Note: There are tags for each build date. If you need to "pin" the Docker image version you use, you can select one of those tags. E.g. ghcr.io/shiphero/uvicorn-gunicorn-fastapi:python3.8.16-slim-2024-05-29
.
Docker image with Uvicorn managed by Gunicorn for high-performance FastAPI web applications in Python with performance auto-tuning.
GitHub repo: https://github.com/shiphero/uvicorn-gunicorn-fastapi-docker
Docker image: https://github.com/Shiphero/uvicorn-gunicorn-fastapi/pkgs/container/uvicorn-gunicorn-fastapi
FastAPI has shown to be a Python web framework with one of the best performances, as measured by third-party benchmarks, thanks to being based on and powered by Starlette.
The achievable performance is on par with (and in many cases superior to) Go and Node.js frameworks.
This image has an auto-tuning mechanism included to start a number of worker processes based on the available CPU cores. That way you can just add your code and get high performance automatically, which is useful in simple deployments.
You are probably using Kubernetes or similar tools. In that case, you probably don't need this image (or any other similar base image). You are probably better off building a Docker image from scratch as explained in the docs for FastAPI in Containers - Docker: Build a Docker Image for FastAPI.
If you have a cluster of machines with Kubernetes, Docker Swarm Mode, Nomad, or other similar complex system to manage distributed containers on multiple machines, then you will probably want to handle replication at the cluster level instead of using a process manager (like Gunicorn with Uvicorn workers) in each container, which is what this Docker image does.
In those cases (e.g. using Kubernetes) you would probably want to build a Docker image from scratch, installing your dependencies, and running a single Uvicorn process instead of this image.
For example, your Dockerfile
could look like:
FROM python:3.9
WORKDIR /code
COPY ./requirements.txt /code/requirements.txt
RUN pip install --no-cache-dir --upgrade -r /code/requirements.txt
COPY ./app /code/app
CMD ["uvicorn", "app.main:app", "--host", "0.0.0.0", "--port", "80"]
You can read more about this in the FastAPI documentation about: FastAPI in Containers - Docker.
You could want a process manager like Gunicorn running Uvicorn workers in the container if your application is simple enough that you don't need (at least not yet) to fine-tune the number of processes too much, and you can just use an automated default, and you are running it on a single server, not a cluster.
You could be deploying to a single server (not a cluster) with Docker Compose, so you wouldn't have an easy way to manage replication of containers (with Docker Compose) while preserving the shared network and load balancing.
Then you could want to have a single container with a Gunicorn process manager starting several Uvicorn worker processes inside, as this Docker image does.
You could also have other reasons that would make it easier to have a single container with multiple processes instead of having multiple containers with a single process in each of them.
For example (depending on your setup) you could have some tool like a Prometheus exporter in the same container that should have access to each of the requests that come.
In this case, if you had multiple containers, by default, when Prometheus came to read the metrics, it would get the ones for a single container each time (for the container that handled that particular request), instead of getting the accumulated metrics for all the replicated containers.
Then, in that case, it could be simpler to have one container with multiple processes, and a local tool (e.g. a Prometheus exporter) on the same container collecting Prometheus metrics for all the internal processes and exposing those metrics on that single container.
Read more about it all in the FastAPI documentation about: FastAPI in Containers - Docker.
Uvicorn is a lightning-fast "ASGI" server.
It runs asynchronous Python web code in a single process.
You can use Gunicorn to start and manage multiple Uvicorn worker processes.
That way, you get the best of concurrency and parallelism in simple deployments.
FastAPI is a modern, fast (high-performance), web framework for building APIs with Python.
The key features are:
- Fast: Very high performance, on par with NodeJS and Go (thanks to Starlette and Pydantic).
- Fast to code: Increase the speed to develop features by about 200% to 300% *.
- Less bugs: Reduce about 40% of human (developer) induced errors. *
- Intuitive: Great editor support. Completion everywhere. Less time debugging.
- Easy: Designed to be easy to use and learn. Less time reading docs.
- Short: Minimize code duplication. Multiple features from each parameter declaration. Less bugs.
- Robust: Get production-ready code. With automatic interactive documentation.
- Standards-based: Based on (and fully compatible with) the open standards for APIs: OpenAPI (previously known as Swagger) and JSON Schema.
* estimation based on tests on an internal development team, building production applications.
This image will set a sensible configuration based on the server it is running on (the amount of CPU cores available) without making sacrifices.
It has sensible defaults, but you can configure it with environment variables or override the configuration files.
There are also slim versions. If you want one of those, use one of the tags from above.
This image (tiangolo/uvicorn-gunicorn-fastapi
) is based on tiangolo/uvicorn-gunicorn.
That image is what actually does all the work.
This image just installs FastAPI and has the documentation specifically targeted at FastAPI.
If you feel confident about your knowledge of Uvicorn, Gunicorn and ASGI, you can use that image directly.
There is a sibling Docker image: tiangolo/uvicorn-gunicorn-starlette
If you are creating a new Starlette web application and you want to discard all the additional features from FastAPI you should use tiangolo/uvicorn-gunicorn-starlette instead.
Note: FastAPI is based on Starlette and adds several features on top of it. Useful for APIs and other cases: data validation, data conversion, documentation with OpenAPI, dependency injection, security/authentication and others.
You don't need to clone the GitHub repo.
You can use this image as a base image for other images.
Assuming you have a file requirements.txt
, you could have a Dockerfile
like this:
FROM tiangolo/uvicorn-gunicorn-fastapi:python3.11
COPY ./requirements.txt /app/requirements.txt
RUN pip install --no-cache-dir --upgrade -r /app/requirements.txt
COPY ./app /app
It will expect a file at /app/app/main.py
.
Or otherwise a file at /app/main.py
.
And will expect it to contain a variable app
with your FastAPI application.
Then you can build your image from the directory that has your Dockerfile
, e.g:
docker build -t myimage ./
- Go to your project directory.
- Create a
Dockerfile
with:
FROM tiangolo/uvicorn-gunicorn-fastapi:python3.11
COPY ./requirements.txt /app/requirements.txt
RUN pip install --no-cache-dir --upgrade -r /app/requirements.txt
COPY ./app /app
- Create an
app
directory and enter in it. - Create a
main.py
file with:
from fastapi import FastAPI
app = FastAPI()
@app.get("/")
def read_root():
return {"Hello": "World"}
@app.get("/items/{item_id}")
def read_item(item_id: int, q: str = None):
return {"item_id": item_id, "q": q}
- You should now have a directory structure like:
.
βββ app
β βββ main.py
βββ Dockerfile
- Go to the project directory (in where your
Dockerfile
is, containing yourapp
directory). - Build your FastAPI image:
docker build -t myimage .
- Run a container based on your image:
docker run -d --name mycontainer -p 80:80 myimage
Now you have an optimized FastAPI server in a Docker container. Auto-tuned for your current server (and number of CPU cores).
You should be able to check it in your Docker container's URL, for example: http://192.168.99.100/items/5?q=somequery or http://127.0.0.1/items/5?q=somequery (or equivalent, using your Docker host).
You will see something like:
{"item_id": 5, "q": "somequery"}
Now you can go to http://192.168.99.100/docs or http://127.0.0.1/docs (or equivalent, using your Docker host).
You will see the automatic interactive API documentation (provided by Swagger UI):
And you can also go to http://192.168.99.100/redoc or http://127.0.0.1/redoc(or equivalent, using your Docker host).
You will see the alternative automatic documentation (provided by ReDoc):
You will probably also want to add any dependencies for your app and pin them to a specific version, probably including Uvicorn, Gunicorn, and FastAPI.
This way you can make sure your app always works as expected.
You could install packages with pip
commands in your Dockerfile
, using a requirements.txt
, or even using Poetry.
And then you can upgrade those dependencies in a controlled way, running your tests, making sure that everything works, but without breaking your production application if some new version is not compatible.
Here's a small example of one of the ways you could install your dependencies making sure you have a pinned version for each package.
Let's say you have a project managed with Poetry, so, you have your package dependencies in a file pyproject.toml
. And possibly a file poetry.lock
.
Then you could have a Dockerfile
using Docker multi-stage building with:
FROM python:3.9 as requirements-stage
WORKDIR /tmp
RUN pip install poetry
COPY ./pyproject.toml ./poetry.lock* /tmp/
RUN poetry export -f requirements.txt --output requirements.txt --without-hashes
FROM tiangolo/uvicorn-gunicorn-fastapi:python3.11
COPY --from=requirements-stage /tmp/requirements.txt /app/requirements.txt
RUN pip install --no-cache-dir --upgrade -r /app/requirements.txt
COPY ./app /app
That will:
- Install poetry and configure it for running inside of the Docker container.
- Copy your application requirements.
- Because it uses
./poetry.lock*
(ending with a*
), it won't crash if that file is not available yet.
- Because it uses
- Install the dependencies.
- Then copy your app code.
It's important to copy the app code after installing the dependencies, that way you can take advantage of Docker's cache. That way it won't have to install everything from scratch every time you update your application files, only when you add new dependencies.
This also applies for any other way you use to install your dependencies. If you use a requirements.txt
, copy it alone and install all the dependencies on the top of the Dockerfile
, and add your app code after it.
These are the environment variables that you can set in the container to configure it and their default values:
The Python "module" (file) to be imported by Gunicorn, this module would contain the actual application in a variable.
By default:
app.main
if there's a file/app/app/main.py
ormain
if there's a file/app/main.py
For example, if your main file was at /app/custom_app/custom_main.py
, you could set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:80 -e MODULE_NAME="custom_app.custom_main" myimage
The variable inside of the Python module that contains the FastAPI application.
By default:
app
For example, if your main Python file has something like:
from fastapi import FastAPI
api = FastAPI()
@api.get("/")
def read_root():
return {"Hello": "World"}
In this case api
would be the variable with the FastAPI application. You could set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:80 -e VARIABLE_NAME="api" myimage
The string with the Python module and the variable name passed to Gunicorn.
By default, set based on the variables MODULE_NAME
and VARIABLE_NAME
:
app.main:app
ormain:app
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:80 -e APP_MODULE="custom_app.custom_main:api" myimage
The path to a Gunicorn Python configuration file.
By default:
/app/gunicorn_conf.py
if it exists/app/app/gunicorn_conf.py
if it exists/gunicorn_conf.py
(the included default)
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:80 -e GUNICORN_CONF="/app/custom_gunicorn_conf.py" myimage
You can use the config file from the base image as a starting point for yours.
This image will check how many CPU cores are available in the current server running your container.
It will set the number of workers to the number of CPU cores multiplied by this value.
By default:
1
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:80 -e WORKERS_PER_CORE="3" myimage
If you used the value 3
in a server with 2 CPU cores, it would run 6 worker processes.
You can use floating point values too.
So, for example, if you have a big server (let's say, with 8 CPU cores) running several applications, and you have a FastAPI application that you know won't need high performance. And you don't want to waste server resources. You could make it use 0.5
workers per CPU core. For example:
docker run -d -p 80:80 -e WORKERS_PER_CORE="0.5" myimage
In a server with 8 CPU cores, this would make it start only 4 worker processes.
Note: By default, if WORKERS_PER_CORE
is 1
and the server has only 1 CPU core, instead of starting 1 single worker, it will start 2. This is to avoid bad performance and blocking applications (server application) on small machines (server machine/cloud/etc). This can be overridden using WEB_CONCURRENCY
.
Set the maximum number of workers to use.
You can use it to let the image compute the number of workers automatically but making sure it's limited to a maximum.
This can be useful, for example, if each worker uses a database connection and your database has a maximum limit of open connections.
By default it's not set, meaning that it's unlimited.
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:80 -e MAX_WORKERS="24" myimage
This would make the image start at most 24 workers, independent of how many CPU cores are available in the server.
Override the automatic definition of number of workers.
By default:
- Set to the number of CPU cores in the current server multiplied by the environment variable
WORKERS_PER_CORE
. So, in a server with 2 cores, by default it will be set to2
.
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:80 -e WEB_CONCURRENCY="2" myimage
This would make the image start 2 worker processes, independent of how many CPU cores are available in the server.
The "host" used by Gunicorn, the IP where Gunicorn will listen for requests.
It is the host inside of the container.
So, for example, if you set this variable to 127.0.0.1
, it will only be available inside the container, not in the host running it.
It's is provided for completeness, but you probably shouldn't change it.
By default:
0.0.0.0
The port the container should listen on.
If you are running your container in a restrictive environment that forces you to use some specific port (like 8080
) you can set it with this variable.
By default:
80
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:8080 -e PORT="8080" myimage
The actual host and port passed to Gunicorn.
By default, set based on the variables HOST
and PORT
.
So, if you didn't change anything, it will be set by default to:
0.0.0.0:80
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:8080 -e BIND="0.0.0.0:8080" myimage
The log level for Gunicorn.
One of:
debug
info
warning
error
critical
By default, set to info
.
If you need to squeeze more performance sacrificing logging, set it to warning
, for example:
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:8080 -e LOG_LEVEL="warning" myimage
The class to be used by Gunicorn for the workers.
By default, set to uvicorn.workers.UvicornWorker
.
The fact that it uses Uvicorn is what allows using ASGI frameworks like FastAPI, and that is also what provides the maximum performance.
You probably shouldn't change it.
But if for some reason you need to use the alternative Uvicorn worker: uvicorn.workers.UvicornH11Worker
you can set it with this environment variable.
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:8080 -e WORKER_CLASS="uvicorn.workers.UvicornH11Worker" myimage
Workers silent for more than this many seconds are killed and restarted.
Read more about it in the Gunicorn docs: timeout.
By default, set to 120
.
Notice that Uvicorn and ASGI frameworks like FastAPI are async, not sync. So it's probably safe to have higher timeouts than for sync workers.
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:8080 -e TIMEOUT="20" myimage
The number of seconds to wait for requests on a Keep-Alive connection.
Read more about it in the Gunicorn docs: keepalive.
By default, set to 2
.
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:8080 -e KEEP_ALIVE="20" myimage
Timeout for graceful workers restart.
Read more about it in the Gunicorn docs: graceful-timeout.
By default, set to 120
.
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:8080 -e GRACEFUL_TIMEOUT="20" myimage
The access log file to write to.
By default "-"
, which means stdout (print in the Docker logs).
If you want to disable ACCESS_LOG
, set it to an empty value.
For example, you could disable it with:
docker run -d -p 80:8080 -e ACCESS_LOG= myimage
The error log file to write to.
By default "-"
, which means stderr (print in the Docker logs).
If you want to disable ERROR_LOG
, set it to an empty value.
For example, you could disable it with:
docker run -d -p 80:8080 -e ERROR_LOG= myimage
Any additional command line settings for Gunicorn can be passed in the GUNICORN_CMD_ARGS
environment variable.
Read more about it in the Gunicorn docs: Settings.
These settings will have precedence over the other environment variables and any Gunicorn config file.
For example, if you have a custom TLS/SSL certificate that you want to use, you could copy them to the Docker image or mount them in the container, and set --keyfile
and --certfile
to the location of the files, for example:
docker run -d -p 80:8080 -e GUNICORN_CMD_ARGS="--keyfile=/secrets/key.pem --certfile=/secrets/cert.pem" -e PORT=443 myimage
Note: instead of handling TLS/SSL yourself and configuring it in the container, it's recommended to use a "TLS Termination Proxy" like Traefik. You can read more about it in the FastAPI documentation about HTTPS.
The path where to find the pre-start script.
By default, set to /app/prestart.sh
.
You can set it like:
docker run -d -p 80:8080 -e PRE_START_PATH="/custom/script.sh" myimage
The image includes a default Gunicorn Python config file at /gunicorn_conf.py
.
It uses the environment variables declared above to set all the configurations.
You can override it by including a file in:
/app/gunicorn_conf.py
/app/app/gunicorn_conf.py
/gunicorn_conf.py
If you need to run anything before starting the app, you can add a file prestart.sh
to the directory /app
. The image will automatically detect and run it before starting everything.
For example, if you want to add Alembic SQL migrations (with SQLALchemy), you could create a ./app/prestart.sh
file in your code directory (that will be copied by your Dockerfile
) with:
#! /usr/bin/env bash
# Let the DB start
sleep 10;
# Run migrations
alembic upgrade head
and it would wait 10 seconds to give the database some time to start and then run that alembic
command.
If you need to run a Python script before starting the app, you could make the /app/prestart.sh
file run your Python script, with something like:
#! /usr/bin/env bash
# Run custom Python script before starting
python /app/my_custom_prestart_script.py
You can customize the location of the prestart script with the environment variable PRE_START_PATH
described above.
The default program that is run is at /start.sh
. It does everything described above.
There's also a version for development with live auto-reload at:
/start-reload.sh
For development, it's useful to be able to mount the contents of the application code inside of the container as a Docker "host volume", to be able to change the code and test it live, without having to build the image every time.
In that case, it's also useful to run the server with live auto-reload, so that it re-starts automatically at every code change.
The additional script /start-reload.sh
runs Uvicorn alone (without Gunicorn) and in a single process.
It is ideal for development.
For example, instead of running:
docker run -d -p 80:80 myimage
You could run:
docker run -d -p 80:80 -v $(pwd):/app myimage /start-reload.sh
-v $(pwd):/app
: means that the directory$(pwd)
should be mounted as a volume inside of the container at/app
.$(pwd)
: runspwd
("print working directory") and puts it as part of the string.
/start-reload.sh
: adding something (like/start-reload.sh
) at the end of the command, replaces the default "command" with this one. In this case, it replaces the default (/start.sh
) with the development alternative/start-reload.sh
.
As /start-reload.sh
doesn't run with Gunicorn, any of the configurations you put in a gunicorn_conf.py
file won't apply.
But these environment variables will work the same as described above:
MODULE_NAME
VARIABLE_NAME
APP_MODULE
HOST
PORT
LOG_LEVEL
In short: You probably shouldn't use Alpine for Python projects, instead use the slim
Docker image versions.
Do you want more details? Continue reading π
Alpine is more useful for other languages where you build a static binary in one Docker image stage (using multi-stage Docker building) and then copy it to a simple Alpine image, and then just execute that binary. For example, using Go.
But for Python, as Alpine doesn't use the standard tooling used for building Python extensions, when installing packages, in many cases Python (pip
) won't find a precompiled installable package (a "wheel") for Alpine. And after debugging lots of strange errors you will realize that you have to install a lot of extra tooling and build a lot of dependencies just to use some of these common Python packages. π©
This means that, although the original Alpine image might have been small, you end up with a an image with a size comparable to the size you would have gotten if you had just used a standard Python image (based on Debian), or in some cases even larger. π€―
And in all those cases, it will take much longer to build, consuming much more resources, building dependencies for longer, and also increasing its carbon footprint, as you are using more CPU time and energy for each build. π³
If you want slim Python images, you should instead try and use the slim
versions that are still based on Debian, but are smaller. π€
All the image tags, configurations, environment variables and application options are tested.
- β¬ Bump gunicorn from 21.2.0 to 22.0.0. PR #287 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬ Bump docker/login-action from 1 to 3. PR #280 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬ Bump docker/setup-buildx-action from 1 to 3. PR #279 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬ Bump docker/build-push-action from 2 to 5. PR #278 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬ Bump actions/setup-python from 4 to 5. PR #277 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬ Update black requirement from ^22.10 to ^23.3. PR #268 by @dependabot[bot].
- π§ Add GitHub templates for discussions and templates. PR #281 by @tiangolo.
- π§ Update
latest-changes.yml
. PR #276 by @alejsdev.
- β¨ Add support for multi-arch builds, including support for arm64 (e.g. Mac M1). PR #273 by @tiangolo.
- π Update test badge in
README.md
. PR #275 by @alejsdev. - π Update test badge in
README.md
. PR #274 by @alejsdev.
- β¬ Bump gunicorn from 20.1.0 to 21.2.0. PR #270 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬οΈ Bump fastapi[all] from 0.87.0 to 0.88.0. PR #222 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬ Update mypy requirement from ^0.991 to ^1.4. PR #269 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬ Bump actions/checkout from 3 to 4. PR #266 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬ Bump peter-evans/dockerhub-description from 3 to 4. PR #267 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬ Bump actions/setup-python from 4.3.0 to 5.0.0. PR #265 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬ Bump tiangolo/issue-manager from 0.4.0 to 0.5.0. PR #264 by @dependabot[bot].
- π· Update dependabot. PR #253 by @tiangolo.
- π· Update token for latest changes. PR #247 by @tiangolo.
- π· Add GitHub Action for Docker Hub description. PR #221 by @tiangolo.
- β¬οΈ Update mypy requirement from ^0.971 to ^0.991. PR #214 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬οΈ Update autoflake requirement from ^1.3.1 to ^2.0.0. PR #215 by @dependabot[bot].
Highlights of this release:
- Support for Python 3.10 and 3.11.
- Deprecation of Python 3.6.
- The last Python 3.6 image tag was pushed and is available in Docker Hub, but it won't be updated or maintained anymore.
- The last image with a date tag is
python3.6-2022-11-25
.
- Upgraded versions of all the dependencies.
- β¨ Add support for Python 3.10 and 3.11. PR #220 by @tiangolo.
- β¨ Add Python 3.9 and Python 3.9 Alpine. PR #67 by @graue70.
- β¬οΈ Upgrade FastAPI and Uvicorn versions. PR #212 by @tiangolo.
- β¬οΈ Upgrade packages to the last version that supports Python 3.6. PR #207 by @tiangolo.
- π Add note to discourage Alpine with Python. PR #122 by @tiangolo.
- π Add warning for Kubernetes, when to use this image. PR #121 by @tiangolo.
- β Fix typo, repeated word on README. PR #96 by @shelbylsmith.
- β¬οΈ Update black requirement from ^20.8b1 to ^22.10. PR #216 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬οΈ Update docker requirement from ^5.0.3 to ^6.0.1. PR #217 by @dependabot[bot].
- π₯ Remove old Travis file. PR #219 by @tiangolo.
- β¬οΈ Upgrade CI OS. PR #218 by @tiangolo.
- π§ Update Dependabot config. PR #213 by @tiangolo.
- π· Add scheduled CI. PR #210 by @tiangolo.
- π· Add alls-green GitHub Action. PR #209 by @tiangolo.
- π· Do not run double CI, run on push only on master. PR #208 by @tiangolo.
- β¬οΈ Bump actions/setup-python from 4.1.0 to 4.3.0. PR #201 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬οΈ Update black requirement from ^19.10b0 to ^20.8b1. PR #113 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬οΈ Update docker requirement from ^4.2.0 to ^5.0.3. PR #125 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬οΈ Bump actions/checkout from 2 to 3.1.0. PR #194 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬οΈ Update mypy requirement from ^0.770 to ^0.971. PR #184 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬οΈ Update isort requirement from ^4.3.21 to ^5.8.0. PR #116 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬οΈ Bump tiangolo/issue-manager from 0.2.0 to 0.4.0. PR #110 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬οΈ Bump actions/setup-python from 1 to 4.1.0. PR #182 by @dependabot[bot].
- β¬οΈ Update pytest requirement from ^5.4.1 to ^7.0.1. PR #153 by @dependabot[bot].
- π Add external dependencies and Dependabot to get automatic upgrade PRs. PR #109 by @tiangolo.
- π· Update Latest Changes. PR #108 by @tiangolo.
- π· Allow GitHub workflow dispatch to trigger test and deploy. PR #93 by @tiangolo.
- π· Add latest-changes GitHub action, update issue-manager, add funding. PR #70 by @tiangolo.
- Add docs about installing and pinning dependencies. PR #41.
- Add
slim
version. PR #40. - Update and refactor bringing all the new features from the base image. Includes:
- Centralize, simplify, and deduplicate code and setup
- Move CI to GitHub actions
- Add Python 3.8 (and Alpine)
- Add new configs and docs:
WORKER_CLASS
TIMEOUT
KEEP_ALIVE
GRACEFUL_TIMEOUT
ACCESS_LOG
ERROR_LOG
GUNICORN_CMD_ARGS
MAX_WORKERS
- PR #39.
- Disable pip cache during installation. PR #38.
- Migrate local development from Pipenv to Poetry. PR #34.
- Add docs for custom
PRE_START_PATH
env var. PR #33.
- Refactor tests to use env vars and add image tags for each build date, like
tiangolo/uvicorn-gunicorn-fastapi:python3.7-2019-10-15
. PR #17. - Upgrade Travis. PR #9.
- Add support for live auto-reload with an additional custom script
/start-reload.sh
, check the updated documentation. PR #6 in parent image.
- Set
WORKERS_PER_CORE
by default to1
, as it shows to have the best performance on benchmarks. - Make the default web concurrency, when
WEB_CONCURRENCY
is not set, to a minimum of 2 workers. This is to avoid bad performance and blocking applications (server application) on small machines (server machine/cloud/etc). This can be overridden usingWEB_CONCURRENCY
. This applies for example in the case whereWORKERS_PER_CORE
is set to1
(the default) and the server has only 1 CPU core. PR #6 and PR #5 in parent image.
- Make
/start.sh
run independently, reading and generating used default environment variables. And remove/entrypoint.sh
as it doesn't modify anything in the system, only reads environment variables. PR #4 in parent image.
- Add support for
/app/prestart.sh
.
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.