--- title: "Traefik Getting Started Quickly" description: "Looking to get started with Traefik Proxy quickly? Read the technical documentation to see a basic use case that leverages Docker." --- # Quick Start A Basic Use Case Using Docker {: .subtitle } ![quickstart-diagram](../assets/img/quickstart-diagram.png) ## Launch Traefik With the Docker Provider Create a `docker-compose.yml` file where you will define a `reverse-proxy` service that uses the official Traefik image: ```yaml version: '3' services: reverse-proxy: # The official v3 Traefik Docker image image: traefik:v3.0 # Enables the web UI and tells Traefik to listen to Docker command: --api.insecure=true --providers.docker ports: # The HTTP port - "80:80" # The Web UI (enabled by --api.insecure=true) - "8080:8080" volumes: # So that Traefik can listen to the Docker events - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock ``` **That's it. Now you can launch Traefik!** Start your `reverse-proxy` with the following command: ```shell docker-compose up -d reverse-proxy ``` You can open a browser and go to `http://localhost:8080/api/rawdata` to see Traefik's API rawdata (we'll go back there once we have launched a service in step 2). ## Traefik Detects New Services and Creates the Route for You Now that we have a Traefik instance up and running, we will deploy new services. Edit your `docker-compose.yml` file and add the following at the end of your file. ```yaml version: '3' services: ... whoami: # A container that exposes an API to show its IP address image: traefik/whoami labels: - "traefik.http.routers.whoami.rule=Host(`whoami.docker.localhost`)" ``` The above defines [`whoami`](https://github.com/traefik/whoami "Link to whoami app on GitHub"), a web service that outputs information about the machine it is deployed on (its IP address, host, etc.). Start the `whoami` service with the following command: ```shell docker-compose up -d whoami ``` Browse `http://localhost:8080/api/rawdata` and see that Traefik has automatically detected the new container and updated its own configuration. When Traefik detects new services, it creates the corresponding routes, so you can call them ... _let's see!_ (Here, we're using curl) ```shell curl -H Host:whoami.docker.localhost http://127.0.0.1 ``` _Shows the following output:_ ```yaml Hostname: a656c8ddca6c IP: 172.27.0.3 #... ``` ## More Instances? Traefik Load Balances Them Run more instances of your `whoami` service with the following command: ```shell docker-compose up -d --scale whoami=2 ``` Browse to `http://localhost:8080/api/rawdata` and see that Traefik has automatically detected the new instance of the container. Finally, see that Traefik load-balances between the two instances of your service by running the following command twice: ```shell curl -H Host:whoami.docker.localhost http://127.0.0.1 ``` The output will show alternatively one of the followings: ```yaml Hostname: a656c8ddca6c IP: 172.27.0.3 #... ``` ```yaml Hostname: s458f154e1f1 IP: 172.27.0.4 # ... ``` !!! question "Where to Go Next?" Now that you have a basic understanding of how Traefik can automatically create the routes to your services and load balance them, it is time to dive into [the documentation](/ "Link to the docs landing page") and let Traefik work for you! {!traefik-for-business-applications.md!}