Refactor high-complexity React components in Dify frontend. Use when `pnpm analyze-component...
npx skills add Notysoty/openagentskills --skill "Docker Compose Generator"
Install specific skill from multi-skill repository
# Description
Generates production-ready docker-compose.yml files for any application stack.
# SKILL.md
name: Docker Compose Generator
description: Generates production-ready docker-compose.yml files for any application stack.
category: devops
tags:
- docker
- containers
- devops
- infrastructure
author: simplyutils
Docker Compose Generator
What this skill does
This skill directs the agent to gather information about your application stack and produce a production-ready docker-compose.yml file. It includes health checks, named volumes, custom networks, environment variable placeholders, restart policies, and sensible resource limits — all things that are easy to miss when writing a Compose file from scratch.
Use this when bootstrapping a new project, when converting an existing app to run in containers, or when you want a solid starting point to customize from.
How to use
Claude Code / Cline
Copy this file to .agents/skills/docker-compose-generator/SKILL.md in your project root.
Then ask:
- "Use the Docker Compose Generator skill to create a docker-compose.yml for my Node.js app with PostgreSQL and Redis."
- "I have a Python FastAPI backend, a React frontend, and a Postgres database. Use the Docker Compose Generator skill."
The agent will ask clarifying questions before generating the file if your description is incomplete.
Cursor / Codex
Paste the instructions from the section below into your session along with a description of your stack.
The Prompt / Instructions for the Agent
When asked to generate a docker-compose.yml, follow these steps:
- Gather requirements. If not already provided, ask for:
- The application services (e.g., web server, worker, frontend build)
- The data stores (PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB, Redis, etc.) and their versions
- The runtime environment (Node.js, Python, Go, etc.) and version
- Whether this is for development or production (they differ significantly)
-
Any custom ports, domains, or volume paths
-
Apply these rules to every service:
- Always set a
restartpolicy (unless-stoppedfor production,on-failurefor dev) - Add a
healthcheckfor every database or cache service - Use named volumes (not bind mounts) for persistent data in production
- Use a custom named network — do not rely on the default bridge network
- Put secrets and credentials in environment variables with
${VAR_NAME}placeholders, never hardcoded values -
Set
depends_onwithcondition: service_healthyfor services that require a healthy DB before starting -
For development configs, also:
- Add bind-mount source code for hot reloading (e.g.,
./src:/app/src) - Expose debug ports (e.g.,
9229for Node.js inspector) -
Add a
.env.examplereminder comment -
For production configs, also:
- Add
deploy.resources.limitsfor memory and CPU - Do not expose database ports to the host unless explicitly requested
-
Use
read_only: trueon containers where the filesystem does not need to be writable -
Output:
- The
docker-compose.ymlin a fenced code block - A
.env.examplesnippet showing all required variables - A brief "Next steps" section (e.g., how to start, how to view logs)
Example
Input to Agent:
"Use the Docker Compose Generator skill. I have a Node.js Express API (port 3000), a PostgreSQL 16 database, and a Redis 7 cache. This is for production."
Output from Agent:
# docker-compose.yml
version: '3.9'
services:
api:
build: .
restart: unless-stopped
ports:
- "3000:3000"
environment:
- DATABASE_URL=${DATABASE_URL}
- REDIS_URL=${REDIS_URL}
- NODE_ENV=production
depends_on:
postgres:
condition: service_healthy
redis:
condition: service_healthy
networks:
- app-network
deploy:
resources:
limits:
cpus: '1.0'
memory: 512M
postgres:
image: postgres:16-alpine
restart: unless-stopped
environment:
- POSTGRES_DB=${POSTGRES_DB}
- POSTGRES_USER=${POSTGRES_USER}
- POSTGRES_PASSWORD=${POSTGRES_PASSWORD}
volumes:
- postgres-data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
networks:
- app-network
healthcheck:
test: ["CMD-SHELL", "pg_isready -U ${POSTGRES_USER} -d ${POSTGRES_DB}"]
interval: 10s
timeout: 5s
retries: 5
redis:
image: redis:7-alpine
restart: unless-stopped
command: redis-server --appendonly yes
volumes:
- redis-data:/data
networks:
- app-network
healthcheck:
test: ["CMD", "redis-cli", "ping"]
interval: 10s
timeout: 5s
retries: 5
volumes:
postgres-data:
redis-data:
networks:
app-network:
driver: bridge
.env.example
DATABASE_URL=postgresql://user:password@postgres:5432/myapp
REDIS_URL=redis://redis:6379
POSTGRES_DB=myapp
POSTGRES_USER=user
POSTGRES_PASSWORD=changeme
Next steps
1. Copy .env.example to .env and fill in real values
2. docker compose up -d to start all services
3. docker compose logs -f api to tail API logs
Notes
- The generated file is a starting point — review resource limits and port exposure before deploying.
- The skill does not write a
Dockerfilefor your application image. It assumes yourDockerfilealready exists in the project root, or will ask you to create one. - For multi-environment setups, consider generating separate
docker-compose.override.ymlfiles for dev and staging. Ask the agent to do this explicitly. - Always rotate any credentials in
.env.examplebefore using them in a real environment.
# Supported AI Coding Agents
This skill is compatible with the SKILL.md standard and works with all major AI coding agents:
Learn more about the SKILL.md standard and how to use these skills with your preferred AI coding agent.