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What is XWiki

XWiki is a free wiki software platform written in Java with a design emphasis on extensibility. XWiki is an enterprise wiki. It includes WYSIWYG editing, OpenDocument based document import/export, semantic annotations and tagging, and advanced permissions management.

As an application wiki, XWiki allows for the storing of structured data and the execution of server side script within the wiki interface. Scripting languages including Velocity, Groovy, Python, Ruby and PHP can be written directly into wiki pages using wiki macros. User-created data structures can be defined in wiki documents and instances of those structures can be attached to wiki documents, stored in a database, and queried using either Hibernate query language or XWiki's own query language.

XWiki.org's extension wiki is home to XWiki extensions ranging from code snippets which can be pasted into wiki pages to loadable core modules. Many of XWiki Enterprise's features are provided by extensions which are bundled with it.

logo

Introduction

The goal is to provide a production-ready XWiki system running in Docker. This is why:

  • The OS is based on Debian and not on some smaller-footprint distribution like Alpine
  • Several containers are used with Docker Compose: one for the DB and another for XWiki + Servlet container. This allows the ability to run them on different machines for example.

How to use this image

You should first install Docker on your machine.

Then there are several options:

  1. Pull the xwiki image from DockerHub.
  2. Get the sources of this project and build them.

Pulling existing image

You need to run 2 containers:

  • One for the XWiki image
  • One for the database image to which XWiki connects to

Using docker run

Start by creating a dedicated docker network:

docker network create -d bridge xwiki-nw

Then run a container for the database and make sure it's configured to use an UTF8 encoding. The following databases are supported out of the box:

  • MySQL
  • PostgreSQL

Starting MySQL

The command below will also configure the MySQL container to save its data on your localhost in a /my/own/mysql directory:

docker run --net=xwiki-nw --name mysql-xwiki -v /my/own/mysql:/var/lib/mysql -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=xwiki -e MYSQL_USER=xwiki -e MYSQL_PASSWORD=xwiki -e MYSQL_DATABASE=xwiki -d mysql:5.7 --character-set-server=utf8 --collation-server=utf8_bin --explicit-defaults-for-timestamp=1

You should adapt the command line to use the passwords that you wish for the MySQL root password and for the xwiki user password.

Starting PostgreSQL

The command below will also configure the PostgreSQL container to save its data on your localhost in a /my/own/postgres directory:

docker run --net=xwiki-nw --name postgres-xwiki -v /my/own/postgres:/var/lib/postgresql/data -e POSTGRES_ROOT_PASSWORD=xwiki -e POSTGRES_USER=xwiki -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=xwiki -e POSTGRES_DB=xwiki -e POSTGRES_INITDB_ARGS="--encoding=UTF8" -d postgres:9.5

You should adapt the command line to use the passwords that you wish for the PostgreSQL root password and for the xwiki user password.

Starting XWiki

Then run XWiki in another container by issuing one of the following command.

For MySQL:

docker run --net=xwiki-nw --name xwiki -p 8080:8080 -v /my/own/xwiki:/usr/local/xwiki -e DB_USER=xwiki -e DB_PASSWORD=xwiki -e DB_DATABASE=xwiki -e DB_HOST=mysql-xwiki xwiki:mysql-tomcat

For PostgreSQL:

docker run --net=xwiki-nw --name xwiki -p 8080:8080 -v /my/own/xwiki:/usr/local/xwiki -e DB_USER=xwiki -e DB_PASSWORD=xwiki -e DB_DATABASE=xwiki -e DB_HOST=postgres-xwiki xwiki:postgres-tomcat

Be careful to use the same DB username, password and database names that you've used on the first command to start the DB container. Also, please don't forget to add a -e DB_HOST= environment variable with the name of the previously created DB container so that XWiki knows where its database is.

At this point, XWiki should start in interactive blocking mode, allowing you to see logs in the console. Should you wish to run it in "detached mode", just add a "-d" flag in the previous command.

docker run -d --net=xwiki-nw ...

Using docker-compose

Another solution is to use the Docker Compose files we provide.

For MySQL

  • wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xwiki-contrib/docker-xwiki/master/10/mysql-tomcat/mysql/xwiki.cnf: This will download the MySQL configuration (UTF8, etc)
    • If you don't have wget or prefer to use curl: curl -fSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xwiki-contrib/docker-xwiki/master/10/mysql-tomcat/mysql/xwiki.cnf -o xwiki.cnf
  • wget -O docker-compose.yml https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xwiki-contrib/docker-xwiki/master/docker-compose-mysql.yml
    • If you don't have wget or prefer to use curl: curl -fSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xwiki-contrib/docker-xwiki/master/docker-compose-mysql.yml -o docker-compose.yml
  • You can edit the compose file retrieved to change the default username/password and other environment variables.
  • docker-compose up

For reference here's a minimal Docker Compose file using MySQL that you could use as an example (full example here):

version: '2'
networks:
  bridge:
    driver: bridge
services:
  web:
    image: "xwiki:mysql-tomcat"
    container_name: xwiki-mysql-tomcat-web
    depends_on:
      - db
    ports:
      - "8080:8080"
    environment:
      - DB_USER=xwiki
      - DB_PASSWORD=xwiki
      - DB_HOST=xwiki-mysql-db
    volumes:
      - xwiki-data:/usr/local/xwiki
    networks:
      - bridge
  db:
    image: "mysql:5.7"
    container_name: xwiki-mysql-db
    volumes:
      - ./xwiki.cnf:/etc/mysql/conf.d/xwiki.cnf
      - mysql-data:/var/lib/mysql
    environment:
      - MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=xwiki
      - MYSQL_USER=xwiki
      - MYSQL_PASSWORD=xwiki
      - MYSQL_DATABASE=xwiki
    networks:
      - bridge
volumes:
  mysql-data: {}
  xwiki-data: {}

For PostgreSQL

  • wget -O docker-compose.yml https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xwiki-contrib/docker-xwiki/master/docker-compose-postgres.yml
    • If you don't have wget or prefer to use curl: curl -fSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xwiki-contrib/docker-xwiki/master/docker-compose-postgres.yml -o docker-compose.yml
  • You can edit the compose file retrieved to change the default username/password and other environment variables.
  • docker-compose up

For reference here's a minimal Docker Compose file using PostgreSQL that you could use as an example (full example here):

version: '2'
networks:
  bridge:
    driver: bridge
services:
  web:
    image: "xwiki:postgres-tomcat"
    container_name: xwiki-postgres-tomcat-web
    depends_on:
      - db
    ports:
      - "8080:8080"
    environment:
      - DB_USER=xwiki
      - DB_PASSWORD=xwiki
      - DB_HOST=xwiki-postgres-db
    volumes:
      - xwiki-data:/usr/local/xwiki
    networks:
      - bridge
  db:
    image: "postgres:9.5"
    container_name: xwiki-postgres-db
    volumes:
      - postgres-data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
    environment:
      - POSTGRES_ROOT_PASSWORD=xwiki
      - POSTGRES_PASSWORD=xwiki
      - POSTGRES_USER=xwiki
      - POSTGRES_DB=xwiki
      - POSTGRES_INITDB_ARGS="--encoding=UTF8"
    networks:
      - bridge
volumes:
  postgres-data: {}
  xwiki-data: {}

Using Docker Swarm

Here are some examples of using this image with Docker Swarm. These examples leverage additional features of Docker Swarm such as Docker secrets, and Docker configs. As such, these examples require Docker to be in swarm mode.

You can read more about these features and Docker swarm mode here:

MySQL Example

This example presupposes the existence of the Docker secrets xwiki-db-username, xwiki-db-password and xwiki-db-root-password, and the Docker config xwiki-mysql-config.

You can create these secrets and configs with the following:

  • echo ${MY_XWIKI_USER:-xwiki} | docker secret create xwiki-db-username -
  • echo $(cat /dev/urandom | tr -dc 'a-zA-Z0-9' | fold -w 16 | head -n 1) | docker secret create xwiki-db-password -
  • echo $(cat /dev/urandom | tr -dc 'a-zA-Z0-9' | fold -w 16 | head -n 1) | docker secret create xwiki-db-root-password -
  • docker config create xwiki-mysql-config /path/to/mysql/xwiki.cnf

To deploy this example, save the following YAML as xwiki-stack.yaml, then run:

  • docker stack deploy -c xwiki-stack.yaml xwiki
version: '3.3'
services:
  web:
    image: "xwiki:mysql-tomcat"
    ports:
      - "8080:8080"
    environment:
      - DB_USER_FILE=/run/secrets/xwiki-db-username
      - DB_PASSWORD_FILE=/run/secrets/xwiki-db-password
      - DB_DATABASE=xwiki
      - DB_HOST=db
    volumes:
      - xwiki-data:/usr/local/xwiki
    secrets:
      - xwiki-db-username
      - xwiki-db-password
  db:
    image: "mysql:5.7"
    volumes:
      - mysql-data:/var/lib/mysql
    environment:
      - MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=/run/secrets/xwiki-db-root-password
      - MYSQL_USER_FILE=/run/secrets/xwiki-db-username
      - MYSQL_PASSWORD_FILE=/run/secrets/xwiki-db-password
      - MYSQL_DATABASE=xwiki
    secrets:
      - xwiki-db-username
      - xwiki-db-password
      - xwiki-db-root-password
    configs: 
      - source: mysql-config
        target: /etc/mysql/conf.d/xwiki.cnf
volumes:
  mysql-data:
  xwiki-data:
secrets:
  xwiki-db-username:
    external:
      name: xwiki-db-username
  xwiki-db-password:
    external:
      name: xwiki-db-password
  xwiki-db-root-password:
    external:
      name: xwiki-db-root-password
configs:
  mysql-config:
    external:
      name: xwiki-mysql-config

PostgreSQL Example

This example presupposes the existence of the Docker secrets xwiki-db-username, xwiki-db-password, and xwiki-db-root-password.

You can create these secrets with the following:

  • echo ${MY_XWIKI_USER:-xwiki} | docker secret create xwiki-db-username -
  • echo $(cat /dev/urandom | tr -dc 'a-zA-Z0-9' | fold -w 16 | head -n 1) | docker secret create xwiki-db-password -
  • echo $(cat /dev/urandom | tr -dc 'a-zA-Z0-9' | fold -w 16 | head -n 1) | docker secret create xwiki-db-root-password -

To deploy this example, save the following YAML as xwiki-stack.yaml then run:

  • docker stack deploy -c xwiki-stack.yaml xwiki
version: '3.3'
services:
  web:
    image: "xwiki:mysql-postgres"
    ports:
      - "8080:8080"
    environment:
      - DB_USER_FILE=/run/secrets/xwiki-db-username
      - DB_PASSWORD_FILE=/run/secrets/xwiki-db-password
      - DB_DATABASE=xwiki
      - DB_HOST=db
    volumes:
      - xwiki-data:/usr/local/xwiki
    secrets:
      - xwiki-db-username
      - xwiki-db-password
  db:
    image: "postgres:9.5"
    volumes:
      - postgres-data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
    environment:
      - POSTGRES_ROOT_PASSWORD_FILE=/run/secrets/xwiki-db-root-password
      - POSTGRES_USER_FILE=/run/secrets/xwiki-db-username
      - POSTGRES_PASSWORD_FILE=/run/secrets/xwiki-db-password
      - POSTGRES_DB=xwiki
    secrets:
      - xwiki-db-username
      - xwiki-db-password
      - xwiki-db-root-password
volumes:
  postgres-data:
  xwiki-data:
secrets:
  xwiki-db-username:
    external:
      name: xwiki-db-username
  xwiki-db-password:
    external:
      name: xwiki-db-password
  xwiki-db-root-password:
    external:
      name: xwiki-db-root-password

Using an external Solr service

From the XWiki Solr Search API documentation:

By default XWiki ships with an embedded Solr. This is mostly for ease of use but the embedded instance is not really recommended by the Solr team so you might want to externalize it when starting to have a wiki with a lots of pages. Solr is using a lot of memory and a standalone Solr instance is generally better in term of speed than the embedded one. It should not be much noticeable in a small wiki but if you find yourself starting to have memory issues and slow search results you should probably try to install and setup an external instance of Solr using the guide.

Also the speed of the drive where the Solr index is located can be very important because Solr/Lucene is quite filesystem intensive. For example putting it in a SSD might give a noticeable boost.

You can also find more Solr-specific performance details on https://wiki.apache.org/solr/SolrPerformanceProblems. Standalone Solr also comes with a very nice UI, along with monitoring and test tools.

This image provides the configuration parameters INDEX_HOST and INDEX_PORT which are used to configure xwiki.properties with:

solr.type=remote  
solr.remote.url=http://$INDEX_HOST:$INDEX_PORT/solr/xwiki

Preparing Solr container

The simplest way to create an external Solr service is using the official Solr image.

  • Select the appropriate XWiki Solr configuration JAR from here (Note: it's usually better to synchronize it with your version of XWiki)
  • Place this JAR in a directory along side solr-init.sh that you can fetch from the docker-xwiki repository
  • Ensure that this directory is owned by the Solr user and group chown -R 8983:8983 /path/to/solr/init/directory
  • Launch the Solr container and mount this directory at /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d
  • This will execute solr-init.sh on container startup and prepare the XWiki core with the contents from the given JAR
  • If you want to persist the Solr index outside of the container with a bind mount, make sure that that directory is owned by the Solr user and group chown 8983:8983 /my/own/solr

Docker run example

Start your chosen database container normally using the docker run command above, this example happens to assume MySQL was chosen.

The command below will configure the Solr container to initialize based on the contents of /path/to/solr/init/directory/ and save its data on the host in a /my/own/solr directory:

docker run \
  --net=xwiki-nw \
  --name solr-xwiki \
  -v /path/to/solr/init/directory:/docker-entrypoint-initdb.d \
  -v /my/own/solr:/opt/solr/server/solr/xwiki \
  -d solr:7.2

Then start the XWiki container, the below command is nearly identical to that specified in the Starting XWiki section above, except that it includes the -e INDEX_HOST= environment variable which specifies the hostname of the Solr container.

docker run \
  --net=xwiki-nw \
  --name xwiki \
  -p 8080:8080 \
  -v /my/own/xwiki:/usr/local/xwiki \
  -e DB_USER=xwiki \
  -e DB_PASSWORD=xwiki \
  -e DB_DATABASE=xwiki \
  -e DB_HOST=mysql-xwiki \
  -e INDEX_HOST=solr-xwiki \
  -d xwiki:mysql-tomcat

Docker Compose example

The below compose file assumes that ./solr contains solr-init.sh and the configuration JAR file.

version: '2'
networks:
  bridge:
    driver: bridge
services:
  web:
    image: "xwiki:mysql-tomcat"
    container_name: xwiki-web
    depends_on:
      - db
      - index
    ports:
      - "8080:8080"
    environment:
      - XWIKI_VERSION=xwiki
      - DB_USER=xwiki
      - DB_PASSWORD=xwiki
      - DB_DATABASE=xwiki
      - DB_HOST=xwiki-db
      - INDEX_HOST=xwiki-index
    volumes:
      - xwiki-data:/usr/local/xwiki
    networks:
      - bridge
  db:
    image: "mysql:5.7"
    container_name: xwiki-db
    volumes:
      - ./mysql/xwiki.cnf:/etc/mysql/conf.d/xwiki.cnf
      - mysql-data:/var/lib/mysql
    environment:
      - MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=xwiki
      - MYSQL_USER=xwiki
      - MYSQL_PASSWORD=xwiki
      - MYSQL_DATABASE=xwiki
    networks:
      - bridge
  index:
    image: "solr:7.2"
    container_name: xwiki-index
    volumes:
      - ./solr:/docker-entrypoint-initdb.d
      - solr-data:/opt/solr/server/solr
    networks:
      - bridge
volumes:
  mysql-data: {}
  xwiki-data: {}
  solr-data: {}

Building

This allows you to rebuild the XWiki docker image locally. Here are the steps:

  • Install Git and run git clone https://github.com/xwiki-contrib/docker-xwiki.git or download the sources from the GitHub UI. Then go to the directory corresponding to the docker tag you wish to use. For example: cd 8/mysql-tomcat
    • The 8/mysql-tomcat directory will get you the latest released XWiki version of the 8.x cycle running on Tomcat and for MySQL.
    • The 8/postgres-tomcat directory will get you the latest released XWiki version of the 8.x cycle running on Tomcat and for MySQL.
    • The 9/mysql-tomcat directory will get you the latest released XWiki version of the 9.x cycle running on Tomcat and for MySQL.
    • etc.
  • Run docker-compose up
  • Start a browser and point it to http://localhost:8080

Note that if you want to set a custom version of XWiki you can edit the .env file and set the values you need in there. It's also possible to override them on the command line with docker-compose run -e "XWIKI_VERSION=8.4.4".

Note that docker-compose up will automatically build the XWiki image on the first run. If you need to rebuild it you can issue docker-compose up --build. You can also build the image with docker build . -t xwiki-mysql-tomcat:latest for example.

You can also just build the image by issuing docker build -t xwiki . and then use the instructions from above to start XWiki and the database using docker run ....

Upgrading XWiki

You've installed an XWiki docker image and used it and now comes the time when you'd like to upgrade XWiki to a newer version.

If you've followed the instructions above you've mapped the XWiki permanent directory to a local directory on your host.

Thus all you need to do is to execute the installation instructions above as if you were installing a new version of the XWiki docker image.

Then you need to stop your running XWiki container. You should keep your DB container running. Then all you have to do is start a new container as described above, using the new XWiki docker image.

Note that your current XWiki configuration files (xwiki.cfg, xwiki.properties and hibernate.cfg.xml) will be preserved.

Details for the xwiki image

Configuration Options

The first time you create a container out of the xwiki image, a shell script (/usr/local/bin/docker-entrypoint.sh) is executed in the container to setup some configuration. The following environment variables can be passed:

  • DB_USER: The user name used by XWiki to read/write to the DB.
  • DB_PASSWORD: The user password used by XWiki to read/write to the DB.
  • DB_DATABASE: The name of the XWiki database to use/create.
  • DB_HOST: The name of the host (or docker container) containing the database. Default is "db".
  • INDEX_HOST: The hostname of an externally configured Solr instance. Defaults to "localhost", and configures an embedded Solr instance.
  • INDEX_PORT: The port used by an externally configured Solr instance. Defaults to 8983.

In order to support Docker secrets, these configuration values can also be given to the container as files containing that value.

  • DB_USER_FILE: The location, inside the container, of a file containing the value for DB_USER
  • DB_PASSWORD_FILE: The location, inside the container, of a file containing the value for DB_PASSWORD
  • DB_DATABASE_FILE: The location, inside the container, of a file containing the value for DB_DATABASE
  • DB_HOST_FILE: The location, inside the container, of a file containing the value for DB_HOST
  • INDEX_HOST_FILE: The location, inside the container, of a file containing the value for INDEX_HOST
  • INDEX_PORT_FILE: The location, inside the container, of a file containing the value for INDEX_PORT

Note: For each configuration value, the normal environment variable and _FILE environment variable are mutually exclusive. Providing values for both variables will result in an error.

The main XWiki configuration files (xwiki.cfg, xwiki.properties and hibernate.cfg.xml) are available in the mapped local directory for the permanent directory on your host.

If you need to perform some advanced configuration, you can execute another container and attach to the running XWiki container by issuing (but note that these won't be saved if you remove the container):

docker exec -it <xwiki container id> bash -l

Passing JVM options

It's possible to pass JVM options to Tomcat by defining the JAVA_OPTS environment property.

For example to debug XWiki, you could use:

docker run --net=xwiki-nw --name xwiki -p 8080:8080 -v xwiki:/usr/local/xwiki -e DB_USER=xwiki -e DB_PASSWORD=xwiki -e DB_DATABASE=xwiki -e DB_HOST=mysql-xwiki -e JAVA_OPTS="-Xdebug -Xnoagent -Djava.compiler=NONE -Xrunjdwp:transport=dt_socket,server=y,suspend=y,address=5005" -p 5005:5005 xwiki

Notice the mapping of the port with p 5005:5005 which expose the port and thus allows you to debug XWiki from within your IDE for example.

Miscellaneous

Volumes:

If you don't map any volume when using docker run or if you use docker-compose then Docker will create some internal volumes attached to your containers as follows.

  • Two volumes are created:

    • A volume named <prefix>_mysql-data or <prefix>_postgres-data that contains the database data.
    • A volume named <prefix>_xwiki-data that contains XWiki's permanent directory.
  • To find out where those volumes are located on your local host machine you can inspect them with docker volume inspect <volume name>. To find the volume name, you can list all volumes with docker volume ls.

  • Note that on Mac OSX, Docker runs inside the xhyve VM and thus the paths you get when inspecting the volumes are relative to this. Thus, you need to get into that VM if you need to access the volume data.

MySQL:

  • To issue some mysql commands:
    • Find the container id with docker ps
    • Execute bash in the mysql container: docker exec -it <containerid> bash -l
    • Once inside the mysql container execute the mysql command: mysql --user=xwiki --password=xwiki

License

XWiki is licensed under the LGPL 2.1.

The Dockerfile repository is also licensed under the LGPL 2.1.

Support

Contribute

  • If you wish to help out on the code, please send Pull Requests on XWiki Docker GitHub project
  • Note that changes need to be merged to all other branches where they make sense and if they make sense for existing tags, those tags must be deleted and recreated.
  • In addition, whenever a branch or tag is modified, a Pull Request on the DockerHub XWiki official image must be made

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