5.1 KiB
conduwuit for Docker
Docker
To run conduwuit with Docker you can either build the image yourself or pull it from a registry.
Use a registry
OCI images for conduwuit are available in the registries listed below.
Registry | Image | Size | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
GitHub Registry | ghcr.io/girlbossceo/conduwuit:latest | Stable tagged image. | |
GitLab Registry | registry.gitlab.com/conduwuit/conduwuit:latest | Stable tagged image. | |
Docker Hub | docker.io/girlbossceo/conduwuit:latest | Stable tagged image. | |
GitHub Registry | ghcr.io/girlbossceo/conduwuit:main | Stable main branch. | |
GitLab Registry | registry.gitlab.com/conduwuit/conduwuit:main | Stable main branch. | |
Docker Hub | docker.io/girlbossceo/conduwuit:main | Stable main branch. |
Use
docker image pull <link>
to pull it to your machine.
Run
When you have the image you can simply run it with
docker run -d -p 8448:6167 \
-v db:/var/lib/conduwuit/ \
-e CONDUWUIT_SERVER_NAME="your.server.name" \
-e CONDUWUIT_DATABASE_BACKEND="rocksdb" \
-e CONDUWUIT_ALLOW_REGISTRATION=false \
--name conduit <link>
or you can use docker compose.
The -d
flag lets the container run in detached mode. You may supply an optional conduwuit.toml
config file, the example config can be found here.
You can pass in different env vars to change config values on the fly. You can even configure conduwuit completely by using env vars. For an overview of possible
values, please take a look at the docker-compose.yml
file.
If you just want to test conduwuit for a short time, you can use the --rm
flag, which will clean up everything related to your container after you stop it.
Docker-compose
If the docker run
command is not for you or your setup, you can also use one of the provided docker-compose
files.
Depending on your proxy setup, you can use one of the following files;
- If you already have a
traefik
instance set up, usedocker-compose.for-traefik.yml
- If you don't have a
traefik
instance set up (or any other reverse proxy), usedocker-compose.with-traefik.yml
- For any other reverse proxy, use
docker-compose.yml
When picking the traefik-related compose file, rename it so it matches docker-compose.yml
, and
rename the override file to docker-compose.override.yml
. Edit the latter with the values you want
for your server.
Additional info about deploying conduwuit can be found here.
Build
To build the conduwuit image with docker-compose, you first need to open and modify the docker-compose.yml
file. There you need to comment the image:
option and uncomment the build:
option. Then call docker compose with:
docker compose up
This will also start the container right afterwards, so if want it to run in detached mode, you also should use the -d
flag.
Run
If you already have built the image or want to use one from the registries, you can just start the container and everything else in the compose file in detached mode with:
docker compose up -d
Note: Don't forget to modify and adjust the compose file to your needs.
Use Traefik as Proxy
As a container user, you probably know about Traefik. It is a easy to use reverse proxy for making
containerized app and services available through the web. With the two provided files,
docker-compose.for-traefik.yml
(or
docker-compose.with-traefik.yml
) and
docker-compose.override.yml
, it is equally easy to deploy
and use conduwuit, with a little caveat. If you already took a look at the files, then you should have
seen the well-known
service, and that is the little caveat. Traefik is simply a proxy and
loadbalancer and is not able to serve any kind of content, but for conduwuit to federate, we need to
either expose ports 443
and 8448
or serve two endpoints .well-known/matrix/client
and
.well-known/matrix/server
.
With the service well-known
we use a single nginx
container that will serve those two files.
Voice communication
See the TURN page.