With zrok and Docker, you can publicly share a web server that's running in a local container or anywhere that's reachable by the zrok container. The share can be reached through a public URL thats temporary or reserved (reusable).
To follow this guide you will need [Docker](https://docs.docker.com/get-docker/) and [the Docker Compose plugin](https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/) for running `docker compose` commands in your terminal.
A temporary public share is a great way to share a web server running in a container with someone else for a short time. A reserved public share is a great way to share a reliable web server running in a container with someone else for a long time.
1. In your terminal, change directory to the newly-created project folder.
1. Download either [the temporary public share project file](pathname:///zrok-public-share/compose.yml) or [the reserved public share project file](pathname:///zrok-public-reserved/compose.yml) into the project folder.
The simplest way to share your web server is to set `ZROK_TARGET` (e.g. `https://example.com`) in the environment of the `docker compose up` command. When you restart the share will auto-configure for that upstream server URL. This applies to both temporary and reserved public shares.
You can require authentication for your public share by setting `ZROK_OAUTH_PROVIDER` to `github` or `google` if you're using our hosted zrok.io, and any OIDC provider you've configured if self-hosting. You can parse the authenticated email address from the request cookie. Read more about the OAuth features in [this blog post](https://blog.openziti.io/the-zrok-oauth-public-frontend). This applies to both temporary and reserved public shares.
```bash title=".env"
ZROK_OAUTH_PROVIDER="github"
```
## Customize Temporary Public Share
1. Create a file `compose.override.yml`. This example demonstrates sharing a static HTML directory `/tmp/html` from the Docker host's filesystem.
```yaml title="compose.override.yml"
services:
zrok-share:
command: share public --headless --backend-mode web /tmp/html
volumes:
- /tmp/html:/tmp/html
```
1. Re-run the project to load the new configuration.
The reserved public share project uses zrok's `caddy` mode. Caddy accepts configuration as a Caddyfile that is mounted into the container ([zrok Caddyfile examples](https://github.com/openziti/zrok/tree/main/etc/caddy)).
1. Create a Caddyfile. This example demonstrates proxying two HTTP servers with a weighted round-robin load balancer.
```console title="Caddyfile"
http:// {
# zrok requires this bind address template
bind {{ .ZrokBindAddress }}
reverse_proxy /* {
to http://httpbin1:8080 http://httpbin2:8080
lb_policy weighted_round_robin 3 2
}
}
```
1. Create a file `compose.override.yml`. This example adds two `httpbin` containers for Caddy load balance, and masks the default Caddyfile with our custom one.
```yaml title="compose.override.yml"
services:
httpbin1:
image: mccutchen/go-httpbin # 8080/tcp
httpbin2:
image: mccutchen/go-httpbin # 8080/tcp
zrok-share:
volumes:
- ./Caddyfile:/mnt/.zrok/Caddyfile
```
1. Re-run the project to load the new configuration.
```bash
docker compose up --force-recreate --detach
```
1. Recall the reserved share URL from the log.
```bash
docker compose logs zrok-share
```
```buttonless title="Output"
INFO: zrok public URL: https://88s803f2qvao.in.zrok.io/
```
## Destroy the zrok Environment
This destroys the Docker volumes containing the zrok environment secrets. The zrok environment can also be destroyed in the web console.