Docker-in-Docker on Jenkins: Why Postgres Tests Can't Reach localhost (And How to Fix It)

Docker-in-Docker on Jenkins: Postgres Tests Can’t Reach localhost#

A Jenkins job runs docker run -d -p 5432:5432 postgres:17-alpine and gets back a container ID. The next step is psql -h localhost -p 5432 -U postgres and it returns Connection refused. The retry loop tries 30 times and gives up. The test job fails with “could not connect to server”.

If you’ve added longer waits, switched to --network host, or rewritten the test script to launch its own postgres container, none of that will help. The problem is the network model: Jenkins running in a Kubernetes pod uses the host’s docker socket to launch SIBLING containers. Those siblings live on the host’s docker bridge network, not in Jenkins’s pod network namespace. localhost from inside Jenkins is the pod’s loopback; the published port is on the host’s interface.

Docker Compose Validation Stacks: Templates for Multi-Service Testing

Docker Compose Validation Stacks#

Docker Compose validates multi-service architectures without Kubernetes overhead. It answers the question: do these services actually work together? Containers start, connect, and communicate – or they fail, giving you fast feedback before you push to a cluster.

This article provides complete Compose stacks for four common validation scenarios. Each includes the full docker-compose.yml, health check scripts, and teardown procedures. The pattern for using them is always the same: clone the template, customize for your services, bring it up, validate, capture results, bring it down.