Lychee-Docker
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Docker image for Lychee
Notice: Dockerhub repository has been migrated to lycheeorg/lychee
Make sure you update your docker-compose files accordingly
Table of Contents
- Image content
- Setup
- Quick Start
- Prerequisites
- Run with Docker
- Run with Docker Compose
- Available environment variables and defaults
- Advanced configuration
Image Content
This image features Lychee, nginx and PHP-FPM. The provided configuration (PHP, nginx...) follows Lychee's official recommendations.
The following tags are available :
latest: Latest Lychee releasev[NUMBER]: Stable version tag for a Lychee releasedev: Current master branch tag (Lychee operates on a stable master, so this should usually be safe)testing: Tag for testing new branches and pull requests. Designed for internal use by LycheeOrg.
Setup
Quick Start
To use the built-in SQLite support, no external dependencies are required. At its simplest, docker run -p 80 lycheeorg/lychee:dev will start Lychee listening on a random port on the local host.
For more runtime options, look below in Run with Docker and Available environment variables and defaults.
Prerequisites
To use this image with MySQL, MariaDB or PostgreSQL you will need a suitable database running externally. This may be through a Docker image, possibly in your docker-compose.yml.
- Create the db, username, password.
- Edit the environment variables (db credentials, language...) by :
- Supplying the environment variables via
docker run/docker-composeor - Creating a
.envfile with the appropriate info and mount it to/conf/.envor - Use the Lychee installer by passing
-e DB_CONNECTION=on the command line and connecting to the container with your browser
- Supplying the environment variables via
Run with Docker
Make sure that you link to the container running your database !!
The example below shows --net and --link for these purposes. --net connects to the name of the network your database is on and --link connects to the database container.
docker run -d \
--name=lychee \
-v /host_path/lychee/conf:/conf \
-v /host_path/lychee/uploads:/uploads \
-v /host_path/lychee/sym:/sym \
-e PUID=1000 \
-e PGID=1000 \
-e PHP_TZ=America/New_York \
-e TIMEZONE=America/New_York \
-e DB_CONNECTION=mysql \
-e DB_HOST=mariadb \
-e DB_PORT=3306 \
-e DB_DATABASE=lychee \
-e DB_USERNAME=user \
-e DB_PASSWORD=password \
-p 90:80 \
--net network_name \
--link db_name \
lycheeorg/lychee
Warning : if you use a MySQL database, make sure to use the mysql_native_password authentication plugin, either by using the --default-authentication-plugin option when starting mysql, or by running a query to enable the authentication plugin for the lychee user, e.g. :
alter user 'lychee' identified with mysql_native_password by '<your password>';
Run with Docker Compose
Change the environment variables in the provided example to reflect your database credentials.
Note that in order to avoid writing credentials directly into the file, you can create a db_secrets.env and use the env_file directive (see the docs).
Available environment variables and defaults
If you do not provide environment variables or .env file, the example .env file will be used with some values already set by default.
Some variables are specific to Docker, and the default values are :
PUID=1000PGID=1000USER=lycheePHP_TZ=UTCSTARTUP_DELAY=0
Advanced configuration
Note that nginx will accept by default images up to 100MB (client_max_body_size 100M) and that PHP parameters are overridden according to the recommendations of the Lychee FAQ.
You may still want to further customize PHP configuration. The first method is to mount a custom php.ini to /etc/php/8.1/fpm/php.ini when starting the container. However, this method is kind of brutal as it will override all parameters. It will also need to be remapped whenever an image is released with a new version of PHP.
Instead, we recommend to use the PHP_VALUE directive of PHP-FPM to override specific parameters. To do so, you will need to mount a custom nginx.conf in your container :
- Take the default.conf file as a base
- Find the line starting by
fastcgi_param PHP_VALUE [...] - Add a new line and set your new parameter
- Add or change any other parameters (e.g.
client_max_body_size) - Mount your new file to
/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
If you need to add (not change) nginx directives, files mounted in /etc/nginx/conf.d/ will be included in the http context.