The following "flavors" are available and built from upstream OpenResty packages:
centos
,centos-rpm
, (centos/Dockerfile withel7
)amzn2
, (centos/Dockerfile withamzn2
)stretch
, (stretch/Dockerfile)stretch-fat
, (stretch/Dockerfile.fat)buster
, (buster/Dockerfile)buster-fat
, (buster/Dockerfile.fat)windows
, (windows/Dockerfile)
The following "flavors" are built from source and are intended for more advanced and custom usage, caveat emptor:
alpine
, (alpine/Dockerfile)alpine-fat
, (alpine/Dockerfile.fat)bionic
, (bionic/Dockerfile)xenial
, (xenial/Dockerfile)
Starting with 1.13.6.1
, releases are tagged with <openresty-version>-<image-version>-<flavor>
. The latest image-version
will also be tagged <openresty-version>-<flavor>
. The HEAD of the master branch is also labeled plainly as <flavor>
. The builds are managed by Travis-CI and Appveyor (for Windows images).
Starting with 1.15.8.1
, there are also -nosse42
image flavors for systems which do not support SSE 4.2 (e.g. older systems and embedded systems). They are built with -mno-sse4.2
appended to the build arg RESTY_LUAJIT_OPTIONS
. It is highly recommended NOT to use these if your system supports SSE 4.2 because the CRC32
instruction dramatically improves large string performance. These are only for built-from-source flavors, e.g. 1.15.8.1-3-bionic-nosse42
, 1.15.8.1-3-alpine-nosse42
, 1.15.8.1-3-alpine-fat-nosse42
.
It is highly recommended that you use the upstream-based images for best support. For best stability, pin your images to the full tag, for example 1.15.8.1-3-bionic
.
- Description
- Usage
- Nginx Config Files
- OPM
- LuaRocks
- Tips & Pitfalls
- Image Labels
- Docker CMD
- Building (from source)
- Building (RPM based)
- Building (DEB based)
- Building (Windows based)
- Feedback & Bug Reports
- Changelog & Authors
- Copyright & License
docker-openresty
is Docker tooling for OpenResty (https://www.openresty.org).
Docker is a container management platform.
OpenResty is a full-fledged web application server by bundling the standard nginx core, lots of 3rd-party nginx modules, as well as most of their external dependencies.
If you are happy with the build defaults, then you can use the openresty image from the Docker Hub. The image tags available there are listed at the top of this README.
docker run [options] openresty/openresty:buster-fat
[options] would be things like -p to map ports, -v to map volumes, and -d to daemonize.
docker-openresty
symlinks /usr/local/openresty/nginx/logs/access.log
and error.log
to /dev/stdout
and /dev/stderr
respectively, so that Docker logging works correctly. If you change the log paths in your nginx.conf
, you should symlink those paths as well. This is not possible with the windows
image.
Temporary directories such as client_body_temp_path
are stored in /var/run/openresty/
. You may consider mounting that volume, rather than writing to a container-local directory. This is not done for windows
.
The Docker tooling installs its own nginx.conf
file. If you want to directly override it, you can replace it in your own Dockerfile or via volume bind-mounting.
For the Linux images, that nginx.conf
has the directive include /etc/nginx/conf.d/*.conf;
so all nginx configurations in that directory will be included. The default virtual host configuration has the original OpenResty configuration and is copied to /etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf
.
You can override that default.conf
directly or volume bind-mount the /etc/nginx/conf.d
directory to your own set of configurations:
docker run -v /my/custom/conf.d:/etc/nginx/conf.d openresty/openresty:alpine
If you are running on an selinux
host (e.g. CentOS), you may need to add :Z
to your volume bind-mount argument:
docker run -v /my/custom/conf.d:/etc/nginx/conf.d:Z openresty/openresty:alpine
When using the windows
image you can change the main configuration directly:
docker run -v C:/my/custom/nginx.conf:C:/openresty/conf/nginx.conf openresty/openresty:windows
Starting at version 1.11.2.2, OpenResty for Linux includes a package manager called opm
, which can be found at /usr/local/openresty/bin/opm
.
opm
is built in all the images except alpine
, stretch
and buster
.
To use opm
in the alpine
image, you must also install the curl
and perl
packages; they are not included by default because they double the image size. You may install them like so: apk add --no-cache curl perl
.
To use opm
within the stretch
and buster
image, you can either use the stretch-fat
/buster-fat
image or install the openresty-opm
package in a custom build (which you would need to do to install your own opm
packages anyway), as shown in this example.
LuaRocks is included in the alpine-fat
, centos
, and xenial
variants. It is excluded from alpine
because it generally requires a build system and we want to keep that variant lean.
It is available at /usr/local/openresty/luajit/bin/luarocks
. Packages can be added in your dependent Dockerfiles like so:
RUN /usr/local/openresty/luajit/bin/luarocks install <rock>
-
The
envsubst
utility is included in all images exceptalpine
andwindows
; this utility is also included in the Nginx docker image and is used to template environment variables into configuration files. -
Docker Hub does not currently support ARM builds, thus an
armhf-xenial
image is not available (See #26). You can build an image yourself using theRESTY_DEBIAN_BASE
build argument:
docker build -f xenial/Dockerfile --build-arg "RESTY_DEBIAN_BASE=armv7/armhf-ubuntu" .
- By default, OpenResty is built with SSE4.2 optimizations if the build machine supports it. If run on machine without SSE4.2, there will be invalid opcode issues. Thus all the Docker Hub images require SSE4.2. You can build a custom image from source explicitly without SSE4.2 support, using build arguments like so:
docker build -f xenial/Dockerfile --build-arg "RESTY_LUAJIT_OPTIONS=--with-luajit-xcflags='-DLUAJIT_NUMMODE=2 -DLUAJIT_ENABLE_LUA52COMPAT -mno-sse4.2'" .
-
OpenResty's OpenSSL library version must be compatible with your
opm
and LuaRocks packages' version. At minimum, the numeric portion should be the same (e.g.1.1.1
). The image labelresty_openssl_version
indicates this value. see Labels. -
The
1.13.6.2-alpine
is built fromOpenSSL 1.0.2r
because of build issues on Alpine.1.15.8.1-alpine
is built fromOpenSSL 1.1.1c
onAlpine 3.9
. -
Windows images must be built from the same version as the host system it runs on. See Windows container version compatibility. Our images are currently built from the "Windows Server 2016" series.
-
The
SIGQUIT
signal will be sent to nginx to stop this container, to give it an opportunity to stop gracefully (i.e, finish processing active connections). The Docker default isSIGTERM
, which immediately terminates active connections. Note that if your configuration listens on UNIX domain sockets, this means that you'll need to manually remove the socket file upon shutdown, due to nginx bug #753. -
Alpine 3.9 added OpenSSL 1.1.1 and we build images against this. OpenSSL 1.1.1 enabled TLS 1.3 by default, which can create unexpected behavior with ssl_session_(store|fetch)_by_lua*. See this patch, which will ship in OpenResty 1.17.x.1, for more information: https://github.com/openresty/lua-nginx-module/commit/d3dbc0c8102a9978d649c99e3261d93aac547378
The image builds are labeled with various information, such as the versions of OpenRestyand its dependent libraries. Here's an example of printing the labels using jq
:
$ docker pull openresty/openresty:1.15.8.1-1-alpine
$ docker inspect openresty/openresty:1.15.8.1-1-alpine | jq '.[].Config.Labels'
{
"maintainer": "Evan Wies <evan@*********.net>",
"resty_add_package_builddeps": "",
"resty_add_package_rundeps": "",
"resty_config_options": " --with-file-aio --with-http_addition_module --with-http_auth_request_module --with-http_dav_module --with-http_flv_module --with-http_geoip_module=dynamic --with-http_gunzip_module --with-http_gzip_static_module --with-http_image_filter_module=dynamic --with-http_mp4_module --with-http_random_index_module --with-http_realip_module --with-http_secure_link_module --with-http_slice_module --with-http_ssl_module --with-http_stub_status_module --with-http_sub_module --with-http_v2_module --with-http_xslt_module=dynamic --with-ipv6 --with-mail --with-mail_ssl_module --with-md5-asm --with-pcre-jit --with-sha1-asm --with-stream --with-stream_ssl_module --with-threads ",
"resty_config_options_more": "",
"resty_eval_post_make": "",
"resty_eval_pre_configure": "",
"resty_openssl_version": "1.0.2r",
"resty_pcre_version": "8.42",
"resty_version": "1.15.8.1"
}
Label Name | Description |
---|---|
maintainer |
Maintainer of the image |
resty_add_package_builddeps |
buildarg RESTY_ADD_PACKAGE_BUILDDEPS |
resty_add_package_rundeps |
buildarg RESTY_ADD_PACKAGE_RUNDEPS |
resty_config_deps |
buildarg _RESTY_CONFIG_DEPS (internal) |
resty_config_options |
buildarg RESTY_CONFIG_OPTIONS |
resty_config_options_more |
buildarg RESTY_CONFIG_OPTIONS_MORE |
resty_deb_flavor |
buildarg RESTY_DEB_FLAVOR |
resty_deb_version |
buildarg RESTY_DEB_VERSION |
resty_eval_post_make |
buildarg RESTY_EVAL_POST_MAKE |
resty_eval_pre_configure |
buildarg RESTY_EVAL_PRE_CONFIGURE |
resty_image_base |
Name of the base image to build from, buildarg RESTY_IMAGE_BASE |
resty_image_tag |
Tag of the base image to build from, buildarg RESTY_IMAGE_TAG |
resty_install_base |
buildarg RESTY_INSTALL_BASE |
resty_install_tag |
buildarg RESTY_INSTALL_TAG |
resty_luajit_options |
buildarg RESTY_LUAJIT_OPTIONS |
resty_luarocks_version |
buildarg RESTY_LUAROCKS_VERSION |
resty_openssl_version |
buildarg RESTY_OPENSSL_VERSION |
resty_pcre_version |
buildarg RESTY_PCRE_VERSION |
resty_rpm_arch |
buildarg RESTY_RPM_ARCH |
resty_rpm_dist |
buildarg RESTY_RPM_DIST |
resty_rpm_flavor |
buildarg RESTY_RPM_FLAVOR |
resty_rpm_version |
buildarg RESTY_RPM_VERSION |
resty_version |
buildarg RESTY_VERSION |
resty_yum_repo |
buildarg RESTY_YUM_REPO |
The -g "daemon off;"
directive is used in the Dockerfile CMD to keep the Nginx daemon running after container creation. If this directive is added to the nginx.conf, then the docker run
should explicitly invoke openresty
(or nginx
for windows
images):
docker run [options] openresty/openresty:xenial openresty
Invoke another CMD, for example the resty
utility, like so:
docker run [options] openresty/openresty:xenial resty [script.lua]
NOTE The alpine
images do not include the packages perl
and ncurses
, which is needed by the resty
utility.
This Docker image can be built and customized by cloning the repo and running docker build
with the desired Dockerfile:
git clone https://github.com/openresty/docker-openresty.git
cd docker-openresty
docker build -t myopenresty -f xenial/Dockerfile .
docker run myopenresty
Dockerfiles are provided for the following base systems, selecting the Dockerfile path with -f
:
- Alpine (
alpine/Dockerfile
) - Alpine Fat (
alpine-fat/Dockerfile
) - Ubuntu Xenial (
xenial/Dockerfile
) - Ubuntu Bionic (
bionic/Dockerfile
)
We used to support more build flavors but have trimmed that down. Older Dockerfiles are archived in the archive
folder.
The following are the available build-time options. They can be set using the --build-arg
CLI argument, like so:
docker build --build-arg RESTY_J=4 -f xenial/Dockerfile .
Key | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
RESTY_IMAGE_BASE | "ubuntu" / "alpine" | The Debian or Alpine Docker image base to build FROM . |
RESTY_IMAGE_TAG | { "xenial", "bionic" } / "3.11" | The Debian or Alpine Docker image tag to build FROM . |
RESTY_VERSION | 1.15.8.2 | The version of OpenResty to use. |
RESTY_LUAROCKS_VERSION | 3.2.1 | The version of LuaRocks to use. |
RESTY_OPENSSL_VERSION | 1.1.0k / 1.1.1c | The version of OpenSSL to use. |
RESTY_PCRE_VERSION | 8.43 | The version of PCRE to use. |
RESTY_J | 1 | Sets the parallelism level (-jN) for the builds. |
RESTY_CONFIG_OPTIONS | "--with-compat --with-file-aio --with-http_addition_module --with-http_auth_request_module --with-http_dav_module --with-http_flv_module --with-http_geoip_module=dynamic --with-http_gunzip_module --with-http_gzip_static_module --with-http_image_filter_module=dynamic --with-http_mp4_module --with-http_perl_module=dynamic --with-http_random_index_module --with-http_realip_module --with-http_secure_link_module --with-http_slice_module --with-http_ssl_module --with-http_stub_status_module --with-http_sub_module --with-http_v2_module --with-http_xslt_module=dynamic --with-ipv6 --with-mail --with-mail_ssl_module --with-md5-asm --with-pcre-jit --with-sha1-asm --with-stream --with-stream_ssl_module --with-threads" | Options to pass to OpenResty's ./configure script. |
RESTY_LUAJIT_OPTIONS | "--with-luajit-xcflags='-DLUAJIT_NUMMODE=2 -DLUAJIT_ENABLE_LUA52COMPAT'" | Options to tweak LuaJIT. |
RESTY_CONFIG_OPTIONS_MORE | "" | More options to pass to OpenResty's ./configure script. |
RESTY_ADD_PACKAGE_BUILDDEPS | "" | Additional packages to install with package manager required by build only (removed after installation) |
RESTY_ADD_PACKAGE_RUNDEPS | "" | Additional packages to install with package manager required at runtime (not removed after installation) |
RESTY_EVAL_PRE_CONFIGURE | "" | Command(s) to run prior to executing OpenResty's ./configure script. (this can be used to clone a github repo of an extension you want to add to OpenResty, for example. In that case, dont forget to add the appropriate argument to the RESTY_CONFIG_OPTIONS_MORE argument as described above). |
RESTY_EVAL_POST_MAKE | "" | Command(s) to run after running make install. |
These built-from-source flavors include the following modules by default, but one can easily increase or decrease that with the custom build options above:
- file-aio
- http_addition_module
- http_auth_request_module
- http_dav_module
- http_flv_module
- http_geoip_module=dynamic
- http_gunzip_module
- http_gzip_static_module
- http_image_filter_module=dynamic
- http_mp4_module
- http_random_index_module
- http_realip_module
- http_secure_link_module
- http_slice_module
- http_ssl_module
- http_stub_status_module
- http_sub_module
- http_v2_module
- http_xslt_module=dynamic
- ipv6
- mail_ssl_module
- md5-asm
- pcre-jit
- sha1-asm
- stream
- stream_ssl_module
- threads Back to TOC
OpenResty now now has RPMs available. The centos
images use these RPMs rather than building from source.
This Docker image can be built and customized by cloning the repo and running docker build
with the desired Dockerfile:
- CentOS 7 RPM (
centos/Dockerfile
)
The following are the available build-time options. They can be set using the --build-arg
CLI argument, like so:
docker build --build-arg RESTY_RPM_FLAVOR="-debug" centos
Key | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
RESTY_IMAGE_BASE | "centos" | The Centos Docker image base to build FROM . |
RESTY_IMAGE_TAG | "7" | The CentOS Docker image tag to build FROM . |
RESTY_LUAROCKS_VERSION | 3.2.1 | The version of LuaRocks to use. |
RESTY_YUM_REPO | "https://openresty.org/package/centos/openresty.repo" | URL for the OpenResty YUM Repository. |
RESTY_RPM_FLAVOR | "" | The openresty package flavor to use. Possibly "-debug" or "-valgrind" . |
RESTY_RPM_VERSION | "1.15.8.2-2" | The openresty package version to install. |
RESTY_RPM_DIST | "el7" | The openresty package distribution to install. |
RESTY_RPM_ARCH | "x86_64" | The openresty package architecture to install. |
OpenResty now now has Debian Packages (DEBs) available. The stretch
image use these DEBs rather than building from source.
You can derive your own Docker images from this to install your own packages. See Dockerfile.opm_example and Dockerfile.luarocks_example.
This Docker image can be built and customized by cloning the repo and running docker build
with the desired Dockerfile:
- Debian Stretch 9 DEB (
stretch/Dockerfile
) - Debian Buster 10 DEB (
buster/Dockerfile
)
The following are the available build-time options. They can be set using the --build-arg
CLI argument, like so:
docker build --build-arg RESTY_DEB_FLAVOR="-debug" -f stretch/Dockerfile .
Key | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
RESTY_IMAGE_BASE | "debian" | The Debian Docker image base to build FROM . |
RESTY_IMAGE_TAG | "stretch-slim" | The Debian Docker image tag to build FROM . |
RESTY_DEB_FLAVOR | "" | The openresty package flavor to use. Possibly "-debug" or "-valgrind" . |
RESTY_DEB_VERSION | "=1.15.8.2-1~stretch1" | The Debian package version to use, with = prepended. |
This Docker image can be built and customized by cloning the repo and running docker build
with the desired Dockerfile:
- Windows (
windows/Dockerfile
)
The following are the available build-time options. They can be set using the --build-arg
CLI argument, like so:
docker build --build-arg RESTY_VERSION="1.13.6.2" -f windows/Dockerfile .
Key | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
RESTY_INSTALL_BASE | "microsoft/windowsservercore" | The Windows Server Docker image name to download and install OpenResty with. |
RESTY_INSTALL_TAG | "ltsc2016" | The Windows Server Docker image name to download and install OpenResty with. |
RESTY_IMAGE_BASE | "microsoft/nanoserver" | The Windows Server Docker image name to build FROM for final image. |
RESTY_IMAGE_TAG | "sac2016" | The Windows Server Docker image tag to build FROM for final image. |
RESTY_VERSION | 1.15.8.2 | The version of OpenResty to use. |
You're very welcome to report bugs and give feedback as GitHub Issues:
https://github.com/openresty/docker-openresty/issues
docker-openresty
is licensed under the 2-clause BSD license.
Copyright (c) 2017-2019, Evan Wies [email protected].
This module is licensed under the terms of the BSD license.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
- Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
- Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.