![]() ![]() ![]() But you can adjust them if you want something specific. Note: Most of the details like availability zone, image details, and networking options are already pre-filled by Oracle. If you're new to Oracle Cloud, then watch the below video and create an "always free" VM by signing up at : If you've got a cloud tenancy then you probably already know how to create an instance. The first thing we need to do is create a VM. Step 1 – Get yourself a tenancy and create a virtual machine We need to install Docker ourselves in the VM – it's provisioned with just an Oracle Linux image. In order for the container to be accessible, the ports mapped on the VM to container also have to be configured in ingress rules in the security list. The boot volume offers just over 45GB of disk storage. Note that the workload of a container has to fit in the shape of this always free VM: VM.Standard.E2.1.Micro, 1/8 OCPU, 1 GB RAM and up to 480 Mbps network bandwidth (see the docs). Oracle offers an Always Free cloud services option. Let's get into the details a bit more now. In short, I used a VM in the Always Free Tier of OCI, and for a side project I set up a dockerised Postgres database. ![]() In this article, I will show you how I quickly set up and ran a Docker container for free on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. ![]()
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