This is a copy of https://github.com/jshimko/meteor-launchpad I changed only the debian version because of 404 at jessie-updates.
Add the following to a Dockerfile
in the root of your app:
FROM jshimko/meteor-launchpad:latest
Then you can build the image with:
docker build -t yourname/app .
Setting up a .dockerignore file
There are several parts of a Meteor development environment that you don't need to pass into a Docker build because a complete production build happens inside the container. For example, you don't need to pass in your node_modules
or the local build files and development database that live in .meteor/local
. To avoid copying all of these into the container, here's a recommended starting point for a .dockerignore
file to be put into the root of your app. Read more: https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#dockerignore-file
.git
.meteor/local
node_modules
Now you can run your container with the following command... (note that the app listens on port 3000 because it is run by a non-root user for security reasons and non-root users can't run processes on port 80)
docker run -d \
-e ROOT_URL=http://example.com \
-e MONGO_URL=mongodb://url \
-e MONGO_OPLOG_URL=mongodb://oplog_url \
-e MAIL_URL=smtp://mail_url.com \
-p 80:3000 \
yourname/app
If you need to force a delay in the startup of the Node process (for example, to wait for a database to be ready), you can set the STARTUP_DELAY
environment variable to any number of seconds. For example, to delay starting the app by 10 seconds, you would do this:
docker run -d \
-e ROOT_URL=http://example.com \
-e MONGO_URL=mongodb://url \
-e STARTUP_DELAY=10 \
-p 80:3000 \
yourname/app
Meteor Launchpad supports setting custom build options in one of two ways. You can either create a launchpad.conf config file in the root of your app or you can use Docker build args. The currently supported options are to install PhantomJS, GraphicsMagick, MongoDB, or any list of apt-get
dependencies (Meteor Launchpad is built on debian:jesse
).
If you choose to install Mongo, you can use it by not supplying a MONGO_URL
when you run your app container. The startup script will then start Mongo inside the container and tell your app to use it. If you do supply a MONGO_URL
, Mongo will not be started inside the container and the external database will be used instead.
Note that having Mongo in the same container as your app is just for convenience while testing/developing. In production, you should use a separate Mongo deployment or at least a separate Mongo container.
Here are examples of both methods of setting custom options for your build:
Option #1 - launchpad.conf
To use any of them, create a launchpad.conf
in the root of your app and add any of the following values.
# launchpad.conf
# Use apt-get to install any additional dependencies
# that you need before your building/running your app
# (default: undefined)
APT_GET_INSTALL="curl git wget"
# Install a custom Node version (default: latest 8.x)
NODE_VERSION=8.9.0
# Installs the latest version of each (default: all false)
INSTALL_MONGO=true
INSTALL_PHANTOMJS=true
INSTALL_GRAPHICSMAGICK=true
Option #2 - Docker Build Args
If you prefer not to have a config file in your project, your other option is to use the Docker --build-arg
flag. When you build your image, you can set any of the same values above as a build arg.
docker build \
--build-arg APT_GET_INSTALL="curl git wget" \
--build-arg INSTALL_MONGO=true \
--build-arg NODE_VERSION=8.9.0 \
-t myorg/myapp:latest .
You can provide your NPM auth token with the NPM_TOKEN
build arg.
docker build --build-arg NPM_TOKEN="<your token>" -t myorg/myapp:latest .
You can optionally avoid downloading Meteor every time when building regularly in development. Add the following to your Dockerfile instead...
FROM jshimko/meteor-launchpad:devbuild
This isn't recommended for your final production build because it creates a much larger image, but it's a bit of a time saver when you're building often in development. The first build you run will download/install Meteor and then every subsequent build will be able to skip that step and just build the app.
If you want to include custom settings (as you would via a settings.json file), you need to set the METEOR_SETTINGS environment variable:
docker run -d \
-e ROOT_URL=http://example.com \
-e MONGO_URL=mongodb://url \
-e MONGO_OPLOG_URL=mongodb://oplog_url \
-e MAIL_URL=smtp://mail_url.com \
-e METEOR_SETTINGS="$(cat settings.json)" \
-p 80:3000 \
yourname/app
Add a docker-compose.yml
to the root of your project with the following content and edit the app image name to match your build name. Everything else should work as-is.
# docker-compose.yml
app:
image: yourname/app
ports:
- "80:3000"
links:
- mongo
environment:
- ROOT_URL=http://example.com
- MONGO_URL=mongodb://mongo:27017/meteor
mongo:
image: mongo:latest
command: mongod --storageEngine=wiredTiger
And then start the app and database containers with...
docker-compose up -d
If you'd like to create a custom build for some reason, you can use the build.sh
script in the root of the project to run all of the necessary commands.
First, make any changes you want, then to create your custom build:
# builds as jshimko/meteor-launchpad:latest
./build.sh
MIT License
Copyright (c) 2017 Jeremy Shimko
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.