atuin/docs/docker.md
Klas Mellbourn f946644ceb
Add kubernetes instructions and manifests (#427)
* add kubernetes instructions

* minor wording improvements

* better password instructions

* add information about changed port

* improved grammar

* Separate docker and k8s docs

Add k8s folder for kubernetes configs
2022-06-26 18:40:36 +00:00

91 lines
1.9 KiB
Markdown

## Docker
There is a supplied docker image to make deploying a server as a container easier.
```sh
docker run -d -v "$USER/.config/atuin:/config" ghcr.io/ellie/atuin:latest server start
```
## Docker Compose
Using the already build docker image hosting your own Atuin can be done using the supplied docker-compose file.
Create a `.env` file next to `docker-compose.yml` with contents like this:
```
ATUIN_DB_USERNAME=atuin
# Choose your own secure password
ATUIN_DB_PASSWORD=really-insecure
```
Create a `docker-compose.yml`:
```yaml
version: '3.5'
services:
atuin:
restart: always
image: ghcr.io/ellie/atuin:main
command: server start
volumes:
- "./config:/config"
links:
- postgresql:db
ports:
- 8888:8888
environment:
ATUIN_HOST: "0.0.0.0"
ATUIN_OPEN_REGISTRATION: "true"
ATUIN_DB_URI: postgres://$ATUIN_DB_USERNAME:$ATUIN_DB_PASSWORD@db/atuin
postgresql:
image: postgres:14
restart: unless-stopped
volumes: # Don't remove permanent storage for index database files!
- "./database:/var/lib/postgresql/data/"
environment:
POSTGRES_USER: $ATUIN_DB_USERNAME
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: $ATUIN_DB_PASSWORD
POSTGRES_DB: atuin
```
Start the services using `docker-compose`:
```sh
docker-compose up -d
```
### Using systemd to manage your atuin server
The following `systemd` unit file to manage your `docker-compose` managed service:
```
[Unit]
Description=Docker Compose Atuin Service
Requires=docker.service
After=docker.service
[Service]
# Where the docker-compose file is located
WorkingDirectory=/srv/atuin-server
ExecStart=/usr/bin/docker-compose up
ExecStop=/usr/bin/docker-compose down
TimeoutStartSec=0
Restart=on-failure
StartLimitBurst=3
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
```
Start and enable the service with:
```sh
systemctl enable --now atuin
```
Check if its running with:
```sh
systemctl status atuin
```