220 lines
9.1 KiB
Markdown
220 lines
9.1 KiB
Markdown
# Production Docker deployment for Mattermost
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This project enables deployment of a Mattermost server in a multi-node production configuration using Docker.
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[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/mattermost/mattermost-docker.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/mattermost/mattermost-docker)
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Notes:
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- The default Mattermost edition for this repo has changed from Team Edition to Enterprise Edition. Please see [Choose Edition](#choose-edition-to-install) section.
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- To install this Docker project on AWS Elastic Beanstalk please see [AWS Elastic Beanstalk Guide](contrib/aws/README.md).
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- To run Mattermost on Kubernetes you can start with the [manifest examples in the kubernetes folder](contrib/kubernetes/README.md)
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- To install Mattermost without Docker directly onto a Linux-based operating systems, please see [Admin Guide](https://docs.mattermost.com/guides/administrator.html#installing-mattermost).
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## Installation using Docker Compose
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The following instructions deploy Mattermost in a production configuration using multi-node Docker Compose set up.
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### Requirements
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* [docker] (version `1.12+`)
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* [docker-compose] (version `1.10.0+` to support Compose file version `3.0`)
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### Choose Edition to Install
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If you want to install Enterprise Edition, you can skip this section.
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To install the team edition, uncomment out these lines in docker-compose.yaml file:
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```yaml
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args:
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- edition=team
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```
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The `app` Dockerfile will read the `edition` build argument to install Team (`edition = 'team'`) or Enterprise (`edition != team`) edition.
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### Database container
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This repository offer a Docker image for the Mattermost database. It is a customized PostgreSQL image that you should configure with following environment variables :
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* `POSTGRES_USER`: database username
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* `POSTGRES_PASSWORD`: database password
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* `POSTGRES_DB`: database name
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It is possible to use your own PostgreSQL database, or even use MySQL. But you will need to ensure that Application container can connect to the database (see [Application container](#application-container))
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#### AWS
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If deploying to AWS, you could also set following variables to enable [Wal-E](https://github.com/wal-e/wal-e) backup to S3 :
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* `AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID`: AWS access key
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* `AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY`: AWS secret
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* `WALE_S3_PREFIX`: AWS s3 bucket name
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* `AWS_REGION`: AWS region
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All four environment variables are required. It will enable completed WAL segments sent to archive storage (S3). The base backup and clean up can be done through the following command:
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```bash
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# Base backup
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docker exec mattermost-db su - postgres sh -c "/usr/bin/envdir /etc/wal-e.d/env /usr/bin/wal-e backup-push /var/lib/postgresql/data"
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# Keep the most recent 7 base backups and remove the old ones
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docker exec mattermost-db su - postgres sh -c "/usr/bin/envdir /etc/wal-e.d/env /usr/bin/wal-e delete --confirm retain 7"
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```
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Those tasks can be executed through a cron job or systemd timer.
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### Application container
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Application container run the Mattermost application. You should configure it with following environment variables :
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* `MM_USERNAME`: database username
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* `MM_PASSWORD`: database password
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* `MM_DBNAME`: database name
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If your database use some custom host and port, it is also possible to configure them :
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* `DB_HOST`: database host address
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* `DB_PORT_NUMBER`: database port
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If you use a Mattermost configuration file on a different location than the default one (`/mattermost/config/config.json`) :
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* `MM_CONFIG`: configuration file location inside the container.
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If you choose to use MySQL instead of PostgreSQL, you should set a different datasource and SQL driver :
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* `DB_PORT_NUMBER` : `3306`
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* `MM_SQLSETTINGS_DRIVERNAME` : `mysql`
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* `MM_SQLSETTINGS_DATASOURCE` : `MM_USERNAME:MM_PASSWORD@tcp(DB_HOST:DB_PORT_NUMBER)/MM_DBNAME?charset=utf8mb4,utf8&readTimeout=30s&writeTimeout=30s`
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Don't forget to replace all entries (beginning by `MM_` and `DB_`) in `MM_SQLSETTINGS_DATASOURCE` with the real variables values.
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If you want to push Mattermost application to **Cloud Foundry**, use a `manifest.yml` like this one (with external PostgreSQL service):
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```
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---
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applications:
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- name: mattermost
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docker:
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image: mattermost/mattermost-prod-app
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instances: 1
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memory: 1G
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disk_quota: 256M
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env:
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DB_HOST: database host address
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DB_PORT_NUMBER: database port
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MM_DBNAME: database name
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MM_USERNAME: database username
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MM_PASSWORD: database password
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```
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### Web server container
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This image is optional, you should **not** use it when you have your own reverse-proxy. It is a simple front Web server for the Mattermost app container. If you use the provided `docker-compose.yml` file, you don't have to configure anything. But if your application container is reachable on custom host and/or port (eg. if you use a container provider), you should add those two environment variables :
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* `APP_HOST`: application host address
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* `APP_PORT_NUMBER`: application HTTP port
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If you plan to upload large files to your Mattermost instance, Nginx will need to write some temporary files. In that case, the `read_only: true` option on the `web` container should be removed from your `docker-compose.yml` file.
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#### Install with SSL certificate
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Put your SSL certificate as `./volumes/web/cert/cert.pem` and the private key that has
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no password as `./volumes/web/cert/key-no-password.pem`. If you don't have
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them you may generate a self-signed SSL certificate.
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### Starting/Stopping Docker
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#### Start
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If you are running docker with non root user, make sure the UID and GID in app/Dockerfile are the same as your current UID/GID
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```
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mkdir -p ./volumes/app/mattermost/{data,logs,config,plugins}
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chown -R 2000:2000 ./volumes/app/mattermost/
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docker-compose start
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```
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#### Stop
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```
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docker-compose stop
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```
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### Removing Docker
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#### Remove the containers
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```
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docker-compose stop && docker-compose rm
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```
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#### Remove the data and settings of your Mattermost instance
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```
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sudo rm -rf volumes
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```
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## Update Mattermost to latest version
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First, shutdown your containers to back up your data.
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```
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docker-compose down
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```
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Back up your mounted volumes to save your data. If you use the default `docker-compose.yml` file proposed on this repository, your data is on `./volumes/` folder.
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Then run the following commands.
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```
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git pull
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docker-compose build
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docker-compose up -d
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```
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Your Docker image should now be on the latest Mattermost version.
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## Upgrading Mattermost to 4.9+
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Docker images for `4.9.0` release introduce some important changes from [PR #241](https://github.com/mattermost/mattermost-docker/pull/241) to improve production use of Mattermost with Docker.
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**There are 2 important changes for existing installations**
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One important change is that we don't use `root` user by default to run the Mattermost application. So, as explained on [the README](https://github.com/mattermost/mattermost-docker#start), if you use host mounted volume you have to be sure that files on your host server have the correct UID/GID (by default those values are `2000`). In practice, you should just run following commands :
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```
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mkdir -p ./volumes/app/mattermost/{data,logs,config,plugins}
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chown -R 2000:2000 ./volumes/app/mattermost/
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```
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The second important change is the port used by Mattermost application container. The default port is now `8000`, and existing installations that use port `80` will not work without a little configuration change. You have to open your Mattermost configuration file (`./volumes/app/mattermost/config/config.json` by default) and change the key `ServiceSettings.ListenAddress` to `:8000`.
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Also if you use your own web-server/reverse-proxy you need to change its configuration to reach port `8000` of the Mattermost container.
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## Upgrading to Team Edition 3.0.x from 2.x
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You need to migrate your database before upgrading Mattermost to `3.0.x` from
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`2.x`. Run these commands in the latest `mattermost-docker` directory.
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```
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docker-compose rm -f app
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docker-compose build app
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docker-compose run app -upgrade_db_30
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docker-compose up -d
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```
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See the [offical Upgrade Guide](http://docs.mattermost.com/administration/upgrade.html) for more details.
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## Installation using Docker Swarm Mode
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The following instructions deploy Mattermost in a production configuration using docker swarm mode on one node.
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Running containerized applications on multi-node swarms involves specific data portability and replication handling that are not covered here.
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### Requirements
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* [docker] (1.12.0+)
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### Swarm Mode Installation
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First, create mattermost directory structure on the docker hosts:
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```
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mkdir -p /var/lib/mattermost/{cert,config,data,logs,plugins}
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```
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Then, fire up the stack in your swarm:
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```
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docker stack deploy -c contrib/swarm/docker-stack.yml mattermost
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```
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## Known Issues
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* Do not modify the Listen Address in Service Settings.
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* Rarely `app` container fails to start because of "connection refused" to
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database. Workaround: Restart the container.
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## More information
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If you want to know how to use docker-compose, see [the overview
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page](https://docs.docker.com/compose).
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For the server configurations, see [prod-ubuntu.rst] of Mattermost.
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[docker]: http://docs.docker.com/engine/installation/
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[docker-compose]: https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/
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[prod-ubuntu.rst]: https://docs.mattermost.com/install/install-ubuntu-1604.html
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