b hasura/graphql-engine ... 1m ago Up 1m 8080->8080/tcp ...
b0b1aac0508d postgres ... 1m ago Up 1m 5432/tcp ...
Step 3: Open the Hasura console¶
Head to http://localhost:8080/console
to open the Hasura console.
Step 4: Try Hasura out¶
Make your first graphql query or set up your first event trigger
You can also check out our 30-Minute Hasura Basics Course and other GraphQL & Hasura Courses for a more detailed introduction to Hasura.
Advanced¶
This was a quickstart guide to get the Hasura GraphQL engine up and running quickly. For more detailed instructions on deploying using Docker with an external database, check out Run Hasura GraphQL engine using Docker.