Skip to main content

We found 4 articles tagged with "dokploy"

View All TagsGo to Portfolio Navigator
Build a Self-Service App Hosting Platform with Dokploy

This blueprint describes how to deploy Dokploy as a lightweight, highly-available application platform on T Cloud Public. The setup uses Docker Swarm for container orchestration and Traefik as the ingress controller, combined with an Elastic Load Balancer (ELB) for TLS termination and secure external access. The architecture runs on multiple Elastic Cloud Servers (ECS) in a high-availability configuration, with a bastion host for administrative access and a NAT gateway for outbound connectivity.

Configure Dokploy for T Cloud Public

This part of the blueprint explains how to configure Dokploy for use with T Cloud Public. After deploying Dokploy, you need to integrate it with cloud services and external components to make the platform fully operational. The configuration steps covered in this guide include setting up container registries, defining S3-compatible storage destinations, assigning a server domain, updating the web server IP address, and connecting to a Git provider. Each of these steps ensures that Dokploy can interact seamlessly with T Cloud Public resources and external systems, enabling you to build and manage applications efficiently.

Deploy Applications with Dokploy

The final part of this blueprint describes how to deploy highly available user workloads with Dokploy on T Cloud Public, positioning it as an open-source alternative to platforms such as Vercel, Netlify, Azure App Services and AWS Elastic Beanstalk.

Deploy Dokploy on ECS

The first part of the blueprint explains how to deploy a highly available Dokploy platform on a fleet of Elastic Cloud Servers (ECS). It covers the configuration of the required T Cloud Public services, including VPC, NAT Gateway, Elastic Load Balancer, RDS, and DCS,