With zrok, you can privately share a service that's running in Docker. You need a zrok private share running somewhere that it can reach the service you're sharing, and a zrok private access running somewhere else where you want to use the private share. Together, the private share and private access form a private point-to-point tunnel.
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.
If you have installed Docker Desktop on macOS or Windows then you are all set.
1. Download [the zrok-private-share Docker Compose project file](pathname:///zrok-private-share/compose.yml) into your new project folder and make sure it's named `compose.yml`.
1. If you are self-hosting zrok then it's important to set your API endpoint URL too. If you're using the hosted zrok service then you can skip this step.
1. Download [the zrok-private-access Docker Compose project file](pathname:///zrok-private-access/compose.yml) into your new project folder and make sure it's named `compose.yml`.
1. Copy your zrok environment token from the zrok web console to your clipboard and paste it in a file named `.env` in the same folder like this:
```bash
# file name ".env"
ZROK_ENABLE_TOKEN="8UL9-48rN0ua"
```
1. Now copy the zrok private access token from the zrok private share project's output to your clipboard and paste it in the same file named `.env` here in your private share project folder like this:
```bash
# file name ".env"
ZROK_ENABLE_TOKEN="8UL9-48rN0ua"
ZROK_ACCESS_TOKEN="wr3hpf2z5fiy"
```
1. Run your Compose project to start accessing the private share:
```bash
docker compose up zrok-private-access
```
1. Now your zrok private access proxy is ready on http://127.0.0.1:9191. You can visit the demo web server in your browser.
## Going Further with Private Access
1. Try changing the demo web server used in the private share project. One alternative demo server is provided: `httpbin`.
1. Try accessing the private share from _inside_ a container running in the private access project. One demo client is provided: `demo-client`. You can run it like this.
```bash
docker compose up demo-client
```
1. You'll see in the terminal output that the demo-client container is getting a response from the private share indicating the source IP of the request from the perspective of the demo server: `httpbin` that's running in the private share project.
## Cleaning Up
Run the "down" command in both Compose projects to destroy them when you're all done. This will stop the running containers and delete zrok environments' storage volumes. Then delete the selected zrok environment by clicking "Actions" in the web console.