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OpenCms logo

Official OpenCms Docker Image

Welcome to the official OpenCms Docker image maintained by Alkacon.

Here you find a Docker Compose setup with a ready to use OpenCms installation including Jetty and MariaDB.

OpenCms can be used with other databases as described below.

Available tags

Images for older OpenCms versions are also available, see here.

How to use this image

Step 1: docker-compose.yml

Save the following docker-compose.yml file to your host machine.

services:
    mariadb:
        image: mariadb:latest
        container_name: mariadb
        init: true
        restart: always
        volumes:
            - ~/dockermount/opencms-docker-mysql:/var/lib/mysql
        environment:
            - "MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=secretDBpassword"
    opencms:
        image: alkacon/opencms-docker:20.1
        container_name: opencms
        init: true
        restart: always
        depends_on: [ "mariadb" ]
        links:
            - "mariadb:mysql"
        ports:
            - "80:8080"
        volumes:
            - ~/dockermount/opencms-docker-webapps:/container/webapps
        command: ["/root/wait-for.sh", "mysql:3306", "-t", "30", "--", "/root/opencms-run.sh"]
        environment:
             - "DB_PASSWD=secretDBpassword"

Change the MariaDB root password secretDBpassword.

Step 2: Persist data

Adjust the following directories for your host system:

  • ~/dockermount/opencms-docker-mysql the directory where all MariaDB data are persisted
  • ~/dockermount/opencms-docker-webapps the Tomcat webapps directory that contains important configurations, caches and indices of OpenCms

Configured in this way, it is possible to upgrade the opencms and mariadb containers while keeping all your OpenCms and MariaDB data. See the upgrade guide below.

On the other hand, if you like to start with a completely fresh OpenCms installation, do not forget to delete both mounted directories before.

Step 3: Start OpenCms and MariaDB

Navigate to the folder with the docker-compose.yml file and execute docker-compose up -d.

Startup will take a while since numerous modules are installed.

You can follow the installation process with docker-compose logs -f opencms.

Step 4: Login to OpenCms

When the containers are set up, you can access the OpenCms workplace via http://localhost/system/login.

The default account is username Admin with password admin.

Environment variables

In addition to DB_PASSWD, the following environment variables are supported:

  • DB_HOST, the database host name, defaults to mysql
  • DB_USER, the database user, default is root
  • DB_PASSWD, the database password, is not set by default
  • DB_PASSWD_FILE, file in the container where the database password is stored (/run/secrets/<secret_name>); to be used with docker compose secrets
  • DB_NAME, the database name, default is opencms
  • ADMIN_PASSWD, the admin password, defaults to admin
  • ADMIN_PASSWD_FILE, file in the container where the admin password is stored (/run/secrets/<secret_name>); to be used with docker compose secrets
  • OPENCMS_COMPONENTS, the OpenCms components to install, default is workplace,demo; to not install the demo template use workplace
  • JETTY_OPTS, the Jetty startup options (in addition to predefined options), default is -Xmx2g
  • DEBUG, flag indicating whether to enable verbose debug logging and allowing connections via {docker ip address}:8000, defaults to false
  • JSONAPI, flag indicating whether to enable the JSON API, default is false
  • SERVER_URL, the server URL, default is http://localhost

The variables DB_PASSWD and DB_PASSWD_FILE respectively ADMIN_PASSWD and ADMIN_PASSWD_FILE are alternatives. Read more about docker compose secrets here.

Upgrade the image

Before upgrading the image, make sure that you have persisted your OpenCms data and MariaDB data with Docker volumes as described above. Otherwise you will lose your data.

When upgrading from an older version of this image, read the image history below at first.

Enter the target version of the OpenCms image in your docker-compose.yml file.

    opencms:
        image: alkacon/opencms-docker:20.1

Navigate to the folder with the docker-compose.yml file and execute docker-compose up -d.

During startup, the Docker setup will update several modules as well as JAR files and configurations in the /container/webapps directory.

You can follow the installation process with docker compose logs -f opencms.

It is recommended to remove the /container/webapps/ROOT/WEB-INF/index folder after upgrade and do a full Solr reindex.

Support for other databases

OpenCms uses a special configuration file called setup.properties to establish a database connection.

In order to connect to a database other than MariaDB, this image supports connection via a custom setup.properties file.

The file must be named custom-setup.properties and must be available in the root folder of the docker container.

An example setup for PostgreSQL can be found here.

For more information on the DB configuration options, see the OpenCms documentation.

Note: when using a custom configuration file, the environment variables DB_HOST, DB_USER, DB_PASSWD, DB_NAME, OPENCMS_COMPONENTS, SERVER_URL are ignored.

Building the image

Since the image is available on Docker Hub, you do not need to build it yourself. If you want to build it anyway, here's how to do it:

Download the opencms-docker repository.

Go to the repository's main folder and type docker compose build opencms.

License

View the licence information on GitHub.

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