matrix-alertbot/docker/README.md
2020-08-11 17:37:23 -07:00

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# Docker
The docker image will run my-project-name with a SQLite database and
end-to-end encryption dependencies included. For larger deployments, a
connection to a Postgres database backend is recommended.
## Setup
### The `/data` volume
The docker container expects the `config.yaml` file to exist at
`/data/config.yaml`. To easily configure this, it is recommended to create a
directory on your filesystem, and mount it as `/data` inside the container:
```
mkdir data
```
We'll later mount this directory into the container so that its contents
persist across container restarts.
### Creating a config file
Copy `sample.config.yaml` to a file named `config.yaml` inside of your newly
created `data` directory. Fill it out as you normally would, with a few minor
differences:
* The bot store directory should reside inside of the data directory so that it
is not wiped on container restart. Change it from the default to `/data/store`.
There is no need to create this directory yourself, my-project-name will
create it on startup if it does not exist.
* Choose whether you want to use SQLite or Postgres as your database backend. If
using SQLite, ensure your database file is stored inside the `/data` directory:
```
database: "sqlite:///data/bot.db"
```
If using postgres, point to your postgres instance instead:
```
database: "postgres://username:password@postgres/my-project-name?sslmode=disable"
```
**Note:** a postgres container is defined in `docker-compose.yaml` for your convenience.
If you would like to use it, set your database connection string to:
```
database: "postgres://postgres:somefancypassword@postgres/postgres?sslmode=disable"
```
The password `somefancypassword` is defined in the docker compose file.
Change any other config values as necessary. For instance, you may also want to
store log files in the `/data` directory.
## Running
First, create a volume for the data directory created in the above section:
```
docker volume create \
--opt type=none \
--opt o=bind \
--opt device="/path/to/data/dir" data_volume
```
If you want to use the postgres container defined in `docker-compose.yaml`, start that
first:
```
docker-compose up -d postgres
```
Start the bot with:
```
docker-compose up my-project-name
```
This will run the bot and log the output to the terminal. You can instead run
the container detached with the `-d` flag:
```
docker-compose up -d my-project-name
```
(Logs can later be accessed with the `docker logs` command).
This will use the `latest` tag from
[Docker Hub](https://hub.docker.com/somebody/my-project-name).
If you would rather run from the checked out code, you can use:
```
docker-compose up local-checkout
```
This will build an optimized, production-ready container. If you are developing
instead and would like a development container for testing local changes, use
the `start-dev.sh` script and consult [CONTRIBUTING.md](../CONTRIBUTING.md).
**Note:** If you are trying to connect to a Synapse instance running on the
host, you need to allow the IP address of the docker container to connect. This
is controlled by `bind_addresses` in the `listeners` section of Synapse's
config. If present, either add the docker internal IP address to the list, or
remove the option altogether to allow all addresses.
## Updating
To update the container, navigate to the bot's `docker` directory and run:
```
docker-compose pull my-project-name
```
Then restart the bot.
## Systemd
A systemd service file is provided for your convenience at
[my-project-name.service](my-project-name.service). The service uses
`docker-compose` to start and stop the bot.
Copy the file to `/etc/systemd/system/my-project-name.service` and edit to
match your setup. You can then start the bot with:
```
systemctl start my-project-name
```
and stop it with:
```
systemctl stop my-project-name
```
To run the bot on system startup:
```
systemctl enable my-project-name
```
## Building the image
To build a production image from source, use the following `docker build` command
from the repo's root:
```
docker build -t somebody/my-project-name:latest -f docker/Dockerfile .
```