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LogicalDOC Enterprise Edition

Official Docker Image for LogicalDOC Enterprise Edition - https://www.logicaldoc.com

This Dockerfile is a published build on Docker Hub.

Note: This image requires to be connected to an external database

What is LogicalDOC ?

LogicalDOC is a flexible and highly performant Document Management System platform By leveraging on the best-of-breed Java frameworks, it creates a flexible and powerful document management platform, which thanks to the most advanced presentation technology (Google GWT), is able to meet the needs of usability and more demanding management. LogicalDOC is both document management and collaboration system. The software is loaded with many functions and allows organizing, index, retrieving, controlling and distributing important business documents securely and safely for any organization and individual.

LogicalDOC

Your UserNo

You have to pass your activation code(the UserNo) when you launch this image. If you need an activation code, you can get one delivered to your email by filling-out the form at https://www.logicaldoc.com/try

Start a LogicalDOC instance linked to a MySQL container

  1. Run the MySQL container
docker run -d --name=logicaldoc-db -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=mypassword -e MYSQL_DATABASE=logicaldoc -e MYSQL_USER=ldoc -e MYSQL_PASSWORD=changeme mysql:8.0 --default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password
  1. Run the LogicalDOC container
docker run -d -p 8080:8080 -p 8022:22 -e LDOC_USERNO=<your userno> --link logicaldoc-db logicaldoc/logicaldoc

This image includes EXPOSE 8080 (the logicaldoc port). The default LogicalDOC configuration is applied.

Then, access it via http://localhost:8080 or http://host-ip:8080 in a browser. Default User and Password are admin / admin.

Notes: In the most recent versions of MySQL it is necessary to enable native authentication, otherwise LogicalDOC will not be able to connect. To do this, simply add the default-authentication-plugin command line argument to the container launch string e.g.:

docker run -d --name=logicaldoc-db -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=mypassword -e MYSQL_DATABASE=logicaldoc -e MYSQL_USER=ldoc -e MYSQL_PASSWORD=changeme mysql:8.0.23 --default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password 

or with the latest MySQL 8 image

docker run -d --name=logicaldoc-db -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=mypassword -e MYSQL_DATABASE=logicaldoc -e MYSQL_USER=ldoc -e MYSQL_PASSWORD=changeme mysql:latest --default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password

Start a LogicalDOC with some settings

docker run -d -p 8080:8080 -p 8022:22 -e LDOC_USERNO=<your userno> -e LDOC_MEMORY=4000 --link logicaldoc-db logicaldoc/logicaldoc

This will run the same image as above but with 4000 MB memory allocated to LogicalDOC.

Then, access it via http://localhost:8080 or http://host-ip:8080 in a browser.

If you'd like to use an external database instead of a linked mysql-ld container, specify the hostname with DB_HOST and port with DB_PORT along with database name DB_NAME, the password in DB_PASSWORD and the username in DB_USER (if it is something other than ldoc):

$ docker run -d -p 8080:8080 -p 8022:22 -e DB_HOST=10.1.2.3 -e DB_PORT=3306 -e DB_USER=... -e DB_PASSWORD=... logicaldoc/logicaldoc

Persistence of configuration and documents

Start as a daemon with attached volumes to persist the configuration and the documents

$ docker run -d --name logicaldoc --restart=always -p 8080:8080 -v logicaldoc-conf:/LogicalDOC/conf -v logicaldoc-repo:/LogicalDOC/repository --link logicaldoc-db logicaldoc/logicaldoc

All document files will be stored in the volume logicaldoc-repo, the configuration files insead are in volume ``logicaldoc-conf`

In this case the physical location of the logicaldoc-conf volume is /var/lib/docker/volumes/logicaldoc-conf/_data while the location of logicaldoc-repo volume is /var/lib/docker/volumes/logicaldoc-repo/_data

Environment Variables

The LogicalDOC image uses environment variables that allow to obtain a more specific setup.

  • LDOC_USERNO: your own license activation code (click here to get a fee trial code)
  • LDOC_MEMORY: memory allocated for LogicalDOC expressed in MB (default is 2000)
  • DB_ENGINE: the database type, possible vaues are: mysql (default), mssql, oracle, postgres, mariadb
  • DB_HOST: the database server host (default is 'logicaldoc-db')
  • DB_PORT: the database communication port (default is 3306)
  • DB_NAME: the database name (default is 'logicaldoc')
  • DB_INSTANCE: some databases require the instance specification
  • DB_USER: the database username (default is 'ldoc')
  • DB_PASSWORD: the database password (default is 'changeme')
  • DB_MANUALURL: must be true when using DB_URL (default is 'false')
  • DB_URL: the jdbc url to connect to the database (remember to set DB_MANUALURL to 'true')
  • SSH_USER: the username to connect via SSH (default is 'logicaldoc')
  • SSH_PASSWORD: the password to connect via SSH (default is 'changeme')

Stopping and starting the container

Assuming that you have assigned the "logicaldoc" alias to the container

To stop the container use:

$ docker stop logicaldoc

To start the container again:

$ docker start logicaldoc

Configuration

(You must have enabled data persistence with volume assignment)

To edit the settings file, check the physical location of the logicaldoc-conf volume using:

$ docker volume inspect logicaldoc-conf

Which should produce an output similar to this one:

    [
        {
            "Name": "logicaldoc-conf",
            "Driver": "local",
            "Mountpoint": "/var/lib/docker/volumes/logicaldoc-conf/_data",
            "Labels": null,
            "Scope": "local"
        }
    ]

In this case the physical location of the logicaldoc-conf volume is /var/lib/docker/volumes/logicaldoc-conf/_data.

Performing backups

To backup the existing data, check the physical location of the logicaldoc-conf and logicaldoc-repo volumes using:

$ docker volume inspect logicaldoc-conf

Which should produce an output similar to this one:

    [
        {
            "Name": "logicaldoc-conf",
            "Driver": "local",
            "Mountpoint": "/var/lib/docker/volumes/logicaldoc-conf/_data",
            "Labels": null,
            "Scope": "local"
        }
    ]
$ sudo tar -zcvf backup.tar.gz /var/lib/docker/volumes/logicaldoc-conf/_data /var/lib/docker/volumes/logicaldoc-repo/_data
$ sudo chown `whoami` backup.tar.gz

If an external PostgreSQL or MySQL database or database containers, these too need to be backed up using their respective procedures.

Restoring from a backup

Uncompress the backup archive in the original docker volume using:

$ sudo tar -xvzf backup.tar.gz -C /

Building the image

Clone the repository with:

$ git clone https://github.com/logicaldoc/docker.git

Change to the directory of the cloned repository:

$ cd docker

Execute Docker's build command:

$ docker build -t logicaldoc/logicaldoc .

Or using an apt cacher to speed up the build:

$ docker build -t logicaldoc/logicaldoc --build-arg APT_PROXY=172.18.0.1:3142 .

Replace the IP address 172.18.0.1 with the IP address of the Docker host used from which these commands are running.

Using Docker compose

To deploy a complete production stack using the included Docker compose file execute:

$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml up -d

This Docker compose file will provision 2 containers:

  • MySQL as the database
  • LogicalDOC using the above service container

To stop the stack use:

$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml stop

The stack will also create three volumes to store the data of each container. These are:

  • ldoc_conf - The LogicalDOC configuration container, normally called logicaldoc-conf when not using Docker compose.
  • ldoc_repository - The LogicalDOC DMS data container for documents and search indexes, normally called logicaldoc-repo when not using Docker compose.
  • ldoc_db - The database volume, in this case MySQL.

Stopping and starting with Docker compose

To stop the services use:

$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml stop

To start the services again:

$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml start

To remove the stopped containers:

$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml rm -v

Destroys the containers and all the created volumes:

$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml down -v

Docker compose examples

Some docker-compose examples are available in the repository of this container on GitHub https://github.com/logicaldoc/docker

Example stack.yml for logicaldoc:

version: "3.1"

services:

  logicaldoc:
    depends_on:
      - logicaldoc-db
    command: ["./wait-for-it.sh", "logicaldoc-db:3306", "-t", "30", "--", "/LogicalDOC/logicaldoc.sh", "run"]
    image: logicaldoc/logicaldoc
    ports:
      - 8080:8080
      - 8022:22
    environment:
      - LDOC_MEMORY=2000

  mysql-ld:
    image: mysql:8.0.28
    command: --default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password
    environment:
      - MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=example
      - MYSQL_DATABASE=logicaldoc
      - MYSQL_USER=ldoc
      - MYSQL_PASSWORD=changeme

Try in PWD

Run docker stack deploy -c stack.yml logicaldoc , wait for it to initialize completely, and visit http://swarm-ip:8080, http://localhost:8080, or http://host-ip:8080 (as appropriate).

Shell Access

For debugging and maintenance purposes you may want access the containers shell. If you are using Docker version 1.3.0 or higher you can access a running containers shell by starting bash using docker exec:

docker exec -it logicaldoc bash