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docker-rocketchat

My docker-compose.yml file/setup to run Rocket.Chat in production. Optional containers for Hubot and a complete application monitoring stack available as well.

Installation

  1. Make sure you've installed Docker including docker-compose support.

  2. Clone this repository:

    git clone https://github.com/frdmn/docker-rocketchat /opt/docker/Rocket.Chat
    cd /opt/docker/Rocket.Chat
  3. Copy and adjust the default environment variables from .env.sample:

    cp .env.sample .env
    vi .env
  4. In case you want to use Traefik as reverse proxy with built-in LetsEncrypt TLS support:

    cp docker-compose.override.https+letsencrypt.yml docker-compose.override.yml
  5. Create and start up containers using docker-compose:

    docker-compose up -d
    
  6. Access your Rocket.Chat instance via http://${HOST_IP}:3000.

Usage

Choosing the right reverse proxy

To allow realtime scaling of Rocket.Chat application containers, we need a reverse proxy that supports Docker-based container load balancing. Traefik is the one that Rocket.Chat recommends for such purposes. Traefik supports LetsEncrypt out of the box, which can be used to automatically issue and configure a free SSL certificate for your Rocket.Chat server. If you rather want to use your own reverse proxy solution, take a look at the chapter below "External (Nginx, Apache, Caddy)".

Traefik (built-in)

If you decide for the built-in Traefik proxy, copy the docker-compose.override.https+letsencrypt.yml to docker-compose.override.yml. This will make Traefik listen on TCP 80 and 443 (default HTTP and HTTPS ports) while trying to request a certificate for the hostname in question ($ROCKETCHAT_HOST).

External (Nginx, Apache, Caddy)

If you rather want to use your own reverse proxy, like Nginx, Apache or Caddy, you can use skip the inclusion of the override file (docker-compose.override.https+letsencrypt.yml) and use just the regular docker-compose.yml. This makes Traefik listen only on the HTTP port specified via ${ROCKETCHAT_PORT} (3000 by default, can be changed by adjusting accordingly in the .env file).

Upgrade to a new Rocket.Chat version

To update your Rocket.Chat server you simply need to make sure the docker-compose.yml reflects the version you're trying to update to (*), pull the new image from Docker hub, stop and destroy your existing application container and recreate them:

git pull
docker-compose up -d rocketchat

(* I will update this (git tracked) docker-compose.yml file according to new Rocket.Chat releases.)

Scaling in case of performance issues

This service file supports the docker-compose builtin scaling. For example to add 3 additional application containers you can simply invoke:

$ docker-compose up -d --scale rocketchat=4
Starting 185_docker-rocketchat_traefik_1            ... done
Starting 185_docker-rocketchat_mongo_1              ... done
Starting 185_docker-rocketchat_mongo-init-replica_1 ... done
Starting 185_docker-rocketchat_rocketchat_1         ... done
Creating 185_docker-rocketchat_rocketchat_2         ... done
Creating 185_docker-rocketchat_rocketchat_3         ... done
Creating 185_docker-rocketchat_rocketchat_4         ... done

Last but not least restart traefik (the load balancer) to make sure it knows about the newly added application containers:

$ docker-compose restart traefik

MongoDB

Backup and restore

Create a backup

You can use the provided backup script (./scripts/export-mongo-dump.sh) to export (and compress if passing GZIP environment variable) your MongoDB:

$ GZIP=true ./scripts/export-mongo-dump.sh

You can also make use of the following environment variables:

  • MONGO_CONTAINER: The exact name of the mongo container (defaults to mongo)
  • GZIP: Set to true if you want to compress your export
$ MONGO_CONTAINER=mongo \
  GZIP=true \
  ./scripts/export-mongo-dump.sh

The backups will be written to the ./data/backups directory.

Restore a backup dump

To restore a backup dump, pick or place one in data/backups and run the following script:

$ IMPORTFILE=<FILENAME> \
  GZIP=true \
  ./scripts/import-mongo-dump.sh

You can also make use of the following environment variables:

  • IMPORTFILE: The filename of the dump that you want to import
  • GZIP: Set to true if you want to compress your export

Monitoring

If you want to monitor Rocket.Chat on application level, you can make use of the preconfigured stack from the docker-compose.monitoring.yml file. To spin up the necessary containers (Grafana, Prometheus, cAdvisor and node-exporter), take a look into the Rocket.Chat.Metrics repository:

https://github.com/RocketChat/Rocket.Chat.Metrics

Troubleshooting

Error: $MONGO_OPLOG_URL must be set to the 'local' database of a Mongo replica set

This message will be thrown by the application container, if you initially start up (and create) the containers but the replica set was not yet fully configured. Just wait a bit until the replica set was setup in the background. The application will retry the connection periodically and will succeed once the replica set is up.

MongoError: not master and slaveOk=false

The initial database seed is probably not yet fully imported into your MongoDB. As above, wait a bit until it's processed in the background.

Contributing

  1. Fork it

  2. Create your feature branch:

    git checkout -b feature/my-new-feature
  3. Commit your changes:

    git commit -am 'Add some feature'
  4. Push to the branch:

    git push origin feature/my-new-feature
  5. Submit a pull request

Requirements / Dependencies

  • Docker

Version

1.0.0

License

MIT

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🚢📦My `docker-compose.yml` file/setup to run Rocket.Chat in production

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