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Everybody is saying a reverse proxy which is correct, but you said docker stacks, so if that means docker compose then the names of your container is also in DNS so you can use that.
Can't remember if port is needed still or not however.
AFAIK docker-compose only puts the container names in DNS for other containers in the same stack (or in the same configured network, if applicable), not for the host system and not for other systems on the local LAN.
Yes, that's how it's supposedto work if they're all on the same Docker network (same yaml). In practice, it can be flaky and you're much better off using ip:port.