Compare commits

..

2 Commits

126 changed files with 937 additions and 1505 deletions
-20
View File
@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
# https://editorconfig.org
# Tip: to find files violating the rules set out here, run `docker run --rm --volume=$PWD:/check mstruebing/editorconfig-checker`
root = true
[*]
charset = utf-8
end_of_line = lf
indent_size = 4
indent_style = space
insert_final_newline = true
trim_trailing_whitespace = true
[*.yaml]
indent_size = 2
[*.yml]
indent_size = 2
-1
View File
@@ -31,7 +31,6 @@ updates:
- "/Containers/collabora"
- "/Containers/docker-socket-proxy"
- "/Containers/domaincheck"
- "/Containers/eurooffice"
- "/Containers/fulltextsearch"
- "/Containers/imaginary"
- "/Containers/mastercontainer"
-5
View File
@@ -3,8 +3,3 @@
-
- Before sending a pull request that fixes a security issue please report it via our HackerOne page (https://hackerone.com/nextcloud) following our security policy (https://nextcloud.com/security/). This allows us to coordinate the fix and release without potentially exposing all Nextcloud servers and users in the meantime.
-->
<!-- Please check the below checkmarks if applicable -->
- [ ] The PR was tested and verified that it works locally
- [ ] The PR was completely or partially created with AI
+1 -4
View File
@@ -10,16 +10,13 @@ on:
jobs:
release:
# Do not run this workflow on forked repositories, as they might not have the `gh-pages` branch created, or might
# want to use it for other purposes than publishing helm charts
if: github.repository == 'nextcloud/all-in-one'
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@de0fac2e4500dabe0009e67214ff5f5447ce83dd # v6.0.2
- name: Turnstyle
uses: softprops/turnstyle@e15e934b3f69ee283ba389ea05c8886baa656d93 # v2
uses: softprops/turnstyle@e565d2d86403c5d23533937e95980570545e5586 # v2
with:
continue-after-seconds: 180
env:
+1 -1
View File
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ jobs:
action:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: dessant/lock-threads@89ae32b08ed1a541efecbab17912962a5e38981c # v5
- uses: dessant/lock-threads@7266a7ce5c1df01b1c6db85bf8cd86c737dadbe7 # v5
with:
issue-inactive-days: '14'
process-only: 'issues'
+2 -2
View File
@@ -30,9 +30,9 @@ jobs:
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@de0fac2e4500dabe0009e67214ff5f5447ce83dd # v6.0.2
- uses: actions/setup-node@48b55a011bda9f5d6aeb4c2d9c7362e8dae4041e # v6
- uses: actions/setup-node@53b83947a5a98c8d113130e565377fae1a50d02f # v6
with:
node-version: 24.15.0
node-version: lts/*
- name: Install dependencies
run: cd php/tests && npm ci
@@ -15,9 +15,9 @@ jobs:
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@de0fac2e4500dabe0009e67214ff5f5447ce83dd # v6.0.2
- uses: actions/setup-node@48b55a011bda9f5d6aeb4c2d9c7362e8dae4041e # v6
- uses: actions/setup-node@53b83947a5a98c8d113130e565377fae1a50d02f # v6
with:
node-version: 24.15.0
node-version: lts/*
- name: Install dependencies
run: cd php/tests && npm ci
+3 -10
View File
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@
}
log {
level ERROR
level {$CADDY_LOG_LEVEL}
}
}
@@ -47,14 +47,7 @@ http://{$APACHE_HOST}.nextcloud-aio:23973, # For Collabora callback and WOPI req
uri strip_prefix /onlyoffice
reverse_proxy {$ONLYOFFICE_HOST}:80 {
header_up X-Forwarded-Host {http.request.hostport}/onlyoffice
}
}
# EuroOffice
route /eurooffice/* {
uri strip_prefix /eurooffice
reverse_proxy {$EUROOFFICE_HOST}:80 {
header_up X-Forwarded-Host {http.request.hostport}/eurooffice
header_up X-Forwarded-Proto https
}
}
@@ -85,7 +78,7 @@ http://{$APACHE_HOST}.nextcloud-aio:23973, # For Collabora callback and WOPI req
# TLS options
tls {
issuer acme {
profile tlsserver
profile shortlived
# Disable HTTP challenge because that would require port 80, which we don't get (it's exposed to the mastercontainer).
# This container by default only exposes port 443 if not configured otherwise via APACHE_PORT.
disable_http_challenge
+2 -3
View File
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
FROM caddy:2.11.4-alpine AS caddy
FROM caddy:2.11.2-alpine AS caddy
# From https://github.com/docker-library/httpd/blob/master/2.4/alpine/Dockerfile
FROM httpd:2.4.67-alpine3.23
FROM httpd:2.4.66-alpine3.23
COPY --from=caddy /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
@@ -103,7 +103,6 @@ CMD ["/usr/bin/supervisord", "-c", "/supervisord.conf"]
HEALTHCHECK CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Apache and Caddy for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="Apache HTTP server with Caddy for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
+35 -2
View File
@@ -9,6 +9,34 @@ Listen 8000
ErrorLogFormat "[%t] [%l] [%E] [client: %{X-Forwarded-For}i] [%M] [%{User-Agent}i]"
LogLevel ${AIO_LOG_LEVEL}
# KeepAlive On: allow the same TCP connection to carry multiple HTTP requests.
# Without this each asset (JS, CSS, image) would require a full TCP handshake,
# which is especially expensive on TLS connections and noticeably slows down
# Nextcloud's login page and file manager that load dozens of resources at once.
KeepAlive On
# KeepAliveTimeout: close an idle keep-alive connection after 5 seconds.
# A short timeout frees Apache worker threads quickly so they are available
# for new requests; 5 s is long enough to cover the gap between requests
# that a browser issues while rendering a page (typically < 1 s), yet short
# enough to avoid holding threads open for idle or slow clients.
KeepAliveTimeout 5
# MaxKeepAliveRequests: allow at most 500 requests per persistent connection.
# 100 (the Apache default) is too low for Nextcloud: the desktop and mobile
# sync clients issue many small API calls (PROPFIND, GET, PUT, checksums …)
# per sync cycle and routinely exceed 100 requests on a single connection.
# Hitting the limit forces a new TCP/TLS handshake, adding latency and CPU
# overhead. 500 gives sync clients enough headroom while still periodically
# recycling threads to contain per-process memory growth.
MaxKeepAliveRequests 500
# sendfile(2) is disabled because it bypasses Apache's output-filter chain: with
# it enabled, mod_brotli is silently skipped for static files (JS, CSS, SVG),
# negating the compression configured below. MMAP is also
# disabled because files can be replaced by Nextcloud at any time and mmap'd
# pages could serve stale data.
EnableSendfile Off
EnableMMAP Off
# PHP match
<FilesMatch "\.php$">
SetHandler "proxy:fcgi://${NEXTCLOUD_HOST}:9000"
@@ -17,12 +45,17 @@ Listen 8000
<Proxy "fcgi://${NEXTCLOUD_HOST}:9000" flushpackets=on>
</Proxy>
# Compress JS, CSS and SVG responses with Brotli.
# Compress JS, CSS and SVG responses with Brotli (quality 4 gives good
# compression with reasonable CPU cost; the default of 0 barely compresses).
# Other plain-text files are already compressed by Nextcloud itself.
# No deflate fallback is needed: every browser that Nextcloud supports
# (Chrome 49+, Firefox 44+, Safari 11+, Edge 15+ — all from 2016-2017)
# supports Brotli. Internet Explorer, the only browser that never gained
# Brotli support, was dropped by Nextcloud with NC15 (2019).
# Desktop and mobile sync clients never request JS/CSS/SVG assets.
<IfModule mod_brotli.c>
AddOutputFilterByType BROTLI_COMPRESS text/javascript application/javascript application/x-javascript text/css image/svg+xml
BrotliCompressionQuality 0
BrotliCompressionQuality 4
</IfModule>
# Nextcloud dir
+2
View File
@@ -9,6 +9,8 @@ if [ -z "$NC_DOMAIN" ]; then
exit 1
fi
CADDY_LOG_LEVEL="$(echo "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" | tr '[:lower:]' '[:upper:]')"
export CADDY_LOG_LEVEL
if [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" = 'debug' ]; then
export SUPERVISORD_STDOUT=/dev/stdout
else
+1 -1
View File
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ loglevel=%(ENV_AIO_LOG_LEVEL)s
stdout_logfile=%(ENV_SUPERVISORD_STDOUT)s
stderr_logfile=/dev/stderr
stderr_logfile_maxbytes=0
command=httpd -DFOREGROUND
command=apachectl -DFOREGROUND
[program:caddy]
stdout_logfile=/dev/stdout
+1 -3
View File
@@ -25,12 +25,10 @@ USER root
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Borgbackup for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="BorgBackup-based backup service for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
org.opencontainers.image.source="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
org.opencontainers.image.vendor="Nextcloud" \
org.opencontainers.image.documentation="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/readme.md"
ENV BORG_RETENTION_POLICY="--keep-within=7d --keep-weekly=4 --keep-monthly=6" \
AIO_LOG_LEVEL="warn"
ENV BORG_RETENTION_POLICY="--keep-within=7d --keep-weekly=4 --keep-monthly=6"
-1
View File
@@ -43,7 +43,6 @@ ENTRYPOINT ["/start.sh"]
CMD ["/usr/bin/supervisord", "-c", "/supervisord.conf"]
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="ClamAV for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="ClamAV antivirus scanner for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
-1
View File
@@ -13,7 +13,6 @@ USER 1001
HEALTHCHECK --start-period=60s --retries=9 CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Collabora Online for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="Collabora Online document editor from upstream for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
+1 -2
View File
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
# From a file located probably somewhere here: https://github.com/CollaboraOnline/online/blob/master/docker/from-packages/Dockerfile
FROM collabora/code:26.04.1.3.1
FROM collabora/code:25.04.9.4.1
USER root
ARG DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
@@ -13,7 +13,6 @@ USER 1001
HEALTHCHECK --start-period=60s --retries=9 CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Collabora for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="Collabora CODE document editor for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
-2
View File
@@ -6,8 +6,6 @@ fi
if [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" = "warn" ]; then
COLLABORA_LOG_LEVEL="warning"
elif [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" = "info" ]; then
COLLABORA_LOG_LEVEL="notice"
else
COLLABORA_LOG_LEVEL="$AIO_LOG_LEVEL"
fi
+1 -2
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
FROM haproxy:3.4.0-alpine
FROM haproxy:3.3.7-alpine
# hadolint ignore=DL3002
USER root
@@ -20,7 +20,6 @@ ENTRYPOINT ["/start.sh"]
HEALTHCHECK CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Docker Socket Proxy for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="HAProxy-based Docker socket proxy for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
-1
View File
@@ -19,7 +19,6 @@ ENTRYPOINT ["/start.sh"]
HEALTHCHECK CMD nc -z 127.0.0.1 $APACHE_PORT || exit 1
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Domain Check for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="Domain validation service for Nextcloud All-in-One setup" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
-17
View File
@@ -1,17 +0,0 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
FROM ghcr.io/euro-office/documentserver:v9.3.1-beta.1
# USER root is probably used
COPY --chmod=775 healthcheck.sh /healthcheck.sh
HEALTHCHECK --start-period=60s --retries=9 CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="EuroOffice for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="EuroOffice Document Server for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
org.opencontainers.image.source="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
org.opencontainers.image.vendor="Nextcloud" \
org.opencontainers.image.documentation="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/readme.md"
-7
View File
@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash
if [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" = 'debug' ]; then
set -x
fi
nc -z 127.0.0.1 80 || exit 1
+1 -2
View File
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
# Probably from here https://github.com/elastic/dockerfiles/blob/9.3/elasticsearch/Dockerfile
FROM elasticsearch:9.4.2
FROM elasticsearch:9.3.3
USER root
@@ -21,7 +21,6 @@ USER 1000:0
HEALTHCHECK --interval=10s --timeout=5s --start-period=1m --retries=5 CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Full Text Search for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="Elasticsearch-based full-text search for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
+1 -1
View File
@@ -4,4 +4,4 @@ if [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" = 'debug' ]; then
set -x
fi
curl -fs -u "elastic:$FULLTEXTSEARCH_PASSWORD" "http://127.0.0.1:9200/_cluster/health?filter_path=status" | grep -qE '"status":"(green|yellow)"' || exit 1
curl -fs "http://127.0.0.1:9200/_cluster/health?filter_path=status" | grep -qE '"status":"(green|yellow)"' || exit 1
+2 -3
View File
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
FROM golang:1.26.4-alpine3.23 AS go
FROM golang:1.26.2-alpine3.23 AS go
ENV IMAGINARY_HASH=6a274b488759a896aff02f52afee6e50b5e3a3ee
ENV IMAGINARY_HASH=6a274b488759a896aff02f52afee6e50b5e3a3ee
RUN set -ex; \
apk upgrade --no-cache -a; \
@@ -45,7 +45,6 @@ ENTRYPOINT ["/start.sh"]
HEALTHCHECK CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Imaginary for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="High-performance image processing service for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
+4 -5
View File
@@ -1,17 +1,17 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
# Docker CLI is a requirement
FROM docker:29.5.2-cli AS docker
FROM docker:29.4.1-cli AS docker
ARG CADDY_REMOTE_HOST_HASH=e80a9931765a8dbcbb47db415863387f0df0e1b3
ARG CADDY_REMOTE_HOST_HASH=b21775afa730ffb52a24ddff310c8a6d1fd37276
# Caddy is a requirement
FROM caddy:2.11.4-builder-alpine AS caddy
FROM caddy:2.11.2-builder-alpine AS caddy
RUN set -ex; \
xcaddy build --with github.com/muety/caddy-remote-host@"$CADDY_REMOTE_HOST_HASH"; \
/usr/bin/caddy list-modules
# From https://github.com/docker-library/php/blob/master/8.5/alpine3.23/fpm/Dockerfile
FROM php:8.5.6-fpm-alpine3.23
FROM php:8.5.5-fpm-alpine3.23
EXPOSE 80
EXPOSE 8080
@@ -107,7 +107,6 @@ LABEL org.opencontainers.image.title="Nextcloud All-in-One Mastercontainer" \
org.opencontainers.image.vendor="Nextcloud" \
org.opencontainers.image.documentation="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/readme.md" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
com.docker.compose.project="nextcloud-aio"
# hadolint ignore=DL3002
+1 -1
View File
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@
}
log {
level ERROR
level {$CADDY_LOG_LEVEL}
# We need to exclude the remote-host plugin from logging as it would spam the logs
# See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/pull/7006#issuecomment-4003238239
exclude http.matchers.remote_host
+3 -3
View File
@@ -18,9 +18,9 @@ header {
Referrer-Policy "no-referrer" # Tells the browser to never sent a Referer header. See https://developer.mozilla.org/de/docs/Web/HTTP/Reference/Headers/Referrer-Policy
X-Robots-Tag "noindex, nofollow" # Tells web crawlers to not index this page. See https://developer.mozilla.org/de/docs/Web/HTTP/Reference/Headers/X-Robots-Tag
Origin-Agent-Cluster "?1" # Isolates AIO from other same site pages. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Reference/Headers/Origin-Agent-Cluster
Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy "same-origin" # AIO does not use any popup, still we can isolate its BCG if it is opened as a pop up by another page. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Reference/Headers/Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy
Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy "require-corp" # Harder rules for cross origin embeds. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Reference/Headers/Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy
Cross-Origin-Resource-Policy "same-origin" # Only allow the same origin to load resources. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Guides/Cross-Origin_Resource_Policy
Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy "same-origin"; # AIO does not use any popup, still we can isolate its BCG if it is opened as a pop up by another page. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Reference/Headers/Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy
Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy "require-corp"; # Harder rules for cross origin embeds. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Reference/Headers/Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy
Cross-Origin-Resource-Policy "same-origin"; # Only allow the same origin to load resources. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Guides/Cross-Origin_Resource_Policy
# Permissions-Policy disables browser features that AIO does not use. Since there is no "deny all" option, all known features need to be listed explicitly. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Reference/Headers/Permissions-Policy
Permissions-Policy "accelerometer=(), ambient-light-sensor=(), aria-notify=(), attribution-reporting=(), autoplay=(), bluetooth=(), browsing-topics=(), camera=(), captured-surface-control=(), ch-ua-high-entropy-values=(), compute-pressure=(), cross-origin-isolated=(), deferred-fetch=(), deferred-fetch-minimal=(), display-capture=(), encrypted-media=(), fullscreen=(), gamepad=(), geolocation=(), gyroscope=(), hid=(), identity-credentials-get=(), idle-detection=(), local-fonts=(), local-network=(), local-network-access=(), loopback-network=(), magnetometer=(), microphone=(), midi=(), on-device-speech-recognition=(), otp-credentials=(), payment=(), picture-in-picture=(), private-state-token-issuance=(), private-state-token-redemption=(), publickey-credentials-create=(), publickey-credentials-get=(), screen-wake-lock=(), serial=(), storage-access=(), summarizer=(), usb=(), web-share=(), window-management=(), xr-spatial-tracking=()"
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@
}
log {
level ERROR
level {$CADDY_LOG_LEVEL}
# We need to exclude the remote-host plugin from logging as it would spam the logs
# See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/pull/7006#issuecomment-4003238239
exclude http.matchers.remote_host
+3 -1
View File
@@ -338,7 +338,7 @@ else
fi
# Log level logics
if [ -n "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" ] && ! echo "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" | grep -q "^debug$\|^info$\|^warn$\|^error$"; then
if [ -n "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" ] && ! grep -q "^debug$\|^info$\|^warn$\|^error$"; then
print_red "AIO_LOG_LEVEL must be one of 'debug', 'info', 'warn' or 'error'.
It is set to '$AIO_LOG_LEVEL'".
exit 1
@@ -347,11 +347,13 @@ if [ -z "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" ]; then
export AIO_LOG_LEVEL="warn"
fi
CADDY_LOG_LEVEL="$(echo "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" | tr '[:lower:]' '[:upper:]')"
if [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" = 'debug' ]; then
export SUPERVISORD_STDOUT=/dev/stdout
else
export SUPERVISORD_STDOUT=NONE
fi
export CADDY_LOG_LEVEL
# Check if ghcr.io is reachable
# Solves issues like https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/discussions/5268
+1 -1
View File
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ stdout_logfile_maxbytes=0
stderr_logfile=/dev/stderr
stderr_logfile_maxbytes=0
command=/session-deduplicator.sh
user=www-data
user=root
[program:domain-validator]
# Logging is disabled as otherwise all attempts will be logged which spams the logs
+2 -3
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
FROM php:8.3.31-fpm-alpine3.23
FROM php:8.3.30-fpm-alpine3.23
ENV PHP_MEMORY_LIMIT=512M
ENV PHP_UPLOAD_LIMIT=16G
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ ENV SOURCE_LOCATION=/usr/src/nextcloud
ENV REDIS_DB_INDEX=0
# AIO settings start # Do not remove or change this line!
ENV NEXTCLOUD_VERSION=33.0.5
ENV NEXTCLOUD_VERSION=33.0.2
ENV AIO_TOKEN=123456
ENV AIO_URL=localhost
# AIO settings end # Do not remove or change this line!
@@ -286,7 +286,6 @@ CMD ["/usr/bin/supervisord", "-c", "/supervisord.conf"]
HEALTHCHECK CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Nextcloud for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="Nextcloud server with all required PHP extensions for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
@@ -2,5 +2,4 @@
$CONFIG = array (
'one-click-instance' => true,
'one-click-instance.user-limit' => 100,
'update_channel' => 'stable',
);
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
<?php
$CONFIG = array (
'serverid' => hexdec(hash('xxh32', gethostname())) & 0x1FF,
'serverid' => crc32(gethostname()) % 512,
);
+31 -55
View File
@@ -419,12 +419,41 @@ EOF
# AIO update to latest start # Do not remove or change this line!
if [ "$INSTALL_LATEST_MAJOR" = yes ]; then
if ! bash /upgrade-latest-major.sh; then
echo "Upgrade to latest major version failed! Check the output above for details."
php /var/www/html/occ config:system:set updatedirectory --value="/nc-updater"
INSTALLED_AT="$(php /var/www/html/occ config:app:get core installedat)"
if [ -n "${INSTALLED_AT}" ]; then
# Set the installdat to 00 which will allow to skip staging and install the next major directly
# shellcheck disable=SC2001
INSTALLED_AT="$(echo "${INSTALLED_AT}" | sed "s|[0-9][0-9]$|00|")"
php /var/www/html/occ config:app:set core installedat --value="${INSTALLED_AT}"
fi
php /var/www/html/updater/updater.phar --no-interaction --no-backup
if ! php /var/www/html/occ -V || php /var/www/html/occ status | grep maintenance | grep -q 'true'; then
echo "Installation of Nextcloud failed!"
touch "$NEXTCLOUD_DATA_DIR/install.failed"
exit 1
fi
# shellcheck disable=SC2016
installed_version="$(php -r 'require "/var/www/html/version.php"; echo implode(".", $OC_Version);')"
INSTALLED_MAJOR="${installed_version%%.*}"
IMAGE_MAJOR="${image_version%%.*}"
# If a valid upgrade path, trigger the Nextcloud built-in Updater
if ! [ "$INSTALLED_MAJOR" -gt "$IMAGE_MAJOR" ]; then
php /var/www/html/updater/updater.phar --no-interaction --no-backup
if ! php /var/www/html/occ -V || php /var/www/html/occ status | grep maintenance | grep -q 'true'; then
echo "Installation of Nextcloud failed!"
# TODO: Add a hint here about what to do / where to look / updater.log?
touch "$NEXTCLOUD_DATA_DIR/install.failed"
exit 1
fi
# shellcheck disable=SC2016
installed_version="$(php -r 'require "/var/www/html/version.php"; echo implode(".", $OC_Version);')"
fi
php /var/www/html/occ config:system:set updatechecker --type=bool --value=true
php /var/www/html/occ app:enable nextcloud-aio --force
php /var/www/html/occ db:add-missing-columns
php /var/www/html/occ db:add-missing-primary-keys
yes | php /var/www/html/occ db:convert-filecache-bigint
fi
# AIO update to latest end # Do not remove or change this line!
@@ -642,7 +671,6 @@ fi
# Adjusting log files to be stored on a volume
echo "Adjusting log files..."
php /var/www/html/occ config:system:set upgrade.cli-upgrade-link --value="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/discussions/2726"
php /var/www/html/occ config:system:set loglevel --value="$NEXTCLOUD_LOG_LEVEL" --type=integer
if [ "$NEXTCLOUD_LOG_TYPE" = "errorlog" ]; then
php /var/www/html/occ config:system:set log_type --value="errorlog"
php /var/www/html/occ config:system:set log_type_audit --value="errorlog"
@@ -867,58 +895,6 @@ else
fi
fi
# EuroOffice
if [ "$EUROOFFICE_ENABLED" = 'yes' ]; then
# Determine EuroOffice port based on host pattern
if echo "$EUROOFFICE_HOST" | grep -q "nextcloud-.*-eurooffice"; then
EUROOFFICE_PORT=80
else
EUROOFFICE_PORT=443
fi
count=0
while ! nc -z "$EUROOFFICE_HOST" "$EUROOFFICE_PORT" && [ "$count" -lt 90 ]; do
echo "Waiting for EuroOffice to become available..."
count=$((count+5))
sleep 5
done
if [ "$count" -ge 90 ]; then
bash /notify.sh "EuroOffice did not start in time!" "Skipping initialization and disabling eurooffice app."
php /var/www/html/occ app:disable eurooffice
else
# Install or enable EuroOffice app as needed
if ! [ -d "/var/www/html/custom_apps/eurooffice" ]; then
php /var/www/html/occ app:install eurooffice
elif [ "$(php /var/www/html/occ config:app:get eurooffice enabled)" != "yes" ]; then
php /var/www/html/occ app:enable eurooffice
elif [ "$SKIP_UPDATE" != 1 ]; then
php /var/www/html/occ app:update eurooffice
fi
# Set EuroOffice configuration
php /var/www/html/occ config:system:set eurooffice editors_check_interval --value="0" --type=integer
php /var/www/html/occ config:system:set eurooffice jwt_secret --value="$EUROOFFICE_SECRET"
php /var/www/html/occ config:app:set eurooffice jwt_secret --value="$EUROOFFICE_SECRET"
php /var/www/html/occ config:system:set eurooffice jwt_header --value="AuthorizationJwt"
# Adjust the EuroOffice host if using internal pattern
if echo "$EUROOFFICE_HOST" | grep -q "nextcloud-.*-eurooffice"; then
EUROOFFICE_HOST="$NC_DOMAIN/eurooffice"
export EUROOFFICE_HOST
fi
php /var/www/html/occ config:app:set eurooffice DocumentServerUrl --value="https://$EUROOFFICE_HOST"
fi
else
# Remove EuroOffice app if disabled and removal is requested
if [ "$REMOVE_DISABLED_APPS" = yes ] && \
[ -d "/var/www/html/custom_apps/eurooffice" ] && \
[ -n "$EUROOFFICE_SECRET" ] && \
[ "$(php /var/www/html/occ config:system:get eurooffice jwt_secret)" = "$EUROOFFICE_SECRET" ]; then
php /var/www/html/occ app:remove eurooffice
fi
fi
# Talk
if [ "$TALK_ENABLED" = 'yes' ]; then
set -x
@@ -1,43 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash
PHP_CLI="php"
if [[ "$EUID" = 0 ]]; then
PHP_CLI="sudo -u www-data -E $PHP_CLI"
fi
# shellcheck disable=SC2016
image_version="$($PHP_CLI -r 'require "/var/www/html/version.php"; echo implode(".", $OC_Version);')"
export IMAGE_MAJOR="${image_version%%.*}"
$PHP_CLI /var/www/html/occ config:system:set updatedirectory --value="/nc-updater"
INSTALLED_AT="$($PHP_CLI /var/www/html/occ config:app:get core installedat)"
if [ -n "${INSTALLED_AT}" ]; then
# Set the installedat to 00 which will allow to skip staging and install the next major directly
# shellcheck disable=SC2001
INSTALLED_AT="$(echo "${INSTALLED_AT}" | sed "s|[0-9][0-9]$|00|")"
$PHP_CLI /var/www/html/occ config:app:set core installedat --value="${INSTALLED_AT}"
fi
$PHP_CLI /var/www/html/updater/updater.phar --no-interaction --no-backup
if ! $PHP_CLI /var/www/html/occ -V || $PHP_CLI /var/www/html/occ status | grep maintenance | grep -q 'true'; then
echo "Installation of Nextcloud failed!"
touch "$NEXTCLOUD_DATA_DIR/install.failed"
exit 1
fi
# shellcheck disable=SC2016
installed_version="$($PHP_CLI -r 'require "/var/www/html/version.php"; echo implode(".", $OC_Version);')"
export INSTALLED_MAJOR="${installed_version%%.*}"
# If a valid upgrade path, trigger the Nextcloud built-in Updater
if ! $PHP_CLI -r "version_compare(getenv('INSTALLED_MAJOR'), getenv('IMAGE_MAJOR'), '>') || exit(1);"; then
$PHP_CLI /var/www/html/updater/updater.phar --no-interaction --no-backup
if ! $PHP_CLI /var/www/html/occ -V || $PHP_CLI /var/www/html/occ status | grep maintenance | grep -q 'true'; then
echo "Installation of Nextcloud failed!"
# TODO: Add a hint here about what to do / where to look / updater.log?
touch "$NEXTCLOUD_DATA_DIR/install.failed"
exit 1
fi
fi
$PHP_CLI /var/www/html/occ config:system:set updatechecker --type=bool --value=true
$PHP_CLI /var/www/html/occ app:enable nextcloud-aio --force
$PHP_CLI /var/www/html/occ db:add-missing-columns
$PHP_CLI /var/www/html/occ db:add-missing-primary-keys
yes | $PHP_CLI /var/www/html/occ db:convert-filecache-bigint
-1
View File
@@ -23,7 +23,6 @@ ENTRYPOINT ["/start.sh"]
HEALTHCHECK CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Notify Push for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="Nextcloud notify_push high-performance backend for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
+2 -17
View File
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ elif [ "$CPU_ARCH" != "x86_64" ]; then
fi
# Add warning
if ! [ -f /var/www/html/custom_apps/notify_push/bin/"$CPU_ARCH"/notify_push ] && ! [ -f /var/www/html/apps/notify_push/bin/"$CPU_ARCH"/notify_push ]; then
if ! [ -f /var/www/html/custom_apps/notify_push/bin/"$CPU_ARCH"/notify_push ]; then
echo "The notify_push binary was not found."
echo "Most likely is DNS resolution not working correctly."
echo "You can try to fix this by configuring a DNS server globally in dockers daemon.json."
@@ -42,24 +42,9 @@ if ! [ -f /var/www/html/custom_apps/notify_push/bin/"$CPU_ARCH"/notify_push ] &&
exit 1
fi
# Logic for ipv6 disabled servers
BIND="::"
if grep -q "1" /sys/module/ipv6/parameters/disable \
|| grep -q "1" /proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/all/disable_ipv6 \
|| grep -q "1" /proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/default/disable_ipv6; then
BIND="0.0.0.0"
fi
export BIND
echo "notify-push was started"
if [ -f /var/www/html/custom_apps/notify_push/bin/"$CPU_ARCH"/notify_push ]; then
PUSH_PATH="/var/www/html/custom_apps/notify_push/bin/$CPU_ARCH/notify_push"
else
PUSH_PATH="/var/www/html/apps/notify_push/bin/$CPU_ARCH/notify_push"
fi
# Run it
exec "$PUSH_PATH" \
exec /var/www/html/custom_apps/notify_push/bin/"$CPU_ARCH"/notify_push \
--port 7867 \
/var/www/html/config/config.php
-1
View File
@@ -9,7 +9,6 @@ COPY --chmod=775 healthcheck.sh /healthcheck.sh
HEALTHCHECK --start-period=60s --retries=9 CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="OnlyOffice for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="OnlyOffice Document Server for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
+1 -3
View File
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
# From https://github.com/docker-library/postgres/blob/master/18/alpine3.23/Dockerfile
FROM postgres:18.4-alpine
FROM postgres:18.3-alpine
ENV PGDATA=/var/lib/postgresql/data
@@ -14,7 +14,6 @@ RUN set -ex; \
bash \
openssl \
shadow \
netcat-openbsd \
grep; \
\
# We need to use the same gid and uid as on old installations
@@ -49,7 +48,6 @@ ENTRYPOINT ["/start.sh"]
HEALTHCHECK CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="PostgreSQL for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="PostgreSQL database for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
+1 -4
View File
@@ -6,9 +6,6 @@ fi
test -f "/mnt/data/backup-is-running" && exit 0
# If database import is running, do not continue with the health check
if nc -z 127.0.0.1 11000; then
exit 0
fi
PGPASSWORD="$POSTGRES_PASSWORD" psql -h 127.0.0.1 -p 11000 -U "oc_$POSTGRES_USER" -d "$POSTGRES_DB" -c "select now()" && exit 0
PGPASSWORD="$POSTGRES_PASSWORD" psql -h 127.0.0.1 -p 5432 -U "oc_$POSTGRES_USER" -d "$POSTGRES_DB" -c "select now()" || exit 1
+1 -2
View File
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
# From https://github.com/redis/docker-library-redis/blob/release/8.2/alpine/Dockerfile
FROM redis:8.6.3-alpine
FROM redis:8.6.2-alpine
COPY --chmod=775 start.sh /start.sh
@@ -23,7 +23,6 @@ ENTRYPOINT ["/start.sh"]
HEALTHCHECK CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Redis for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="Redis cache server for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
+1 -4
View File
@@ -4,11 +4,8 @@ if [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" = 'debug' ]; then
set -x
fi
# Redis only supports [debug, verbose, notice, warning, nothing] as log level
if [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" = "warn" ] || [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" = "error" ]; then
if [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" = "warn" ]; then
REDIS_LOG_LEVEL="warning"
elif [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" = "info" ]; then
REDIS_LOG_LEVEL="notice"
else
REDIS_LOG_LEVEL="$AIO_LOG_LEVEL"
fi
+3 -7
View File
@@ -1,11 +1,11 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
FROM python:3.14.5-alpine3.23
FROM python:3.14.3-alpine3.23
COPY --chmod=775 start.sh /start.sh
COPY --chmod=775 healthcheck.sh /healthcheck.sh
ENV RECORDING_VERSION=v0.2.1
ENV ALLOW_ALL=false \
ENV RECORDING_VERSION=v0.2.1 \
ALLOW_ALL=false \
HPB_PROTOCOL=https \
NC_PROTOCOL=https \
SKIP_VERIFY=false \
@@ -35,9 +35,6 @@ RUN set -ex; \
build-base \
linux-headers \
geckodriver; \
if [ "$(apk --print-arch)" = "x86_64" ]; then \
apk add --no-cache intel-media-driver; \
fi; \
useradd -d /tmp --system recording -u 122; \
# Give root a random password
echo "root:$(openssl rand -base64 12)" | chpasswd; \
@@ -67,7 +64,6 @@ CMD ["python", "-m", "nextcloud.talk.recording", "--config", "/conf/recording.co
HEALTHCHECK CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Talk Recording for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="Nextcloud Talk recording service for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
+1 -2
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
FROM nats:2.14.2-scratch AS nats
FROM nats:2.12.8-scratch AS nats
FROM eturnal/eturnal:1.12.2-alpine AS eturnal
FROM strukturag/nextcloud-spreed-signaling:2.1.1 AS signaling
FROM alpine:3.23.4 AS janus
@@ -112,7 +112,6 @@ CMD ["supervisord", "-c", "/supervisord.conf"]
HEALTHCHECK CMD /healthcheck.sh
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Talk for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="Nextcloud Talk with NATS, Janus, eturnal, and signaling server for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
+3 -5
View File
@@ -4,13 +4,11 @@ if [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" = 'debug' ]; then
set -x
fi
nc -z 127.0.0.1 8081 || nc -z ::1 8081 || exit 1
nc -z 127.0.0.1 8081 || exit 1
nc -z 127.0.0.1 8188 || exit 1
nc -z 127.0.0.1 4222 || exit 1
nc -z 127.0.0.1 "$TALK_PORT" || nc -z ::1 "$TALK_PORT" || exit 1
nc -z 127.0.0.1 "$TALK_PORT" || exit 1
eturnalctl status || exit 1
# Verify that the signaling server is actually serving requests, not just
# listening on the TCP port (which nc -z above only tests for open port).
# SC2102: [::1] is an IPv6 address literal in a URL, not a character-range glob.
# shellcheck disable=SC2102
wget -q -O /dev/null http://127.0.0.1:8081/api/v1/stats || wget -q -O /dev/null http://[::1]:8081/api/v1/stats || exit 1
wget -q -O /dev/null http://127.0.0.1:8081/api/v1/stats || exit 1
+1 -8
View File
@@ -75,13 +75,6 @@ if grep -q "1" /sys/module/ipv6/parameters/disable \
|| grep -q "1" /proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/default/disable_ipv6; then
IP_BINDING="0.0.0.0"
fi
# Build a listen address suitable for the signaling server's "ip:port" format.
# IPv6 needs bracket notation: [::]:8081; IPv4 keeps the plain form: 0.0.0.0:8081
if [ "$IP_BINDING" = "::" ]; then
SIGNALING_LISTEN="[::]:8081"
else
SIGNALING_LISTEN="$IP_BINDING:8081"
fi
if [ "$AIO_LOG_LEVEL" != 'debug' ]; then
set +x
fi
@@ -125,7 +118,7 @@ fi
# Signaling
cat << SIGNALING_CONF > "/conf/signaling.conf"
[http]
listen = ${SIGNALING_LISTEN}
listen = 0.0.0.0:8081
readtimeout = 15
writetimeout = 30
+3 -6
View File
@@ -1,13 +1,13 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
FROM golang:1.26.4-alpine3.23 AS go
FROM golang:1.26.2-alpine3.23 AS go
ENV WATCHTOWER_COMMIT_HASH=9d0048403a7242943084bede951f6f966f7691ba
ENV WATCHTOWER_COMMIT_HASH=652c89577076f6bc6f2af4465217589641216ee3
RUN set -ex; \
apk upgrade --no-cache -a; \
apk add --no-cache \
build-base; \
go install github.com/nicholas-fedor/watchtower@$WATCHTOWER_COMMIT_HASH # v1.17.2
go install github.com/nicholas-fedor/watchtower@$WATCHTOWER_COMMIT_HASH # v1.16.1
FROM alpine:3.23.4
@@ -22,12 +22,9 @@ COPY --chmod=775 start.sh /start.sh
# hadolint ignore=DL3002
USER root
ENV AIO_LOG_LEVEL="warn"
ENTRYPOINT ["/start.sh"]
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Watchtower for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="Watchtower auto-update service for Nextcloud All-in-One containers" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
+1 -2
View File
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:latest
# Probably from this file: https://github.com/nextcloud/whiteboard/blob/main/Dockerfile
FROM ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/whiteboard:v1.5.9
FROM ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/whiteboard:v1.5.7
USER root
RUN set -ex; \
@@ -24,7 +24,6 @@ ENTRYPOINT ["/start.sh"]
LABEL com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable="false" \
wud.watch="false" \
dockhand.update="false" \
org.opencontainers.image.title="Whiteboard for Nextcloud AIO" \
org.opencontainers.image.description="Collaborative whiteboard service for Nextcloud All-in-One" \
org.opencontainers.image.url="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one" \
+9 -2
View File
@@ -1,12 +1,19 @@
# https://editorconfig.org
# note: the files in ./composer actually use 4 spaces instead of tabs
root = true
[*]
charset = utf-8
end_of_line = lf
indent_size = 4
indent_style = tab
insert_final_newline = true
trim_trailing_whitespace = true
[*.feature]
indent_size = 2
indent_style = space
[*.yml]
indent_size = 2
indent_style = space
+1 -1
View File
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@
<category>monitoring</category>
<bugs>https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/issues</bugs>
<dependencies>
<nextcloud min-version="33" max-version="34"/>
<nextcloud min-version="32" max-version="33"/>
</dependencies>
<settings>
+4 -7
View File
@@ -1,10 +1,7 @@
# AIO app for Nextcloud
This folder contains a Nextcloud app, which will be automatically installed within the Nextcloud instance.
It adds a link to the admin settings page that gives access to the AIO interface.
## How to develop the app?
Please note that in order to check if an app is already downloaded Nextcloud will look for a folder with the same name as the app.
Please note that in order to check if an app is already downloaded
Nextcloud will look for a folder with the same name as the app.
Therefore you need to add the app to one of the app directories naming the directory `nextcloud-aio`.
Therefore you need to add the app to one of the app directories
naming the directory `nextcloud-aio`.
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## Borgbackup Viewer
This container allows to view the local borg backups repository in a web session. It also allows you to restore files and folders from the backup by using desktop programs in a web browser.
This container allows to view the local borg repository in a web session. It also allows you to restore files and folders from the backup by using desktop programs in a web browser.
### Notes
- After adding and starting the container, you need to visit `https://ip.address.of.this.server:5801` in order to log in with the user `nextcloud` and the password that you can see next to the container in the AIO interface. (The web page uses a self-signed certificate, so you need to accept the warning).
@@ -14,3 +14,4 @@ https://github.com/szaimen/aio-borgbackup-viewer
### Maintainer
https://github.com/szaimen
+1 -9
View File
@@ -1,13 +1,5 @@
## Caddy with geoblocking
This container bundles [caddy](https://caddyserver.com/) and auto-configures it for you as a reverse proxy.
It also covers [vaultwarden](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/vaultwarden) by listening on `bw.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed.
It also covers [stalwart](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/stalwart) by listening on `mail.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed.
It also covers [jellyfin](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/jellyfin) by listening on `media.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed.
It also covers [lldap](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/lldap) by listening on `ldap.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed.
It also covers [nocodb](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/nocodb) by listening on `tables.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed.
It also covers [seerr](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/jellyseerr) by listening on `requests.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed.
It also covers [nextcloud-exporter](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/nextcloud-exporter) by listening on `metrics.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed.
It also covers [LocalAI](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/local-ai) by listening on `ai.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed.
This container bundles caddy and auto-configures it for you. It also covers [vaultwarden](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/vaultwarden) by listening on `bw.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed. It also covers [stalwart](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/stalwart) by listening on `mail.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed. It also covers [jellyfin](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/jellyfin) by listening on `media.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed. It also covers [lldap](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/lldap) by listening on `ldap.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed. It also covers [nocodb](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/nocodb) by listening on `tables.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed. It also covers [seerr](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/jellyseerr) by listening on `requests.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed. It also covers [nextcloud-exporter](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/nextcloud-exporter) by listening on `metrics.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed. It also covers [LocalAI](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/local-ai) by listening on `ai.$NC_DOMAIN`, if installed.
### Notes
- This container is incompatible with the [npmplus](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/npmplus) community container. So make sure that you do not enable both at the same time!
+2 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## calcardbackup
This container packages [calcardbackup](https://codeberg.org/BernieO/calcardbackup), a tool that exports calendars and addressbooks from Nextcloud to .ics and .vcf files and saves them to a compressed file.
This container packages calcardbackup which is a tool that exports calendars and addressbooks from Nextcloud to .ics and .vcf files and saves them to a compressed file.
### Notes
- Backups will be created at 00:00 UTC every day. Make sure that this does not conflict with the configured daily backups inside AIO.
@@ -12,3 +12,4 @@ https://github.com/waja/docker-calcardbackup
### Maintainer
https://github.com/pailloM
@@ -1,11 +1,11 @@
## Container-Management
This container allows to manage other containers via a GUI inside a Web session by allowing to run docker commands from inside this container.
This container allows to manage insides of other containers via a GUI inside a Web session by allowing to run docker commands from inside this container.
### Notes
- After adding and starting the container, you need to visit `https://ip.address.of.this.server:5804` in order to log in with the user `container-management` and the password that you can see next to the container in the AIO interface. (The web page uses a self-signed certificate, so you need to accept the warning).
- Then, you should see a terminal. There you can use any docker command. ⚠️ Be very carefully while doing that as can break your instance!
- There are also some pre-made scripts that make configuring some community containers easier. For example scripts for [LLDAP](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/lldap) and [Facerecognition](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/facerecognition).
- ⚠️ After you are done doing your operations, remove the container from the stack for better security: https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers#how-to-remove-containers-from-aios-stack
- There are also some pre-made scripts that make configuring some of the community containers easier. For example scripts for [LLDAP](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/lldap) and [Facerecognition](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/facerecognition).
- ⚠️ After you are done doing your operations, remove the container for better security again from the stack: https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers#how-to-remove-containers-from-aios-stack
- See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers#community-containers how to add it to the AIO stack
### Repository
+3 -2
View File
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
## DLNA server
This container bundles a DLNA multimedia streaming server for your Nextcloud files to be accessible by the clients in your local network. Simply run the container and look for a new media server `nextcloud-aio` in your local network.
This container bundles DLNA server for your Nextcloud files to be accessible by the clients in your local network. Simply run the container and look for a new media server `nextcloud-aio` in your local network.
### Notes
- This container will work only if the Nextcloud installation is in your home network, it is not suitable for installations on public servers.
- This container will work only if the Nextcloud installation is in your home network, it is not suitable for installations on remote servers.
- If you have a firewall like ufw configured, you might need to open at least port 9999 TCP and 1900 UDP first in order to make it work.
- See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers#community-containers how to add it to the AIO stack
@@ -11,3 +11,4 @@ https://github.com/thanek/nextcloud-dlna
### Maintainer
https://github.com/thanek
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## Facerecognition
This container bundles a basic facial recognition system and auto-configures it for you.
This container bundles the external model of facerecognition and auto-configures it for you.
### Notes
- This container needs imaginary in order to analyze modern file format images. Make sure to enable imaginary in the AIO interface before adding this container.
+1 -2
View File
@@ -1,6 +1,5 @@
## Fail2ban
This container bundles [fail2ban](https://github.com/fail2ban/fail2ban) and auto-configures it for you in order to block ip-addresses automatically.
It also covers https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/vaultwarden, https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/jellyfin, and https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/jellyseerr, if installed.
This container bundles fail2ban and auto-configures it for you in order to block ip-addresses automatically. It also covers https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/vaultwarden, https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/jellyfin, and https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/jellyseerr, if installed.
### Notes
- If you get an error like `"ip6tables v1.8.9 (legacy): can't initialize ip6tables table filter': Table does not exist (do you need to insmod?)"`, you need to enable ip6tables on your host via `sudo modprobe ip6table_filter`.
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## Glances
This container starts [Glances](https://nicolargo.github.io/glances/), a web-based system monitoring dashboard, and auto-configures it for you.
This container starts Glances, a web-based info-board, and auto-configures it for you.
> [!CAUTION]
> This container mounts the docker-socket from the host-system.
@@ -1,13 +1,11 @@
## Home Assistant
This container bundles [Home Assistant](https://www.home-assistant.io/) and auto-configures it for you.
This container bundles Home Assistant and auto-configures it for you.
### Notes
- This container should only be run in home networks since Home Assistant is designed for local home automation.
- After adding and starting the container, you can visit `http://ip.address.of.this.server:8123` in order to set up your Home Assistant instance.
- The data of Home Assistant will be automatically included in AIOs backup solution!
- In order to access your Home Assistant outside the local network, you have to set up your own reverse proxy. You can set up a reverse proxy following [these instructions](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/reverse-proxy.md).
- And to allow the traffic from the reverse proxy to be accepted by Home Assistant, follow [these instructions](https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/http/#reverse-proxies) from the Home Assistant documentation.
- Or, to use the Caddy with geoblocking community container, follow the following instruction to add your own Caddyfile, to use it for Home Assistant: https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/caddy#notes
- See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers#community-containers how to add it to the AIO stack
### Repository
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## Jellyfin
This container bundles [Jellyfin](https://jellyfin.org/) and auto-configures it for you.
This container bundles Jellyfin and auto-configures it for you.
### Notes
- This container is incompatible with the [Plex](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/plex) community container. So make sure that you do not enable both at the same time!
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## Seerr
This container bundles [Seerr](https://seerr.dev/) request management and media discovery tool and auto-configures it for you.
This container bundles Seerr and auto-configures it for you.
### Notes
- **Migration from Jellyseerr**: Jellyseer previously ran as the root user. With the migration to Seerr, the container now runs rootless with userid 1000, meaning that if you previously used Jellyseerr, Seerr will not be able to access the config files generated by the old Jellyseerr container. To migrate, execute the following steps: 1. stop all containers using the AIO-interface, 2. run `sudo docker run --rm -v nextcloud_aio_jellyseerr:/data alpine chown -R 1000:1000 /data`
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## LanguageTool for Nextcloud Office
This container bundles [LanguageTool](https://github.com/languagetool-org/languagetool) for Nextcloud Office which adds spell checking functionality to Nextcloud Office.
This container bundles a LanguageTool for Nextcloud Office which adds spell checking functionality to Nextcloud Office.
### Notes
- Make sure to have Nextcloud Office enabled via the AIO interface
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## LibreTranslate
This container bundles [LibreTranslate](https://github.com/LibreTranslate/LibreTranslate) and auto-configures it for you.
This container bundles LibreTranslate and auto-configures it for you.
> [!WARNING]
> The LibreTranslate container and app is deprecated!
+2 -2
View File
@@ -4,8 +4,8 @@
"container_name": "nextcloud-aio-lldap",
"display_name": "Light LDAP implementation",
"documentation": "https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/lldap",
"image": "ghcr.io/lldap/lldap",
"image_tag": "latest-alpine",
"image": "lldap/lldap",
"image_tag": "v0-alpine",
"internal_port": "17170",
"restart": "unless-stopped",
"ports": [
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## Light LDAP server
This container bundles an [LLDAP](https://github.com/lldap/lldap) LDAP server and auto-configures your Nextcloud instance for you.
This container bundles LLDAP server and auto-configures your Nextcloud instance for you.
### Notes
- In order to access your LLDAP web interface outside the local network, you have to set up your own reverse proxy. You can set up a reverse proxy following [these instructions](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/reverse-proxy.md) OR use the [Caddy](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/caddy) community container that will automatically configure `ldap.$NC_DOMAIN` to redirect to your Lldap. You need to point the reverse proxy at port 17170 of this server.
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## Local AI
This container bundles [Local AI](https://localai.io/) and auto-configures it for you. It support hardware acceleration with Vulkan.
This container bundles Local AI and auto-configures it for you. It support hardware acceleration with Vulkan.
### Notes
Documentation is available on the container repository. This documentation is regularly updated and is intended to be as simple and detailed as possible. Thanks for all your feedback!
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## MakeMKV
This container bundles the [MakeMKV](https://www.makemkv.com/) video converter and auto-configures it for you.
This container bundles MakeMKV and auto-configures it for you.
### Notes
- This container should only be run in home networks
+1 -4
View File
@@ -1,8 +1,5 @@
## Minio
This container bundles [minio](https://github.com/minio/minio) s3 storage and auto-configures it for you.
> [!CAUTION]
> The Minio upstream project is no longer maintained. The container should still work in its current form...
This container bundles minio s3 storage and auto-configures it for you.
>[!WARNING]
> Enabling this container will remove access to all the files formerly written to the data directory.
+1 -1
View File
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
> - See more here https://github.com/nextcloud/tables/issues/103
## NocoDb server
This container bundles [NocoDb](https://github.com/nocodb/nocodb), an online no-code database solution, without synchronization with Nextcloud.
This container bundles NocoDb without synchronization with Nextcloud.
This is an alternative of **Airtable**.
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## NPMplus
This container contains a fork of [Nginx Proxy Manager](https://nginxproxymanager.com/), which is a WebUI for nginx. It will also automatically create a config and cert for AIO.
This container contains a fork of the Nginx Proxy Manager, which is a WebUI for nginx. It will also automatically create a config and cert for AIO.
### Notes
- This container is incompatible with the [caddy](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/caddy) community container. So make sure that you do not enable both at the same time!
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## Pi-hole
This container bundles the [pi-hole](https://pi-hole.net/) ad blocker and auto-configures it for you.
This container bundles pi-hole and auto-configures it for you.
### Notes
- You should not run this container on a public VPS! It is only intended to run in home networks!
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## Plex
This container bundles the [Plex Media Server](https://www.plex.tv/en-gb/personal-media-server/) and auto-configures it for you.
This container bundles Plex and auto-configures it for you.
### Notes
- This container is incompatible with the [Jellyfin](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/jellyfin) community container. So make sure that you do not enable both at the same time!
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## Scrutiny
This container bundles [Scrutiny](https://github.com/analogj/scrutiny), a web frontend for SMART stats, and auto-configures it for you.
This container bundles Scrutiny which is a frontend for SMART stats and auto-configures it for you.
### Notes
- This container should only be run in home networks
+1 -1
View File
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
> Do not use this feature as a main mail server or without a redundancy system and without knowledge.
## Stalwart mail server
This container bundles the [Stalwart](https://stalw.art/) mail server and auto-configures it for you.
This container bundles stalwart mail server and auto-configures it for you.
### Notes
Documentation is available on the container repository.
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
## Vaultwarden
This container bundles the [VaultWarden](https://www.vaultwarden.net/) password manager and auto-configures it for you.
This container bundles vaultwarden and auto-configures it for you.
### Notes
- You need to configure a reverse proxy in order to run this container since vaultwarden needs a dedicated (sub)domain! For that, you might have a look at https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/tree/main/community-containers/caddy or follow https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/reverse-proxy.md and https://github.com/dani-garcia/vaultwarden/wiki/Proxy-examples. You need to point the reverse proxy at port 8812 of this server.
+4 -4
View File
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
name: nextcloud-aio # Add the container to the same compose project to which all the sibling containers are added automatically
name: nextcloud-aio # Add the container to the same compose project like all the sibling containers are added to automatically.
services:
nextcloud-aio-mastercontainer:
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/all-in-one:latest # This is the container image used. You can switch to ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/all-in-one:beta if you want to help testing new releases. See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-switch-the-channel
@@ -15,10 +15,10 @@ services:
- "80:80" # Can be removed when running behind a web server or reverse proxy (like Apache, Nginx, Caddy, Cloudflare Tunnel and else). See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/reverse-proxy.md
- "8080:8080" # This is the AIO interface, served via https and self-signed certificate. See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#explanation-of-used-ports
- "8443:8443" # Can be removed when running behind a web server or reverse proxy (like Apache, Nginx, Caddy, Cloudflare Tunnel and else). See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/reverse-proxy.md
# security_opt: ["label:disable"] # Needed when using SELinux. See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#are-there-known-problems-when-selinux-is-enabled
# environment: # This line is needed (has to be uncommented) when using any of the options below
# security_opt: ["label:disable"] # Is needed when using SELinux. See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#are-there-known-problems-when-selinux-is-enabled
# environment: # Is needed when using any of the options below
# AIO_DISABLE_BACKUP_SECTION: false # Setting this to true allows to hide the backup section in the AIO interface. See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-disable-the-backup-section
# APACHE_PORT: 11000 # Needed when running behind a web server or reverse proxy (like Apache, Nginx, Caddy, Cloudflare Tunnel and else). See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/reverse-proxy.md
# APACHE_PORT: 11000 # Is needed when running behind a web server or reverse proxy (like Apache, Nginx, Caddy, Cloudflare Tunnel and else). See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/reverse-proxy.md
# APACHE_IP_BINDING: 127.0.0.1 # Should be set when running behind a web server or reverse proxy (like Apache, Nginx, Caddy, Cloudflare Tunnel and else) that is running on the same host. See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/reverse-proxy.md
# APACHE_ADDITIONAL_NETWORK: frontend_net # (Optional) Connect the apache container to an additional docker network. Needed when behind a web server or reverse proxy (like Apache, Nginx, Caddy, Cloudflare Tunnel and else) running in a different docker network on same server. See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/reverse-proxy.md
# BORG_RETENTION_POLICY: --keep-within=7d --keep-weekly=4 --keep-monthly=6 # Allows to adjust borgs retention policy. See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-adjust-borgs-retention-policy
+37 -37
View File
@@ -1,37 +1,37 @@
# Docker rootless
You can run AIO with docker rootless by following the steps below.
0. If docker is already installed, you should consider disabling it first: (`sudo systemctl disable --now docker.service docker.socket`)
1. Install docker rootless by following the official documentation: https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/rootless/#install. The easiest way is installing it **Without packages** (`curl -fsSL https://get.docker.com/rootless | sh`). Further limitations, distribution specific hints, etc. are discussed on the same site. Also do not forget to enable the systemd service, which may not be enabled always by default. See https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/rootless/#usage. (`systemctl --user enable docker`)
1. If you need ipv6 support, you should enable it by following https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/docker-ipv6-support.md.
1. Do not forget to set the mentioned environmental variables `PATH` and `DOCKER_HOST` and in best case add them to your `~/.bashrc` file as shown!
1. Also do not forget to run `loginctl enable-linger USERNAME` (and substitute USERNAME with the correct one) in order to make sure that user services are automatically started after every reboot.
1. Expose the privileged ports by following https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/rootless/tips/#exposing-privileged-ports. (`sudo setcap cap_net_bind_service=ep $(which rootlesskit); systemctl --user restart docker`). If you require the correct source IP you must expose them via `/etc/sysctl.conf`, [see note below](#note-regarding-docker-network-driver).
1. Use the official AIO startup command but use `--volume $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro` instead of `--volume /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro` and also add `--env WATCHTOWER_DOCKER_SOCKET_PATH=$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/docker.sock` to the initial container startup (which is needed for mastercontainer updates to work correctly). When you are using Portainer to deploy AIO, the variable `$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR` is not available. In this case, it is necessary to manually add the path (e.g. `/run/user/1000/docker.sock`) to the Docker compose file to replace the `$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR` variable. If you are not sure how to get the path, you can run on the host: `echo $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR`.
1. Now everything should work like without docker rootless. You can consider using docker-compose for this or running it behind a reverse proxy. Basically the only thing that needs to be adjusted always in the startup command or compose.yaml file (after installing docker rootles) are things that are mentioned in point 3.
1. ⚠️ **Important:** Please read through all notes below!
### Note regarding sudo in the documentation
Almost all commands in this project's documentation use `sudo docker ...`. Since `sudo` is not needed in case of docker rootless, you simply remove `sudo` from the commands and they should work.
### Note regarding permissions
All files outside the containers get created, written to and accessed as the user that is running the docker daemon or a subuid of it. So for the built-in backup to work you need to allow this user to write to the target directory. E.g. with `sudo chown -R USERNAME:GROUPNAME /mnt/backup`. The same applies when changing Nextcloud's datadir via NEXTCLOUD_DATADIR. E.g. `sudo chown -R USERNAME:GROUPNAME /mnt/ncdata`. When you want to use the NEXTCLOUD_MOUNT option for local external storage, you need to adjust the permissions of the chosen folders to be accessible/writeable by the userid `100032:100032` (if running `grep ^$(whoami): /etc/subuid` as the user that is running the docker daemon returns 100000 as first value).
### Note regarding docker network driver
By default rootless docker uses the `slirp4netns` IP driver and the `builtin` port driver. As mentioned in [the documentation](https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/rootless/#networking-errors), this combination doesn't provide "Source IP propagation". This means that Apache and Nextcloud will see all connections as coming from the docker gateway (e.g 172.19.0.1), which can lead to the Nextcloud brute force protection blocking all connection attempts. To expose the correct source IP, you will need to configure docker to also use `slirp4netns` as the port driver (see also [this guide](https://rootlesscontaine.rs/getting-started/docker/#changing-the-port-forwarder)).
As stated in the documentation, this change will likely lead to decreased network throughput. You should test this by trying to transfer a large file after completing your setup and revert back to the `builtin` port driver if the throughput is too slow.
* Add `net.ipv4.ip_unprivileged_port_start=80` to `/etc/sysctl.conf`. Editing this file requires root privileges. (using capabilities doesn't work here; see [this issue](https://github.com/rootless-containers/slirp4netns/issues/251#issuecomment-761415404)).
* Run `sudo sysctl --system` to propagate the change.
* Create `~/.config/systemd/user/docker.service.d/override.conf`
with the following content:
```
[Service]
Environment="DOCKERD_ROOTLESS_ROOTLESSKIT_NET=slirp4netns"
Environment="DOCKERD_ROOTLESS_ROOTLESSKIT_PORT_DRIVER=slirp4netns"
```
* Restart the docker daemon
```
systemctl --user restart docker
```
# Docker rootless
You can run AIO with docker rootless by following the steps below.
0. If docker is already installed, you should consider disabling it first: (`sudo systemctl disable --now docker.service docker.socket`)
1. Install docker rootless by following the official documentation: https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/rootless/#install. The easiest way is installing it **Without packages** (`curl -fsSL https://get.docker.com/rootless | sh`). Further limitations, distribution specific hints, etc. are discussed on the same site. Also do not forget to enable the systemd service, which may not be enabled always by default. See https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/rootless/#usage. (`systemctl --user enable docker`)
1. If you need ipv6 support, you should enable it by following https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/blob/main/docker-ipv6-support.md.
1. Do not forget to set the mentioned environmental variables `PATH` and `DOCKER_HOST` and in best case add them to your `~/.bashrc` file as shown!
1. Also do not forget to run `loginctl enable-linger USERNAME` (and substitute USERNAME with the correct one) in order to make sure that user services are automatically started after every reboot.
1. Expose the privileged ports by following https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/rootless/tips/#exposing-privileged-ports. (`sudo setcap cap_net_bind_service=ep $(which rootlesskit); systemctl --user restart docker`). If you require the correct source IP you must expose them via `/etc/sysctl.conf`, [see note below](#note-regarding-docker-network-driver).
1. Use the official AIO startup command but use `--volume $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro` instead of `--volume /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro` and also add `--env WATCHTOWER_DOCKER_SOCKET_PATH=$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/docker.sock` to the initial container startup (which is needed for mastercontainer updates to work correctly). When you are using Portainer to deploy AIO, the variable `$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR` is not available. In this case, it is necessary to manually add the path (e.g. `/run/user/1000/docker.sock`) to the Docker compose file to replace the `$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR` variable. If you are not sure how to get the path, you can run on the host: `echo $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR`.
1. Now everything should work like without docker rootless. You can consider using docker-compose for this or running it behind a reverse proxy. Basically the only thing that needs to be adjusted always in the startup command or compose.yaml file (after installing docker rootles) are things that are mentioned in point 3.
1. ⚠️ **Important:** Please read through all notes below!
### Note regarding sudo in the documentation
Almost all commands in this project's documentation use `sudo docker ...`. Since `sudo` is not needed in case of docker rootless, you simply remove `sudo` from the commands and they should work.
### Note regarding permissions
All files outside the containers get created, written to and accessed as the user that is running the docker daemon or a subuid of it. So for the built-in backup to work you need to allow this user to write to the target directory. E.g. with `sudo chown -R USERNAME:GROUPNAME /mnt/backup`. The same applies when changing Nextcloud's datadir via NEXTCLOUD_DATADIR. E.g. `sudo chown -R USERNAME:GROUPNAME /mnt/ncdata`. When you want to use the NEXTCLOUD_MOUNT option for local external storage, you need to adjust the permissions of the chosen folders to be accessible/writeable by the userid `100032:100032` (if running `grep ^$(whoami): /etc/subuid` as the user that is running the docker daemon returns 100000 as first value).
### Note regarding docker network driver
By default rootless docker uses the `slirp4netns` IP driver and the `builtin` port driver. As mentioned in [the documentation](https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/rootless/#networking-errors), this combination doesn't provide "Source IP propagation". This means that Apache and Nextcloud will see all connections as coming from the docker gateway (e.g 172.19.0.1), which can lead to the Nextcloud brute force protection blocking all connection attempts. To expose the correct source IP, you will need to configure docker to also use `slirp4netns` as the port driver (see also [this guide](https://rootlesscontaine.rs/getting-started/docker/#changing-the-port-forwarder)).
As stated in the documentation, this change will likely lead to decreased network throughput. You should test this by trying to transfer a large file after completing your setup and revert back to the `builtin` port driver if the throughput is too slow.
* Add `net.ipv4.ip_unprivileged_port_start=80` to `/etc/sysctl.conf`. Editing this file requires root privileges. (using capabilities doesn't work here; see [this issue](https://github.com/rootless-containers/slirp4netns/issues/251#issuecomment-761415404)).
* Run `sudo sysctl --system` to propagate the change.
* Create `~/.config/systemd/user/docker.service.d/override.conf`
with the following content:
```
[Service]
Environment="DOCKERD_ROOTLESS_ROOTLESSKIT_NET=slirp4netns"
Environment="DOCKERD_ROOTLESS_ROOTLESSKIT_PORT_DRIVER=slirp4netns"
```
* Restart the docker daemon
```
systemctl --user restart docker
```
+40 -40
View File
@@ -1,40 +1,40 @@
# Local instance
It is possible due to several reasons that you do not want or cannot open Nextcloud to the public internet. Perhaps you were hoping to access AIO directly from an `ip.add.r.ess` (unsupported) or without a valid domain. However, AIO requires a valid certificate to work correctly. Below is discussed how you can achieve both: Having a valid certificate for Nextcloud and only using it locally.
### Content
- [1. Tailscale](#1-tailscale)
- [2. Pangolin](#2-pangolin)
- [3. The normal way](#3-the-normal-way)
- [4. Use the ACME DNS-challenge](#4-use-the-acme-dns-challenge)
- [5. Use Cloudflare](#5-use-cloudflare)
- [6. Buy a certificate and use that](#6-buy-a-certificate-and-use-that)
## 1. Tailscale
This is the recommended way. For a reverse proxy example guide for Tailscale, see this guide by [@Perseus333](https://github.com/Perseus333): https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/discussions/6817
## 2. Pangolin
[Pangolin](https://pangolin.net/) is an open-source, WireGuard-based remote access platform similar in concept to Tailscale. It uses the **Newt** connector to create outbound-only encrypted tunnels — no inbound ports need to be opened on your firewall. Pangolin handles TLS automatically, providing a valid certificate for your Nextcloud domain.
You can use either [Pangolin Cloud](https://app.pangolin.net/) (free tier available) or [self-host your own Pangolin server](https://docs.pangolin.net/self-host/quick-install) on a VPS. For private/local-only access, self-hosting Pangolin on a machine within your local network means that Nextcloud never needs to be exposed to the public internet.
For the reverse proxy configuration details and a step-by-step setup guide, see the [Pangolin section in the reverse proxy documentation](./reverse-proxy.md#pangolin).
## 3. The normal way
The normal way is the following:
1. Set up your domain correctly to point to your home network
1. Set up a reverse proxy by following the [reverse proxy documentation](./reverse-proxy.md) but only open port 80 (which is needed for the ACME challenge to work - however no real traffic will use this port).
1. Set up a local DNS-server like a pi-hole and configure it to be your local DNS-server for the whole network. Then in the Pi-hole interface, add a custom DNS-record for your domain and overwrite the A-record (and possibly the AAAA-record, too) to point to the private ip-address of your reverse proxy (see https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-can-i-access-nextcloud-locally)
1. Enter the ip-address of your local dns-server in the daemon.json file for docker so that you are sure that all docker containers use the correct local dns-server.
1. Now, entering the domain in the AIO-interface should work as expected and should allow you to continue with the setup
**Hint:** You may have a look at [this video](https://youtu.be/zk-y2wVkY4c) for a more complete but possibly outdated example.
## 4. Use the ACME DNS-challenge
You can alternatively use the ACME DNS-challenge to get a valid certificate for Nextcloud. Here is described how to set it up using an external caddy reverse proxy: https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-get-nextcloud-running-using-the-acme-dns-challenge
## 5. Use Cloudflare
If you do not have any control over the network, you may think about using Cloudflare Tunnel to get a valid certificate for your Nextcloud. However it will be opened to the public internet then. See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-run-nextcloud-behind-a-cloudflare-tunnel how to set this up.
## 6. Buy a certificate and use that
If none of the above ways work for you, you may simply buy a certificate from an issuer for your domain. You then download the certificate onto your server, configure AIO in [reverse proxy mode](./reverse-proxy.md) and use the certificate for your domain in your reverse proxy config.
# Local instance
It is possible due to several reasons that you do not want or cannot open Nextcloud to the public internet. Perhaps you were hoping to access AIO directly from an `ip.add.r.ess` (unsupported) or without a valid domain. However, AIO requires a valid certificate to work correctly. Below is discussed how you can achieve both: Having a valid certificate for Nextcloud and only using it locally.
### Content
- [1. Tailscale](#1-tailscale)
- [2. Pangolin](#2-pangolin)
- [3. The normal way](#3-the-normal-way)
- [4. Use the ACME DNS-challenge](#4-use-the-acme-dns-challenge)
- [5. Use Cloudflare](#5-use-cloudflare)
- [6. Buy a certificate and use that](#6-buy-a-certificate-and-use-that)
## 1. Tailscale
This is the recommended way. For a reverse proxy example guide for Tailscale, see this guide by [@Perseus333](https://github.com/Perseus333): https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/discussions/6817
## 2. Pangolin
[Pangolin](https://pangolin.net/) is an open-source, WireGuard-based remote access platform similar in concept to Tailscale. It uses the **Newt** connector to create outbound-only encrypted tunnels — no inbound ports need to be opened on your firewall. Pangolin handles TLS automatically, providing a valid certificate for your Nextcloud domain.
You can use either [Pangolin Cloud](https://app.pangolin.net/) (free tier available) or [self-host your own Pangolin server](https://docs.pangolin.net/self-host/quick-install) on a VPS. For private/local-only access, self-hosting Pangolin on a machine within your local network means that Nextcloud never needs to be exposed to the public internet.
For the reverse proxy configuration details and a step-by-step setup guide, see the [Pangolin section in the reverse proxy documentation](./reverse-proxy.md#pangolin).
## 3. The normal way
The normal way is the following:
1. Set up your domain correctly to point to your home network
1. Set up a reverse proxy by following the [reverse proxy documentation](./reverse-proxy.md) but only open port 80 (which is needed for the ACME challenge to work - however no real traffic will use this port).
1. Set up a local DNS-server like a pi-hole and configure it to be your local DNS-server for the whole network. Then in the Pi-hole interface, add a custom DNS-record for your domain and overwrite the A-record (and possibly the AAAA-record, too) to point to the private ip-address of your reverse proxy (see https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-can-i-access-nextcloud-locally)
1. Enter the ip-address of your local dns-server in the daemon.json file for docker so that you are sure that all docker containers use the correct local dns-server.
1. Now, entering the domain in the AIO-interface should work as expected and should allow you to continue with the setup
**Hint:** You may have a look at [this video](https://youtu.be/zk-y2wVkY4c) for a more complete but possibly outdated example.
## 4. Use the ACME DNS-challenge
You can alternatively use the ACME DNS-challenge to get a valid certificate for Nextcloud. Here is described how to set it up using an external caddy reverse proxy: https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-get-nextcloud-running-using-the-acme-dns-challenge
## 5. Use Cloudflare
If you do not have any control over the network, you may think about using Cloudflare Tunnel to get a valid certificate for your Nextcloud. However it will be opened to the public internet then. See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-run-nextcloud-behind-a-cloudflare-tunnel how to set this up.
## 6. Buy a certificate and use that
If none of the above ways work for you, you may simply buy a certificate from an issuer for your domain. You then download the certificate onto your server, configure AIO in [reverse proxy mode](./reverse-proxy.md) and use the certificate for your domain in your reverse proxy config.
+3 -15
View File
@@ -39,13 +39,13 @@ services:
- COLLABORA_HOST=nextcloud-aio-collabora
- TALK_HOST=nextcloud-aio-talk
- APACHE_PORT
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- ONLYOFFICE_HOST=nextcloud-aio-onlyoffice
- TZ=${TIMEZONE}
- APACHE_MAX_SIZE
- APACHE_MAX_TIME=${NEXTCLOUD_MAX_TIME}
- NOTIFY_PUSH_HOST=nextcloud-aio-notify-push
- WHITEBOARD_HOST=nextcloud-aio-whiteboard
- HARP_HOST=nextcloud-aio-harp
volumes:
- nextcloud_aio_nextcloud:/var/www/html:ro
- nextcloud_aio_apache:/mnt/data:rw
@@ -80,7 +80,6 @@ services:
- POSTGRES_PASSWORD=${DATABASE_PASSWORD}
- POSTGRES_DB=nextcloud_database
- POSTGRES_USER=nextcloud
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- TZ=${TIMEZONE}
- PGTZ=${TIMEZONE}
stop_grace_period: 1800s
@@ -150,7 +149,6 @@ services:
- TURN_SECRET
- SIGNALING_SECRET
- ONLYOFFICE_SECRET
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- NEXTCLOUD_MOUNT
- CLAMAV_ENABLED
- CLAMAV_HOST=nextcloud-aio-clamav
@@ -209,7 +207,6 @@ services:
- nextcloud_aio_nextcloud:/var/www/html:ro
environment:
- NEXTCLOUD_HOST=nextcloud-aio-nextcloud
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- TZ=${TIMEZONE}
restart: unless-stopped
read_only: true
@@ -231,7 +228,6 @@ services:
- "6379"
environment:
- REDIS_HOST_PASSWORD=${REDIS_PASSWORD}
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- TZ=${TIMEZONE}
volumes:
- nextcloud_aio_redis:/data:rw
@@ -255,9 +251,8 @@ services:
- "9980"
environment:
- aliasgroup1=https://${NC_DOMAIN}:443,http://nextcloud-aio-apache.nextcloud-aio:23973
- extra_params=--o:ssl.enable=false --o:ssl.termination=true --o:logging.disable_server_audit=true --o:welcome.enable=false --o:fetch_update_check=0 --o:allow_update_popup=false --o:remote_font_config.url=https://${NC_DOMAIN}/apps/richdocuments/settings/fonts.json --o:net.post_allow.host[0]=.+
- extra_params=--o:ssl.enable=false --o:ssl.termination=true --o:logging.disable_server_audit=true --o:logging.level=warning --o:logging.level_startup=warning --o:welcome.enable=false --o:fetch_update_check=0 --o:allow_update_popup=false --o:remote_font_config.url=https://${NC_DOMAIN}/apps/richdocuments/settings/fonts.json --o:net.post_allow.host[0]=.+
- dictionaries=${COLLABORA_DICTIONARIES}
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- TZ=${TIMEZONE}
- server_name=${NC_DOMAIN}
- DONT_GEN_SSL_CERT=1
@@ -298,7 +293,6 @@ services:
- TALK_HOST=nextcloud-aio-talk
- TURN_SECRET
- SIGNALING_SECRET
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- TZ=${TIMEZONE}
- TALK_PORT
- INTERNAL_SECRET=${TALK_INTERNAL_SECRET}
@@ -331,7 +325,6 @@ services:
- "1234"
environment:
- NC_DOMAIN
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- TZ=${TIMEZONE}
- RECORDING_SECRET
- INTERNAL_SECRET=${TALK_INTERNAL_SECRET}
@@ -361,7 +354,6 @@ services:
expose:
- "3310"
environment:
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- TZ=${TIMEZONE}
- MAX_SIZE=${NEXTCLOUD_UPLOAD_LIMIT}
volumes:
@@ -392,8 +384,6 @@ services:
expose:
- "80"
environment:
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- LOG_LEVEL=${AIO_LOG_LEVEL}
- TZ=${TIMEZONE}
- JWT_ENABLED=true
- JWT_HEADER=AuthorizationJwt
@@ -420,7 +410,6 @@ services:
expose:
- "9000"
environment:
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- TZ=${TIMEZONE}
- IMAGINARY_SECRET
restart: unless-stopped
@@ -447,12 +436,12 @@ services:
expose:
- "9200"
environment:
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- TZ=${TIMEZONE}
- ES_JAVA_OPTS=${FULLTEXTSEARCH_JAVA_OPTIONS}
- bootstrap.memory_lock=false
- cluster.name=nextcloud-aio
- discovery.type=single-node
- logger.level=WARN
- http.port=9200
- xpack.license.self_generated.type=basic
- xpack.security.enabled=false
@@ -484,7 +473,6 @@ services:
tmpfs:
- /tmp
environment:
- AIO_LOG_LEVEL
- TZ=${TIMEZONE}
- NEXTCLOUD_URL=https://${NC_DOMAIN}
- JWT_SECRET_KEY=${WHITEBOARD_SECRET}
+1 -1
View File
@@ -21,11 +21,11 @@ TALK_ENABLED="no" # Setting this to "yes" (with quotes) enables the opt
TALK_RECORDING_ENABLED="no" # Setting this to "yes" (with quotes) enables the option in Nextcloud automatically.
WHITEBOARD_ENABLED="no" # Setting this to "yes" (with quotes) enables the option in Nextcloud automatically.
AIO_LOG_LEVEL=warn # Allows to adjust the global AIO log level. Valid values are debug, info, warn and error.
APACHE_IP_BINDING=0.0.0.0 # This can be changed to e.g. 127.0.0.1 if you want to run AIO behind a web server or reverse proxy (like Apache, Nginx, Caddy, Cloudflare Tunnel and else) and if that is running on the same host and using localhost to connect
APACHE_MAX_SIZE=17179869184 # This needs to be an integer and in sync with NEXTCLOUD_UPLOAD_LIMIT
APACHE_PORT=443 # Changing this to a different value than 443 will allow you to run it behind a web server or reverse proxy (like Apache, Nginx, Caddy, Cloudflare Tunnel and else).
ADDITIONAL_COLLABORA_OPTIONS=['--o:security.seccomp=true'] # You can add additional collabora options here by using the array syntax.
AIO_LOG_LEVEL=warn # Allows to adjust the global AIO log level. Valid values are debug, info, warn and error.
COLLABORA_DICTIONARIES="de_DE en_GB en_US es_ES fr_FR it nl pt_BR pt_PT ru" # You can change this in order to enable other dictionaries for collabora
FULLTEXTSEARCH_JAVA_OPTIONS="-Xms512M -Xmx512M" # Allows to adjust the fulltextsearch java options.
INSTALL_LATEST_MAJOR=no # Setting this to yes will install the latest Major Nextcloud version upon the first installation
+1 -2
View File
@@ -48,7 +48,6 @@ sed -i '/AIO_TOKEN/d' containers.yml
sed -i '/AIO_URL/d' containers.yml
sed -i '/DOCKER_SOCKET_PROXY_ENABLED/d' containers.yml
sed -i '/HARP_ENABLED/d' containers.yml
sed -i '/HARP_HOST/d' containers.yml
sed -i '/HP_SHARED_KEY/d' containers.yml
sed -i '/ADDITIONAL_TRUSTED_PROXY/d' containers.yml
sed -i '/TURN_DOMAIN/d' containers.yml
@@ -101,7 +100,7 @@ sed -i 's|NC_DOMAIN=|NC_DOMAIN=yourdomain.com # TODO! Needs to be chang
sed -i 's|NEXTCLOUD_PASSWORD=|NEXTCLOUD_PASSWORD= # TODO! This is the password of the initially created Nextcloud admin with username "admin".|' sample.conf
sed -i 's|TIMEZONE=|TIMEZONE=Europe/Berlin # TODO! This is the timezone that your containers will use.|' sample.conf
sed -i 's|COLLABORA_SECCOMP_POLICY=|COLLABORA_SECCOMP_POLICY=--o:security.seccomp=true # Changing the value to false allows to disable the seccomp feature of the Collabora container.|' sample.conf
sed -i 's|AIO_LOG_LEVEL=|AIO_LOG_LEVEL=warn # Allows to adjust the global AIO log level. Valid values are debug, info, warn and error.|' sample.conf
sed -i 's|AIO_LOG_LEVEL=|AIO_LOG_LEVEL=warning # Allows to adjust the global AIO log level. Valid values are debug, info, warn and error.|' sample.conf
sed -i 's|FULLTEXTSEARCH_JAVA_OPTIONS=|FULLTEXTSEARCH_JAVA_OPTIONS="-Xms512M -Xmx512M" # Allows to adjust the fulltextsearch java options.|' sample.conf
sed -i 's|NEXTCLOUD_STARTUP_APPS=|NEXTCLOUD_STARTUP_APPS="deck twofactor_totp tasks calendar contacts notes" # Allows to modify the Nextcloud apps that are installed on starting AIO the first time. You can also disable apps by using a hyphen in front of them. E.g. "-app_api"|' sample.conf
sed -i 's|NEXTCLOUD_ADDITIONAL_APKS=|NEXTCLOUD_ADDITIONAL_APKS=imagemagick # This allows to add additional packages to the Nextcloud container permanently. Default is imagemagick but can be overwritten by modifying this value.|' sample.conf
+122 -122
View File
@@ -1,122 +1,122 @@
# Manual upgrade
If you do not update Nextcloud AIO for a long time (6+ months), when you eventually update in the AIO interface you will find Nextcloud no longer works. This is due to incompatible PHP versions within the nextcloud container.
There is unfortunately no way to fix this from a maintainer POV if you refrain from upgrading for so long.
The only way to fix this on your side is upgrading regularly (e.g. by enabling daily backups which will also automatically upgrade all containers) and following the steps below to get back to a normal state:
---
## Method 1 using `assaflavie/runlike`
> [!Warning]
> Please note that this method is apparently currently broken. See https://help.nextcloud.com/t/manual-upgrade-keeps-failing/217164/10
> So please refer to method 2 using Portainer.
1. Start all containers from the AIO interface
- Now, it will report that Nextcloud is restarting because it is not able to start due to the above mentioned problem
- #### Do **not** click on `Stop containers` because you will need them running going forward, see below
2. Find out with which PHP version your installed Nextcloud is compatible by running `sudo docker exec nextcloud-aio-nextcloud cat lib/versioncheck.php`.
- There you will find information about the max. supported PHP version
- **Make a mental note of this**
3. Stop the Nextcloud container and the Apache container by running
```bash
sudo docker stop nextcloud-aio-nextcloud && sudo docker stop nextcloud-aio-apache
```
4. Run the following commands in order to reverse engineer the Nextcloud container:
```bash
sudo docker pull assaflavie/runlike
echo '#!/bin/bash' > /tmp/nextcloud-aio-nextcloud
sudo docker run --rm -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro assaflavie/runlike -p nextcloud-aio-nextcloud >> /tmp/nextcloud-aio-nextcloud
sudo chown root:root /tmp/nextcloud-aio-nextcloud
```
5. Now open `/tmp/nextcloud-aio-nextcloud` with a text editor, and edit the container tag:
| To change | Replace with |
|----------------------------------------|-----------------------------------------------------|
| `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:latest` | `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:php{version}-latest` |
| `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:latest-arm64` | `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:php{version}-latest-arm64` |
- e.g. `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:php8.0-latest` or `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:php8.0-latest-arm64`
- However, if you are unsure check the ghcr.io (https://github.com/nextcloud-releases/all-in-one/pkgs/container/aio-nextcloud/versions?filters%5Bversion_type%5D=tagged) and docker hub: https://hub.docker.com/r/nextcloud/aio-nextcloud/tags?name=php
- Using nano and the arrow keys to navigate:
- `sudo nano /tmp/nextcloud-aio-nextcloud` making changes as above, then `[Ctrl]+[o]` -> `[Enter]` and `[Ctrl]+[x]` to save and exit.
6. Next, stop and remove the current container:
```bash
sudo docker stop nextcloud-aio-nextcloud
sudo docker rm nextcloud-aio-nextcloud
```
7. Now start the Nextcloud container with the new tag by simply running `sudo bash /tmp/nextcloud-aio-nextcloud` which at startup should automatically upgrade Nextcloud to a more recent version. If not, make sure that there is no `skip.update` file in the Nextcloud datadir. If there is such a file, simply delete the file and restart the container again.<br>
**Info**: You can open the Nextcloud container logs with `sudo docker logs -f nextcloud-aio-nextcloud`.
8. After the Nextcloud container is started (you can tell by looking at the logs), simply restart the container again with `sudo docker restart nextcloud-aio-nextcloud` until it does not install a new Nextcloud update anymore upon the container startup.
9. Now, you should be able to use the AIO interface again by simply stopping the AIO containers and starting them again which should finally bring up your instance again.
10. If not and if you get the same error again, you may repeat the process starting from the beginning again until your Nextcloud version is finally up-to-date.
11. Now, if everything is finally running as usual again, it is recommended to create a backup in order to save the current state. Consider enabling daily backups if doing regular upgrades is a hassle for you.
---
## Method 2 using Portainer
#### *Approach using portainer if method 1 does not work for you*
Prerequisite: have all containers from AIO interface running.
##### 1. Install portainer if not installed:
```bash
docker volume create portainer_data
docker run -d -p 8000:8000 -p 9443:9443 --name portainer --restart=always -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro -v portainer_data:/data portainer/portainer-ce:latest
```
- If you have a reverse proxy
- you can setup and navigate using a domain name.
- For the **standard** AIO install
- Open port 9443 on your firewall
- navigate to `https://<server-ip>:9443`
- Accept the insecure self-signed certificate and set an admin password
- If prompted to add an environment
- add local
##### 2. Within the local portainer environment navigate to the **containers** tab
- Here you should see all the various containers running
##### 3. Now we need to stop the `nextcloud-aio-nextcloud` and `nextcloud-aio-apache` containers
- This can be done by selecting the checkbox's next to the containers' name and clicking the **Stop** button at the top
- or you can click into individual containers and stop them there
##### 4. Find the version of PHP compatible with the running nextcloud container
- navigate to ```nextcloud-aio-nextcloud``` and click on ```logs```, you should see something along the lines of:
```logs
This version of nextcloud is not compatible with >=php 8.2, you are currently running php 8.2.18
```
Make **note** of the version which is compatible, rounding down to 1 digit after the dot.
- In this example we would want php 8.1 since anything with 8.2 or above is incompatible
##### 5. Find the correct container version
In general it should be ```ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:php8.x-latest-arm64``` or `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:php8.x-latest` replacing `x` with the version you require.
However, if you are unsure check the ghcr.io (https://github.com/nextcloud-releases/all-in-one/pkgs/container/aio-nextcloud/versions?filters%5Bversion_type%5D=tagged) and docker hub: https://hub.docker.com/r/nextcloud/aio-nextcloud/tags?name=php
##### 6. Replace the container
- Navigate to the ```nextcloud-aio-nextcloud``` container within portainer
- Click ```Duplicate/Edit```
- Within image, change this to the correct version from Step 5
- Click ```Deploy the container```
- if you are prompted to force repull the image click the slider and press pull image
*Navigate to the nextcloud-aio-nextcloud logs and you will see the container updating*
Once you see no more activities in the logs or a message like ```NOTICE: ready to handle connections```, we've done it!
#### Now you can handle everything through the AIO interface and stop and restart the containers normally.
---
##### 7. Last Step is removing portainer if you don't want to keep it
```bash
docker stop portainer
docker rm portainer
docker volume rm portainer_data
```
- Make sure you close port 9443 on your firewall and delete any necessary reverse proxy hosts.
# Manual upgrade
If you do not update Nextcloud AIO for a long time (6+ months), when you eventually update in the AIO interface you will find Nextcloud no longer works. This is due to incompatible PHP versions within the nextcloud container.
There is unfortunately no way to fix this from a maintainer POV if you refrain from upgrading for so long.
The only way to fix this on your side is upgrading regularly (e.g. by enabling daily backups which will also automatically upgrade all containers) and following the steps below to get back to a normal state:
---
## Method 1 using `assaflavie/runlike`
> [!Warning]
> Please note that this method is apparently currently broken. See https://help.nextcloud.com/t/manual-upgrade-keeps-failing/217164/10
> So please refer to method 2 using Portainer.
1. Start all containers from the AIO interface
- Now, it will report that Nextcloud is restarting because it is not able to start due to the above mentioned problem
- #### Do **not** click on `Stop containers` because you will need them running going forward, see below
2. Find out with which PHP version your installed Nextcloud is compatible by running `sudo docker exec nextcloud-aio-nextcloud cat lib/versioncheck.php`.
- There you will find information about the max. supported PHP version
- **Make a mental note of this**
3. Stop the Nextcloud container and the Apache container by running
```bash
sudo docker stop nextcloud-aio-nextcloud && sudo docker stop nextcloud-aio-apache
```
4. Run the following commands in order to reverse engineer the Nextcloud container:
```bash
sudo docker pull assaflavie/runlike
echo '#!/bin/bash' > /tmp/nextcloud-aio-nextcloud
sudo docker run --rm -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock assaflavie/runlike -p nextcloud-aio-nextcloud >> /tmp/nextcloud-aio-nextcloud
sudo chown root:root /tmp/nextcloud-aio-nextcloud
```
5. Now open `/tmp/nextcloud-aio-nextcloud` with a text editor, and edit the container tag:
| To change | Replace with |
|----------------------------------------|-----------------------------------------------------|
| `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:latest` | `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:php{version}-latest` |
| `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:latest-arm64` | `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:php{version}-latest-arm64` |
- e.g. `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:php8.0-latest` or `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:php8.0-latest-arm64`
- However, if you are unsure check the ghcr.io (https://github.com/nextcloud-releases/all-in-one/pkgs/container/aio-nextcloud/versions?filters%5Bversion_type%5D=tagged) and docker hub: https://hub.docker.com/r/nextcloud/aio-nextcloud/tags?name=php
- Using nano and the arrow keys to navigate:
- `sudo nano /tmp/nextcloud-aio-nextcloud` making changes as above, then `[Ctrl]+[o]` -> `[Enter]` and `[Ctrl]+[x]` to save and exit.
6. Next, stop and remove the current container:
```bash
sudo docker stop nextcloud-aio-nextcloud
sudo docker rm nextcloud-aio-nextcloud
```
7. Now start the Nextcloud container with the new tag by simply running `sudo bash /tmp/nextcloud-aio-nextcloud` which at startup should automatically upgrade Nextcloud to a more recent version. If not, make sure that there is no `skip.update` file in the Nextcloud datadir. If there is such a file, simply delete the file and restart the container again.<br>
**Info**: You can open the Nextcloud container logs with `sudo docker logs -f nextcloud-aio-nextcloud`.
8. After the Nextcloud container is started (you can tell by looking at the logs), simply restart the container again with `sudo docker restart nextcloud-aio-nextcloud` until it does not install a new Nextcloud update anymore upon the container startup.
9. Now, you should be able to use the AIO interface again by simply stopping the AIO containers and starting them again which should finally bring up your instance again.
10. If not and if you get the same error again, you may repeat the process starting from the beginning again until your Nextcloud version is finally up-to-date.
11. Now, if everything is finally running as usual again, it is recommended to create a backup in order to save the current state. Consider enabling daily backups if doing regular upgrades is a hassle for you.
---
## Method 2 using Portainer
#### *Approach using portainer if method 1 does not work for you*
Prerequisite: have all containers from AIO interface running.
##### 1. Install portainer if not installed:
```bash
docker volume create portainer_data
docker run -d -p 8000:8000 -p 9443:9443 --name portainer --restart=always -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -v portainer_data:/data portainer/portainer-ce:latest
```
- If you have a reverse proxy
- you can setup and navigate using a domain name.
- For the **standard** AIO install
- Open port 9443 on your firewall
- navigate to `https://<server-ip>:9443`
- Accept the insecure self-signed certificate and set an admin password
- If prompted to add an environment
- add local
##### 2. Within the local portainer environment navigate to the **containers** tab
- Here you should see all the various containers running
##### 3. Now we need to stop the `nextcloud-aio-nextcloud` and `nextcloud-aio-apache` containers
- This can be done by selecting the checkbox's next to the containers' name and clicking the **Stop** button at the top
- or you can click into individual containers and stop them there
##### 4. Find the version of PHP compatible with the running nextcloud container
- navigate to ```nextcloud-aio-nextcloud``` and click on ```logs```, you should see something along the lines of:
```logs
This version of nextcloud is not compatible with >=php 8.2, you are currently running php 8.2.18
```
Make **note** of the version which is compatible, rounding down to 1 digit after the dot.
- In this example we would want php 8.1 since anything with 8.2 or above is incompatible
##### 5. Find the correct container version
In general it should be ```ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:php8.x-latest-arm64``` or `ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:php8.x-latest` replacing `x` with the version you require.
However, if you are unsure check the ghcr.io (https://github.com/nextcloud-releases/all-in-one/pkgs/container/aio-nextcloud/versions?filters%5Bversion_type%5D=tagged) and docker hub: https://hub.docker.com/r/nextcloud/aio-nextcloud/tags?name=php
##### 6. Replace the container
- Navigate to the ```nextcloud-aio-nextcloud``` container within portainer
- Click ```Duplicate/Edit```
- Within image, change this to the correct version from Step 5
- Click ```Deploy the container```
- if you are prompted to force repull the image click the slider and press pull image
*Navigate to the nextcloud-aio-nextcloud logs and you will see the container updating*
Once you see no more activities in the logs or a message like ```NOTICE: ready to handle connections```, we've done it!
#### Now you can handle everything through the AIO interface and stop and restart the containers normally.
---
##### 7. Last Step is removing portainer if you don't want to keep it
```bash
docker stop portainer
docker rm portainer
docker volume rm portainer_data
```
- Make sure you close port 9443 on your firewall and delete any necessary reverse proxy hosts.
+228 -228
View File
@@ -1,228 +1,228 @@
# Multiple AIO instances
It is possible to run multiple instances of AIO on one server.
There are two ways to achieve this: The normal way is creating multiple VMs, installing AIO in [reverse proxy mode](./reverse-proxy.md) in each of them and having one reverse proxy in front of them that points to each VM (you also need to [use a different `TALK_PORT`](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-adjust-the-talk-port) for each of them). The second and more advanced way is creating multiple users on the server and using docker rootless for each of them in order to install multiple instances on the same server.
## Run multiple AIO instances on the same server with docker rootless
1. Create as many linux users as you need first. The easiest way is to use `sudo adduser` and follow the setup for that. Make sure to create a strong unique password for each of them and write it down!
1. Log in as each of the users by opening a new SSH connection as the user and install docker rootless for each of them by following step 0-1 and 3-4 of the [docker rootless documentation](./docker-rootless.md) (you can skip step 2 in this case).
1. Then install AIO in reverse proxy mode by using the command that is described in step 2 and 3 of the [reverse proxy documentation](./reverse-proxy.md) but use a different `APACHE_PORT` and [`TALK_PORT`](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-adjust-the-talk-port) for each instance as otherwise it will bug out. Also make sure to adjust the docker socket and `WATCHTOWER_DOCKER_SOCKET_PATH` correctly for each of them by following step 6 of the [docker rootless documentation](./docker-rootless.md). Additionally, modify `--publish 8080:8080` to a different port for each container, e.g. `8081:8080` as otherwise it will not work.<br>
**⚠️ Please note:** If you want to adjust the `NEXTCLOUD_DATADIR`, make sure to apply the correct permissions to the chosen path as documented at the bottom of the [docker rootless documentation](./docker-rootless.md). Also for the built-in backup to work, the target path needs to have the correct permissions as documented there, too.
1. Now install your webserver of choice on the host system. It is recommended to use caddy for this as it is by far the easiest solution. You can do so by following https://caddyserver.com/docs/install#debian-ubuntu-raspbian or below. (It needs to be installed directly on the host or on a different server in the same network).
1. Next create your Caddyfile with multiple entries and domains for the different instances like described in step 1 of the [reverse proxy documentation](./reverse-proxy.md). Obviously each domain needs to point correctly to the chosen `APACHE_PORT` that you've configured before. Then start Caddy which should automatically get the needed certificates for you if your domains are configured correctly and ports 80 and 443 are forwarded to your server.
1. Now open each of the AIO interfaces by opening `https://ip.address.of.this.server:8080` or e.g. `https://ip.address.of.this.server:8081` or as chosen during step 3 of this documentation.
1. Finally type in the domain that you've configured for each of the instances during step 5 of this documentation and you are done.
1. Please also do not forget to open/forward each chosen `TALK_PORT` UDP and TCP in your firewall/router as otherwise Talk will not work correctly!
Now everything should be set up correctly and you should have created multiple working instances of AIO on the same server!
## Run multiple AIO instances on the same server inside their own virtual machines
This guide will walk you through creating and configuring two (or more) Debian-based VMs (with "reverse proxy mode" Nextcloud AIO installed in each VM), behind one Caddy reverse proxy, all running on one host physical machine (like a laptop or desktop PC). It's highly recommend to follow the steps in order. Steps 1 through 4 will need to be repeated. Steps 5 through 8 only need to be completed once. All commands are expected to be run as root.
<details><summary><strong>PLEASE READ: A few expectations about your network</strong></summary>
This guide assumes that you have forwarded ports 443 and 8443 to your host physical machine via your router's configuration page, and either set up Dynamic DNS or obtained a static outbound IP address from your ISP. If this is not the case, or if you are brand-new to networking, you probably should not proceed with this guide, unless you are just using it for educational purposes. Proper network setup and security is critical when it comes to keeping your data safe. You may consider hosting using a VPS instead, or choosing one of <a href="https://nextcloud.com/providers/">Nextcloud's trusted providers.</a>
</details>
<details><summary><strong>A note for VPS users</strong></summary>
If you want to do this on a VPS, and your VPS is KVM-based and provides a static IP address, you can likely benefit from this guide too! Simply replace the words "host physical machine" with "VPS" and follow along.
</details>
**Before starting:** Make sure your host physical machine has enough resources. A host machine with 8GB RAM and 100GB storage is sufficient for running two fairly minimal VMs, with 2GB RAM and 32GB storage allocated to each VM. This guide assumes you have these resources at the minimum. This is fine for just testing the setup, but you will probably want to allocate more resources to your VMs if you plan to use this for day-to-day use.
If your host machine has more than 8GB memory available, and you plan to enable any of the optional containers (Nextcloud Office, Talk, Imaginary, etc.) in any of your instances, then you should definitely allocate more memory to the VM hosting that instance. In other words, before turning on any extra features inside a particular AIO interface, make sure you've first allocated enough resources to the VM that the instance is running inside. If in doubt, the AIO interface itself gives great recommendations for extra CPU and RAM allocation.
**Additional prerequisites:** Your host physical machine needs to have virtualization enabled in it's UEFI/BIOS. It also needs a few tools installed in order to create VMs. Assuming your host machine is a bare-bones Ubuntu or Debian Linux server without a desktop environment installed, the easiest way to create VMs is to install *QEMU*, *virsh*, *virt-install*, and a few extra packages to support UEFI booting and network config ([more info](https://wiki.debian.org/KVM)). You only need to do this once. To do this, run this command (**on the host physical machine**):
<!--
```shell
# For host machines running Ubuntu Server:
apt install --no-install-recommends qemu-system libvirt-clients libvirt-daemon-system virtinst ovmf bridge-utils
```
```shell
# For host machines running Debian:
apt install --no-install-recommends qemu-system qemu-utils libvirt-clients libvirt-daemon-system virtinst ovmf bridge-utils dnsmasq-base
```
-->
```shell
# For host machines running Ubuntu Server or Debian:
apt install --no-install-recommends qemu-system qemu-utils libvirt-clients libvirt-daemon-system virtinst ovmf bridge-utils dnsmasq-base
```
**Let's begin!** This guide assumes that you have two domains where you would like to host two individual AIO instances (one instance per domain). Let's call these domains `example1.com` and `example2.com`. Therefore, we'll create two VMs named `example1-com` and `example2-com` (These are the VM names we'll use below in step 1).
**Once you're ready, follow steps 1-4 below to set up your VMs. You will configure them one at a time.**
1. Choose a name for your VM. A good choice is to name each VM the same as the domain name that will be used to access it.
2. Choose the distribution you'd like to install within the VM:
<details><summary><strong>Ubuntu Server 22.04.4 LTS</strong></summary>
<h4>Downloading the .ISO image</h4>
You must first download an .ISO image to your host machine, and then provide virt-install with the path to that image.
<!-- This step is required because Ubuntu no longer hosts their "Legacy Ubuntu Server Installer" images, meaning we can no longer pass a URL to virt-install to use as a location. -->
<pre><code># Skip this part if you've already downloaded this image
curl -o /tmp/ubuntu-22.04.4-live-server-amd64.iso https://releases.ubuntu.com/jammy/ubuntu-22.04.4-live-server-amd64.iso
</code></pre>
<em>Note: You may choose a different place to store the .ISO file, but it needs to be somewhere accessible by QEMU. "/tmp" and "/home" work well, but choosing a location like "/root" will cause the next command to fail.</em>
<h4>Creating the VM</h4>
Now create the Ubuntu Server VM (Don't forget to replace [VM_NAME]):
<pre><code>virt-install \
--name [VM_NAME] \
--virt-type kvm \
--location /tmp/ubuntu-22.04.4-live-server-amd64.iso,kernel=casper/vmlinuz,initrd=casper/initrd \
--os-variant ubuntujammy \
--disk size=32 \
--memory 2048 \
--graphics none \
--console pty,target_type=serial \
--extra-args "console=ttyS0" \
--autostart \
--boot uefi
</code></pre>
<h4>Using a different version of Ubuntu Server</h4>
To use a different Ubuntu Server release, visit <a href="https://releases.ubuntu.com">this page</a> and find the version you want. You will need to adjust the filename and URL for the curl command, and the location and os-variant for the virt-install command, accordingly.
</details>
<details><summary><strong>Debian 11</strong></summary>
<h4>Creating the VM</h4>
Create the Debian VM (Don't forget to replace [VM_NAME]):
<pre><code>virt-install \
--name [VM_NAME] \
--virt-type kvm \
--location http://deb.debian.org/debian/dists/bullseye/main/installer-amd64/ \
--os-variant debian11 \
--disk size=32 \
--memory 2048 \
--graphics none \
--console pty,target_type=serial \
--extra-args "console=ttyS0" \
--autostart \
--boot uefi
</code></pre>
</details>
<details><summary><strong>Debian 12</strong></summary>
<h4>Creating the VM</h4>
Create the Debian VM (Don't forget to replace [VM_NAME]):
<pre><code># If the os-variant "debian12" is unknown, try "debiantesting" instead
virt-install \
--name [VM_NAME] \
--virt-type kvm \
--location http://deb.debian.org/debian/dists/bookworm/main/installer-amd64/ \
--os-variant debian12 \
--disk size=32 \
--memory 2048 \
--graphics none \
--console pty,target_type=serial \
--extra-args "console=ttyS0" \
--autostart \
--boot uefi
</code></pre>
</details>
<!--To learn more about virt-install or automating this process, see <a href="https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/7/html/virtualization_deployment_and_administration_guide/sect-guest_virtual_machine_installation_overview-creating_guests_with_virt_install">this guide</a>.-->
3. Navigate through the text-based installer. Most options can remain as default, but here are some tips:
<details><summary><strong>For the Ubuntu Server installer</strong></summary>
When asked about the "type of installation", you can leave the default "Ubuntu Server" without third-party drivers. You can leave the HTTP proxy information blank. In the "Profile Configuration" section, you can set "Your servers name" (hostname) to the same value as the name you gave to your VM (for example, "example1-com"). The installer will only let you create a non-root user. Note down the password you use here! You may skip enabling Ubuntu Pro. You can allow the partitioner to use the entire disk, this only uses the virtual disk that you defined above in step 2. You'll eventually be given the option to install additional software. Although "Nextcloud" is listed here, you almost certainly do <strong>not</strong> want to select this option, since you are setting up Nextcloud AIO. You'll be asked about installing "SSH server", this is entirely optional (This lets you easily SSH into the VM in the future in case you have to perform any maintenance, but even if you do not install an SSH server, you can still log in using the "virsh console" command). Finally, disregard the "[FAILED] Failed unmounting /cdrom." message, and press return.
</details>
<details><summary><strong>For the Debian installer</strong></summary>
When asked, you can set the hostname to the same value as the name you gave to your VM (for example, "example1-com"). You can leave the domain name and HTTP proxy information blank. Allow the installer to create both a root and a non-root user. Note down the password(s) you use here! You can allow the partitioner to use the entire disk, this only uses the virtual disk that you defined above in step 2. When tasksel (Software selection) runs and asks if you want to install additional software, use spacebar and your arrow keys to un-check the "Debian desktop environment" and "GNOME" options. The "SSH server" option is entirely optional (This lets you easily SSH into the VM in the future in case you have to perform any maintenance, but even if you do not install an SSH server, you can still log in using the "virsh console" command). Make sure "standard system utilities" is also checked. Hit tab to select "Continue". Finally, disregard the warning about GRUB, allow it to install to your "primary drive" (again, it's only virtual, and this only applies to the VM- this will not affect the boot configuration of your host physical machine) and select "/dev/vda" for the bootable device.
</details>
4. Configure your new VM:
After it has finished installing, the VM will have rebooted and presented you with a login prompt. For Debian, just use `root` as the username, and enter the password you chose during the installation process. Ubuntu restricts root account access, so you'll need to first login with your non-root user, and then run `sudo su -` to elevate your privileges.
We will now run a few commands to install docker and AIO in reverse proxy mode! As with any other commands, carefully read and try your best to understand them before running them.
**Each time you reach this step and run the `docker run` command below, you'll need to increment the `TALK_PORT` value. For example: 3478, 3479, etc... You may use other values as long as they don't conflict, and make sure they are [greater than 1024](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/discussions/2517). Be sure to note down the Talk port number you've assigned to this VM/AIO instance. You will need it later if you decide to enable Nextcloud Talk.**
Run these commands (**on the VM**):
```shell
apt install -y curl
curl -fsSL https://get.docker.com | sh
# Make sure you increment the TALK_PORT value every time you run this!
docker run \
--init \
--sig-proxy=false \
--name nextcloud-aio-mastercontainer \
--restart always \
--publish 8080:8080 \
--env APACHE_PORT=11000 \
--env APACHE_IP_BINDING=0.0.0.0 \
--env TALK_PORT=3478 \
--volume nextcloud_aio_mastercontainer:/mnt/docker-aio-config \
--volume /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro \
ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/all-in-one:latest
```
The last command may take a few minutes. When it's finished, you should see a success message, saying "Initial startup of Nextcloud All-in-One complete!". Now exit the console session with `Ctrl + [c]`. This concludes the setup for this particular VM.
---
6. Go ahead and run through steps 1-4 again in order to set up your second VM. When you're finished, proceed down to step 6. *(Note: If you downloaded the Ubuntu .ISO image and no longer need it, you may delete it now.)*
7. Almost done! All that's left is configuring your reverse proxy. To do this, you first need to [install it](https://caddyserver.com/docs/install#debian-ubuntu-raspbian). Run (**on the host physical machine**):
```shell
apt update -y
apt install -y debian-keyring debian-archive-keyring apt-transport-https curl
curl -1sLf 'https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/caddy/stable/gpg.key' | gpg --dearmor -o /usr/share/keyrings/caddy-stable-archive-keyring.gpg
curl -1sLf 'https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/caddy/stable/debian.deb.txt' | tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/caddy-stable.list
apt update -y
apt install -y caddy
```
These commands will ensure that your system is up-to-date and install the latest stable version of Caddy via it's official binary source.
8. To configure Caddy, you need to know the IP address assigned to each VM. Run (**on the host physical machine**):
```shell
virsh net-dhcp-leases default
```
This will show you the VMs you set up, and the IP address corresponding to each of them. Note down each IP and corresponding hostname.
Finally, you will configure Caddy using this information. Open the default Caddyfile with a text editor:
```shell
nano /etc/caddy/Caddyfile
```
Replace everything in this file with the following configuration. Don't forget to edit this sample configuration and substitute in your own domain names and IP addresses. `[DOMAIN_NAME_*]` should be a domain name like `example1.com`, and `[IP_ADDRESS_*]` should be a local IPv4 address like `192.168.122.225`.
```shell
# Virtual machine #1 - "example1-com"
https://[DOMAIN_NAME_1]:8443 {
reverse_proxy https://[IP_ADDRESS_1]:8080 {
header_up Host {host}
transport http {
tls_insecure_skip_verify
}
}
}
https://[DOMAIN_NAME_1]:443 {
reverse_proxy [IP_ADDRESS_1]:11000
}
# Virtual machine #2 - "example2-com"
https://[DOMAIN_NAME_2]:8443 {
reverse_proxy https://[IP_ADDRESS_2]:8080 {
header_up Host {host}
transport http {
tls_insecure_skip_verify
}
}
}
https://[DOMAIN_NAME_2]:443 {
reverse_proxy [IP_ADDRESS_2]:11000
}
# (Add more configurations here if you set up more than two VMs!)
```
After making this change, you'll need to restart Caddy:
```shell
systemctl restart caddy
```
9. That's it! Now, all that's left is to set up your instances through the AIO interface as usual by visiting `https://example1.com:8443` and `https://example2.com:8443` in a browser. Once you're finished going through each setup, you can access your new instances simply through their domain names. You can host as many instances with as many domain names as you want this way, as long as you have enough system resources. Enjoy!
<details><summary><strong>A few extra tips for managing this setup</strong></summary>
<ul>
<li>You can easily connect to a VM to perform maintenance using this command (<strong>on the host physical machine</strong>): <pre><code>virsh console --domain [VM_NAME]</code></pre></li>
<li>If you chose to install an SSH Server, you can SSH in using this command (<strong>on the host physical machine</strong>): <pre><code>ssh [NONROOT_USER]@[IP_ADDRESS] # By default, OpenSSH does not allow logging in as root</code></pre></li>
<li>If you mess up the configuration of a VM, you may wish to completely delete it and start fresh with a new one. <strong>THIS WILL DELETE ALL DATA ASSOCIATED WITH THE VM INCLUDING ANYTHING IN YOUR AIO DATADIR!</strong> If you are sure you would like to do this, run (<strong>on the host physical machine</strong>): <pre><code>virsh destroy --domain [VM_NAME] ; virsh undefine --nvram --domain [VM_NAME] && rm -rfi /var/lib/libvirt/images/[VM_NAME].qcow2</code></pre></li>
<li>Using Nextcloud Talk will require some extra configuration. Back when you set up your VMs, they were (by default) configured with NAT, meaning they are in their own subnet. The VMs must each instead be bridged, so that your router may directly "see" them (as if they were real, physical devices on your network), and each AIO instance inside each VM must be configured with a different Talk port (like 3478, 3479, etc.). You should have already set these port numbers (back when you first configured the VM in step 4 above), but if you still need to set (or want to change) these values, you can remove the mastercontainer and re-run the initial "docker run" command with a modified Talk port <a href="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-adjust-the-talk-port">like so</a>. Then, the Talk port for EACH instance needs to be forwarded in your router's settings DIRECTLY to the VM hosting the instance (completely bypassing your host physical machine/reverse proxy). And finally, inside an admin-privileged account (such as the default "admin" account) in each instance, you must visit <strong>https://[DOMAIN_NAME]/settings/admin/talk</strong> then find the STUN/TURN Settings, and from there set the proper values. If this is too complicated, it may be easier to use public STUN/TURN servers, but I have not tested any of this, rather I'm just sharing what I have found so far (more info available <a href="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/discussions/2517">here</a>). If you have figured this out or if any of this information is incorrect, please edit this section!</li>
<li>Configuring daily automatic backups is a bit more involved with this setup. But for the occasional manual borg backup, you can connect a physical SSD/HDD via a cheap USB SATA adapter/dock to a free USB port on your host physical machine, and then use these commands to pass the disk through to a VM of your choosing (<strong>on the host physical machine and on the VM</strong>): <pre><code>virsh attach-device --live --domain [VM_NAME] --file [USB_DEVICE_DEFINITION.xml]
virsh console --domain [VM_NAME]
# (Login to the VM with root privileges)
mkdir -p /mnt/[MOUNT_NAME]
mount /dev/disk/by-label/[DISK_NAME] /mnt/[MOUNT_NAME]</code></pre></li>
To create the XML device definition file, see <a href="https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/6/html/virtualization_administration_guide/sect-managing_guest_virtual_machines_with_virsh-attaching_and_updating_a_device_with_virsh">this short guide</a>. An SSD/HDD is recommended, but nothing is stopping you from using something as simple as a flash drive for testing if you really want. Finally, to actually perform a manual backup, make sure your disk is properly mounted and then simply use the AIO interface to perform the backup.
<li>If you want to shave off around 8-10 seconds of total boot time when you reboot your host physical machine, a simple trick is to lower the GRUB_TIMEOUT from the default five seconds to one second, on both the host physical machine and each of the VMs. You can also remove the delay, but it's generally safer to leave at least one second. (Always be extremely careful when editing GRUB config, especially on the host physical machine, as an incorrect configuration can prevent your device from booting!)</li>
</ul>
</details>
# Multiple AIO instances
It is possible to run multiple instances of AIO on one server.
There are two ways to achieve this: The normal way is creating multiple VMs, installing AIO in [reverse proxy mode](./reverse-proxy.md) in each of them and having one reverse proxy in front of them that points to each VM (you also need to [use a different `TALK_PORT`](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-adjust-the-talk-port) for each of them). The second and more advanced way is creating multiple users on the server and using docker rootless for each of them in order to install multiple instances on the same server.
## Run multiple AIO instances on the same server with docker rootless
1. Create as many linux users as you need first. The easiest way is to use `sudo adduser` and follow the setup for that. Make sure to create a strong unique password for each of them and write it down!
1. Log in as each of the users by opening a new SSH connection as the user and install docker rootless for each of them by following step 0-1 and 3-4 of the [docker rootless documentation](./docker-rootless.md) (you can skip step 2 in this case).
1. Then install AIO in reverse proxy mode by using the command that is described in step 2 and 3 of the [reverse proxy documentation](./reverse-proxy.md) but use a different `APACHE_PORT` and [`TALK_PORT`](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-adjust-the-talk-port) for each instance as otherwise it will bug out. Also make sure to adjust the docker socket and `WATCHTOWER_DOCKER_SOCKET_PATH` correctly for each of them by following step 6 of the [docker rootless documentation](./docker-rootless.md). Additionally, modify `--publish 8080:8080` to a different port for each container, e.g. `8081:8080` as otherwise it will not work.<br>
**⚠️ Please note:** If you want to adjust the `NEXTCLOUD_DATADIR`, make sure to apply the correct permissions to the chosen path as documented at the bottom of the [docker rootless documentation](./docker-rootless.md). Also for the built-in backup to work, the target path needs to have the correct permissions as documented there, too.
1. Now install your webserver of choice on the host system. It is recommended to use caddy for this as it is by far the easiest solution. You can do so by following https://caddyserver.com/docs/install#debian-ubuntu-raspbian or below. (It needs to be installed directly on the host or on a different server in the same network).
1. Next create your Caddyfile with multiple entries and domains for the different instances like described in step 1 of the [reverse proxy documentation](./reverse-proxy.md). Obviously each domain needs to point correctly to the chosen `APACHE_PORT` that you've configured before. Then start Caddy which should automatically get the needed certificates for you if your domains are configured correctly and ports 80 and 443 are forwarded to your server.
1. Now open each of the AIO interfaces by opening `https://ip.address.of.this.server:8080` or e.g. `https://ip.address.of.this.server:8081` or as chosen during step 3 of this documentation.
1. Finally type in the domain that you've configured for each of the instances during step 5 of this documentation and you are done.
1. Please also do not forget to open/forward each chosen `TALK_PORT` UDP and TCP in your firewall/router as otherwise Talk will not work correctly!
Now everything should be set up correctly and you should have created multiple working instances of AIO on the same server!
## Run multiple AIO instances on the same server inside their own virtual machines
This guide will walk you through creating and configuring two (or more) Debian-based VMs (with "reverse proxy mode" Nextcloud AIO installed in each VM), behind one Caddy reverse proxy, all running on one host physical machine (like a laptop or desktop PC). It's highly recommend to follow the steps in order. Steps 1 through 4 will need to be repeated. Steps 5 through 8 only need to be completed once. All commands are expected to be run as root.
<details><summary><strong>PLEASE READ: A few expectations about your network</strong></summary>
This guide assumes that you have forwarded ports 443 and 8443 to your host physical machine via your router's configuration page, and either set up Dynamic DNS or obtained a static outbound IP address from your ISP. If this is not the case, or if you are brand-new to networking, you probably should not proceed with this guide, unless you are just using it for educational purposes. Proper network setup and security is critical when it comes to keeping your data safe. You may consider hosting using a VPS instead, or choosing one of <a href="https://nextcloud.com/providers/">Nextcloud's trusted providers.</a>
</details>
<details><summary><strong>A note for VPS users</strong></summary>
If you want to do this on a VPS, and your VPS is KVM-based and provides a static IP address, you can likely benefit from this guide too! Simply replace the words "host physical machine" with "VPS" and follow along.
</details>
**Before starting:** Make sure your host physical machine has enough resources. A host machine with 8GB RAM and 100GB storage is sufficient for running two fairly minimal VMs, with 2GB RAM and 32GB storage allocated to each VM. This guide assumes you have these resources at the minimum. This is fine for just testing the setup, but you will probably want to allocate more resources to your VMs if you plan to use this for day-to-day use.
If your host machine has more than 8GB memory available, and you plan to enable any of the optional containers (Nextcloud Office, Talk, Imaginary, etc.) in any of your instances, then you should definitely allocate more memory to the VM hosting that instance. In other words, before turning on any extra features inside a particular AIO interface, make sure you've first allocated enough resources to the VM that the instance is running inside. If in doubt, the AIO interface itself gives great recommendations for extra CPU and RAM allocation.
**Additional prerequisites:** Your host physical machine needs to have virtualization enabled in it's UEFI/BIOS. It also needs a few tools installed in order to create VMs. Assuming your host machine is a bare-bones Ubuntu or Debian Linux server without a desktop environment installed, the easiest way to create VMs is to install *QEMU*, *virsh*, *virt-install*, and a few extra packages to support UEFI booting and network config ([more info](https://wiki.debian.org/KVM)). You only need to do this once. To do this, run this command (**on the host physical machine**):
<!--
```shell
# For host machines running Ubuntu Server:
apt install --no-install-recommends qemu-system libvirt-clients libvirt-daemon-system virtinst ovmf bridge-utils
```
```shell
# For host machines running Debian:
apt install --no-install-recommends qemu-system qemu-utils libvirt-clients libvirt-daemon-system virtinst ovmf bridge-utils dnsmasq-base
```
-->
```shell
# For host machines running Ubuntu Server or Debian:
apt install --no-install-recommends qemu-system qemu-utils libvirt-clients libvirt-daemon-system virtinst ovmf bridge-utils dnsmasq-base
```
**Let's begin!** This guide assumes that you have two domains where you would like to host two individual AIO instances (one instance per domain). Let's call these domains `example1.com` and `example2.com`. Therefore, we'll create two VMs named `example1-com` and `example2-com` (These are the VM names we'll use below in step 1).
**Once you're ready, follow steps 1-4 below to set up your VMs. You will configure them one at a time.**
1. Choose a name for your VM. A good choice is to name each VM the same as the domain name that will be used to access it.
2. Choose the distribution you'd like to install within the VM:
<details><summary><strong>Ubuntu Server 22.04.4 LTS</strong></summary>
<h4>Downloading the .ISO image</h4>
You must first download an .ISO image to your host machine, and then provide virt-install with the path to that image.
<!-- This step is required because Ubuntu no longer hosts their "Legacy Ubuntu Server Installer" images, meaning we can no longer pass a URL to virt-install to use as a location. -->
<pre><code># Skip this part if you've already downloaded this image
curl -o /tmp/ubuntu-22.04.4-live-server-amd64.iso https://releases.ubuntu.com/jammy/ubuntu-22.04.4-live-server-amd64.iso
</code></pre>
<em>Note: You may choose a different place to store the .ISO file, but it needs to be somewhere accessible by QEMU. "/tmp" and "/home" work well, but choosing a location like "/root" will cause the next command to fail.</em>
<h4>Creating the VM</h4>
Now create the Ubuntu Server VM (Don't forget to replace [VM_NAME]):
<pre><code>virt-install \
--name [VM_NAME] \
--virt-type kvm \
--location /tmp/ubuntu-22.04.4-live-server-amd64.iso,kernel=casper/vmlinuz,initrd=casper/initrd \
--os-variant ubuntujammy \
--disk size=32 \
--memory 2048 \
--graphics none \
--console pty,target_type=serial \
--extra-args "console=ttyS0" \
--autostart \
--boot uefi
</code></pre>
<h4>Using a different version of Ubuntu Server</h4>
To use a different Ubuntu Server release, visit <a href="https://releases.ubuntu.com">this page</a> and find the version you want. You will need to adjust the filename and URL for the curl command, and the location and os-variant for the virt-install command, accordingly.
</details>
<details><summary><strong>Debian 11</strong></summary>
<h4>Creating the VM</h4>
Create the Debian VM (Don't forget to replace [VM_NAME]):
<pre><code>virt-install \
--name [VM_NAME] \
--virt-type kvm \
--location http://deb.debian.org/debian/dists/bullseye/main/installer-amd64/ \
--os-variant debian11 \
--disk size=32 \
--memory 2048 \
--graphics none \
--console pty,target_type=serial \
--extra-args "console=ttyS0" \
--autostart \
--boot uefi
</code></pre>
</details>
<details><summary><strong>Debian 12</strong></summary>
<h4>Creating the VM</h4>
Create the Debian VM (Don't forget to replace [VM_NAME]):
<pre><code># If the os-variant "debian12" is unknown, try "debiantesting" instead
virt-install \
--name [VM_NAME] \
--virt-type kvm \
--location http://deb.debian.org/debian/dists/bookworm/main/installer-amd64/ \
--os-variant debian12 \
--disk size=32 \
--memory 2048 \
--graphics none \
--console pty,target_type=serial \
--extra-args "console=ttyS0" \
--autostart \
--boot uefi
</code></pre>
</details>
<!--To learn more about virt-install or automating this process, see <a href="https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/7/html/virtualization_deployment_and_administration_guide/sect-guest_virtual_machine_installation_overview-creating_guests_with_virt_install">this guide</a>.-->
3. Navigate through the text-based installer. Most options can remain as default, but here are some tips:
<details><summary><strong>For the Ubuntu Server installer</strong></summary>
When asked about the "type of installation", you can leave the default "Ubuntu Server" without third-party drivers. You can leave the HTTP proxy information blank. In the "Profile Configuration" section, you can set "Your servers name" (hostname) to the same value as the name you gave to your VM (for example, "example1-com"). The installer will only let you create a non-root user. Note down the password you use here! You may skip enabling Ubuntu Pro. You can allow the partitioner to use the entire disk, this only uses the virtual disk that you defined above in step 2. You'll eventually be given the option to install additional software. Although "Nextcloud" is listed here, you almost certainly do <strong>not</strong> want to select this option, since you are setting up Nextcloud AIO. You'll be asked about installing "SSH server", this is entirely optional (This lets you easily SSH into the VM in the future in case you have to perform any maintenance, but even if you do not install an SSH server, you can still log in using the "virsh console" command). Finally, disregard the "[FAILED] Failed unmounting /cdrom." message, and press return.
</details>
<details><summary><strong>For the Debian installer</strong></summary>
When asked, you can set the hostname to the same value as the name you gave to your VM (for example, "example1-com"). You can leave the domain name and HTTP proxy information blank. Allow the installer to create both a root and a non-root user. Note down the password(s) you use here! You can allow the partitioner to use the entire disk, this only uses the virtual disk that you defined above in step 2. When tasksel (Software selection) runs and asks if you want to install additional software, use spacebar and your arrow keys to un-check the "Debian desktop environment" and "GNOME" options. The "SSH server" option is entirely optional (This lets you easily SSH into the VM in the future in case you have to perform any maintenance, but even if you do not install an SSH server, you can still log in using the "virsh console" command). Make sure "standard system utilities" is also checked. Hit tab to select "Continue". Finally, disregard the warning about GRUB, allow it to install to your "primary drive" (again, it's only virtual, and this only applies to the VM- this will not affect the boot configuration of your host physical machine) and select "/dev/vda" for the bootable device.
</details>
4. Configure your new VM:
After it has finished installing, the VM will have rebooted and presented you with a login prompt. For Debian, just use `root` as the username, and enter the password you chose during the installation process. Ubuntu restricts root account access, so you'll need to first login with your non-root user, and then run `sudo su -` to elevate your privileges.
We will now run a few commands to install docker and AIO in reverse proxy mode! As with any other commands, carefully read and try your best to understand them before running them.
**Each time you reach this step and run the `docker run` command below, you'll need to increment the `TALK_PORT` value. For example: 3478, 3479, etc... You may use other values as long as they don't conflict, and make sure they are [greater than 1024](https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/discussions/2517). Be sure to note down the Talk port number you've assigned to this VM/AIO instance. You will need it later if you decide to enable Nextcloud Talk.**
Run these commands (**on the VM**):
```shell
apt install -y curl
curl -fsSL https://get.docker.com | sh
# Make sure you increment the TALK_PORT value every time you run this!
docker run \
--init \
--sig-proxy=false \
--name nextcloud-aio-mastercontainer \
--restart always \
--publish 8080:8080 \
--env APACHE_PORT=11000 \
--env APACHE_IP_BINDING=0.0.0.0 \
--env TALK_PORT=3478 \
--volume nextcloud_aio_mastercontainer:/mnt/docker-aio-config \
--volume /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro \
ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/all-in-one:latest
```
The last command may take a few minutes. When it's finished, you should see a success message, saying "Initial startup of Nextcloud All-in-One complete!". Now exit the console session with `Ctrl + [c]`. This concludes the setup for this particular VM.
---
6. Go ahead and run through steps 1-4 again in order to set up your second VM. When you're finished, proceed down to step 6. *(Note: If you downloaded the Ubuntu .ISO image and no longer need it, you may delete it now.)*
7. Almost done! All that's left is configuring your reverse proxy. To do this, you first need to [install it](https://caddyserver.com/docs/install#debian-ubuntu-raspbian). Run (**on the host physical machine**):
```shell
apt update -y
apt install -y debian-keyring debian-archive-keyring apt-transport-https curl
curl -1sLf 'https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/caddy/stable/gpg.key' | gpg --dearmor -o /usr/share/keyrings/caddy-stable-archive-keyring.gpg
curl -1sLf 'https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/caddy/stable/debian.deb.txt' | tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/caddy-stable.list
apt update -y
apt install -y caddy
```
These commands will ensure that your system is up-to-date and install the latest stable version of Caddy via it's official binary source.
8. To configure Caddy, you need to know the IP address assigned to each VM. Run (**on the host physical machine**):
```shell
virsh net-dhcp-leases default
```
This will show you the VMs you set up, and the IP address corresponding to each of them. Note down each IP and corresponding hostname.
Finally, you will configure Caddy using this information. Open the default Caddyfile with a text editor:
```shell
nano /etc/caddy/Caddyfile
```
Replace everything in this file with the following configuration. Don't forget to edit this sample configuration and substitute in your own domain names and IP addresses. `[DOMAIN_NAME_*]` should be a domain name like `example1.com`, and `[IP_ADDRESS_*]` should be a local IPv4 address like `192.168.122.225`.
```shell
# Virtual machine #1 - "example1-com"
https://[DOMAIN_NAME_1]:8443 {
reverse_proxy https://[IP_ADDRESS_1]:8080 {
header_up Host {host}
transport http {
tls_insecure_skip_verify
}
}
}
https://[DOMAIN_NAME_1]:443 {
reverse_proxy [IP_ADDRESS_1]:11000
}
# Virtual machine #2 - "example2-com"
https://[DOMAIN_NAME_2]:8443 {
reverse_proxy https://[IP_ADDRESS_2]:8080 {
header_up Host {host}
transport http {
tls_insecure_skip_verify
}
}
}
https://[DOMAIN_NAME_2]:443 {
reverse_proxy [IP_ADDRESS_2]:11000
}
# (Add more configurations here if you set up more than two VMs!)
```
After making this change, you'll need to restart Caddy:
```shell
systemctl restart caddy
```
9. That's it! Now, all that's left is to set up your instances through the AIO interface as usual by visiting `https://example1.com:8443` and `https://example2.com:8443` in a browser. Once you're finished going through each setup, you can access your new instances simply through their domain names. You can host as many instances with as many domain names as you want this way, as long as you have enough system resources. Enjoy!
<details><summary><strong>A few extra tips for managing this setup</strong></summary>
<ul>
<li>You can easily connect to a VM to perform maintenance using this command (<strong>on the host physical machine</strong>): <pre><code>virsh console --domain [VM_NAME]</code></pre></li>
<li>If you chose to install an SSH Server, you can SSH in using this command (<strong>on the host physical machine</strong>): <pre><code>ssh [NONROOT_USER]@[IP_ADDRESS] # By default, OpenSSH does not allow logging in as root</code></pre></li>
<li>If you mess up the configuration of a VM, you may wish to completely delete it and start fresh with a new one. <strong>THIS WILL DELETE ALL DATA ASSOCIATED WITH THE VM INCLUDING ANYTHING IN YOUR AIO DATADIR!</strong> If you are sure you would like to do this, run (<strong>on the host physical machine</strong>): <pre><code>virsh destroy --domain [VM_NAME] ; virsh undefine --nvram --domain [VM_NAME] && rm -rfi /var/lib/libvirt/images/[VM_NAME].qcow2</code></pre></li>
<li>Using Nextcloud Talk will require some extra configuration. Back when you set up your VMs, they were (by default) configured with NAT, meaning they are in their own subnet. The VMs must each instead be bridged, so that your router may directly "see" them (as if they were real, physical devices on your network), and each AIO instance inside each VM must be configured with a different Talk port (like 3478, 3479, etc.). You should have already set these port numbers (back when you first configured the VM in step 4 above), but if you still need to set (or want to change) these values, you can remove the mastercontainer and re-run the initial "docker run" command with a modified Talk port <a href="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-adjust-the-talk-port">like so</a>. Then, the Talk port for EACH instance needs to be forwarded in your router's settings DIRECTLY to the VM hosting the instance (completely bypassing your host physical machine/reverse proxy). And finally, inside an admin-privileged account (such as the default "admin" account) in each instance, you must visit <strong>https://[DOMAIN_NAME]/settings/admin/talk</strong> then find the STUN/TURN Settings, and from there set the proper values. If this is too complicated, it may be easier to use public STUN/TURN servers, but I have not tested any of this, rather I'm just sharing what I have found so far (more info available <a href="https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/discussions/2517">here</a>). If you have figured this out or if any of this information is incorrect, please edit this section!</li>
<li>Configuring daily automatic backups is a bit more involved with this setup. But for the occasional manual borg backup, you can connect a physical SSD/HDD via a cheap USB SATA adapter/dock to a free USB port on your host physical machine, and then use these commands to pass the disk through to a VM of your choosing (<strong>on the host physical machine and on the VM</strong>): <pre><code>virsh attach-device --live --domain [VM_NAME] --file [USB_DEVICE_DEFINITION.xml]
virsh console --domain [VM_NAME]
# (Login to the VM with root privileges)
mkdir -p /mnt/[MOUNT_NAME]
mount /dev/disk/by-label/[DISK_NAME] /mnt/[MOUNT_NAME]</code></pre></li>
To create the XML device definition file, see <a href="https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/6/html/virtualization_administration_guide/sect-managing_guest_virtual_machines_with_virsh-attaching_and_updating_a_device_with_virsh">this short guide</a>. An SSD/HDD is recommended, but nothing is stopping you from using something as simple as a flash drive for testing if you really want. Finally, to actually perform a manual backup, make sure your disk is properly mounted and then simply use the AIO interface to perform the backup.
<li>If you want to shave off around 8-10 seconds of total boot time when you reboot your host physical machine, a simple trick is to lower the GRUB_TIMEOUT from the default five seconds to one second, on both the host physical machine and each of the VMs. You can also remove the delay, but it's generally safer to leave at least one second. (Always be extremely careful when editing GRUB config, especially on the host physical machine, as an incorrect configuration can prevent your device from booting!)</li>
</ul>
</details>
+1 -1
View File
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
name: nextcloud-aio-helm-chart
description: A generated Helm Chart for Nextcloud AIO from Skippbox Kompose
version: 13.1.0
version: 12.9.2
apiVersion: v2
keywords:
- latest
@@ -37,8 +37,6 @@ spec:
- env:
- name: ADDITIONAL_TRUSTED_DOMAIN
value: "{{ .Values.ADDITIONAL_TRUSTED_DOMAIN }}"
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: APACHE_HOST
value: nextcloud-aio-apache
- name: APACHE_MAX_SIZE
@@ -49,6 +47,8 @@ spec:
value: "{{ .Values.APACHE_PORT }}"
- name: COLLABORA_HOST
value: nextcloud-aio-collabora
- name: HARP_HOST
value: nextcloud-aio-harp
- name: NC_DOMAIN
value: "{{ .Values.NC_DOMAIN }}"
- name: NEXTCLOUD_HOST
@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ spec:
value: "{{ .Values.TIMEZONE }}"
- name: WHITEBOARD_HOST
value: nextcloud-aio-whiteboard
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-apache:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-apache:20260409_094910
readinessProbe:
exec:
command:
@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ spec:
{{- end }}
initContainers:
- name: init-subpath
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-alpine:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-alpine:20260409_094910
command:
- mkdir
- "-p"
@@ -55,13 +55,11 @@ spec:
{{- end }}
containers:
- env:
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: MAX_SIZE
value: "{{ .Values.NEXTCLOUD_UPLOAD_LIMIT }}"
- name: TZ
value: "{{ .Values.TIMEZONE }}"
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-clamav:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-clamav:20260409_094910
readinessProbe:
exec:
command:
@@ -23,8 +23,6 @@ spec:
containers:
- args: {{ .Values.ADDITIONAL_COLLABORA_OPTIONS | default list | toJson }}
env:
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: DONT_GEN_SSL_CERT
value: "1"
- name: TZ
@@ -34,13 +32,13 @@ spec:
- name: dictionaries
value: "{{ .Values.COLLABORA_DICTIONARIES }}"
- name: extra_params
value: --o:ssl.enable=false --o:ssl.termination=true --o:logging.disable_server_audit=true --o:welcome.enable=false --o:fetch_update_check=0 --o:allow_update_popup=false --o:remote_font_config.url=https://{{ .Values.NC_DOMAIN }}/apps/richdocuments/settings/fonts.json --o:net.post_allow.host[0]=.+
value: --o:ssl.enable=false --o:ssl.termination=true --o:logging.disable_server_audit=true --o:logging.level=warning --o:logging.level_startup=warning --o:welcome.enable=false --o:fetch_update_check=0 --o:allow_update_popup=false --o:remote_font_config.url=https://{{ .Values.NC_DOMAIN }}/apps/richdocuments/settings/fonts.json --o:net.post_allow.host[0]=.+
- name: server_name
value: "{{ .Values.NC_DOMAIN }}"
{{- if contains "--o:support_key=" (join " " (.Values.ADDITIONAL_COLLABORA_OPTIONS | default list)) }}
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-collabora-online:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-collabora-online:20260409_094910
{{- else }}
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-collabora:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-collabora:20260409_094910
{{- end }}
readinessProbe:
exec:
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ spec:
{{- end }}
initContainers:
- name: init-subpath
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-alpine:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-alpine:20260409_094910
command:
- mkdir
- "-p"
@@ -54,8 +54,6 @@ spec:
{{- end }}
containers:
- env:
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: PGTZ
value: "{{ .Values.TIMEZONE }}"
- name: POSTGRES_DB
@@ -66,7 +64,7 @@ spec:
value: nextcloud
- name: TZ
value: "{{ .Values.TIMEZONE }}"
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-postgresql:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-postgresql:20260409_094910
readinessProbe:
exec:
command:
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ spec:
spec:
initContainers:
- name: init-volumes
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-alpine:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-alpine:20260409_094910
command:
- chmod
- "777"
@@ -34,8 +34,6 @@ spec:
mountPath: /nextcloud-aio-elasticsearch
containers:
- env:
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: ES_JAVA_OPTS
value: "{{ .Values.FULLTEXTSEARCH_JAVA_OPTIONS | default "-Xms512M -Xmx512M" }}"
- name: FULLTEXTSEARCH_PASSWORD
@@ -50,17 +48,13 @@ spec:
value: single-node
- name: http.port
value: "9200"
- name: indices.fielddata.cache.size
value: 20%
- name: indices.memory.index_buffer_size
value: 20%
- name: thread_pool.write.queue_size
value: "1000"
- name: logger.level
value: WARN
- name: xpack.license.self_generated.type
value: basic
- name: xpack.security.enabled
value: "false"
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-fulltextsearch:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-fulltextsearch:20260409_094910
readinessProbe:
exec:
command:
@@ -34,13 +34,11 @@ spec:
{{- end }}
containers:
- env:
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: IMAGINARY_SECRET
value: "{{ .Values.IMAGINARY_SECRET }}"
- name: TZ
value: "{{ .Values.TIMEZONE }}"
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-imaginary:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-imaginary:20260409_094910
readinessProbe:
exec:
command:
@@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ spec:
# AIO settings start # Do not remove or change this line!
initContainers:
- name: init-volumes
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-alpine:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-alpine:20260409_094910
command:
- chmod
- "777"
@@ -92,8 +92,6 @@ spec:
value: "{{ .Values.NEXTCLOUD_PASSWORD }}"
- name: ADMIN_USER
value: admin
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: APACHE_HOST
value: nextcloud-aio-apache
- name: APACHE_PORT
@@ -192,7 +190,7 @@ spec:
value: "{{ .Values.WHITEBOARD_ENABLED }}"
- name: WHITEBOARD_SECRET
value: "{{ .Values.WHITEBOARD_SECRET }}"
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-nextcloud:20260409_094910
{{- if eq (.Values.RPSS_ENABLED | default "no") "yes" }} # AIO-config - do not change this comment!
securityContext:
# The items below only work in container context
@@ -35,13 +35,11 @@ spec:
{{- end }}
containers:
- env:
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: NEXTCLOUD_HOST
value: nextcloud-aio-nextcloud
- name: TZ
value: "{{ .Values.TIMEZONE }}"
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-notify-push:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-notify-push:20260409_094910
readinessProbe:
exec:
command:
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ spec:
spec:
initContainers:
- name: init-volumes
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-alpine:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-alpine:20260409_094910
command:
- chmod
- "777"
@@ -34,19 +34,15 @@ spec:
mountPath: /nextcloud-aio-onlyoffice
containers:
- env:
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: JWT_ENABLED
value: "true"
- name: JWT_HEADER
value: AuthorizationJwt
- name: JWT_SECRET
value: "{{ .Values.ONLYOFFICE_SECRET }}"
- name: LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: TZ
value: "{{ .Values.TIMEZONE }}"
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-onlyoffice:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-onlyoffice:20260409_094910
readinessProbe:
exec:
command:
@@ -35,13 +35,11 @@ spec:
{{- end }}
containers:
- env:
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: REDIS_HOST_PASSWORD
value: "{{ .Values.REDIS_PASSWORD }}"
- name: TZ
value: "{{ .Values.TIMEZONE }}"
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-redis:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-redis:20260409_094910
readinessProbe:
exec:
command:
@@ -40,8 +40,6 @@ spec:
value: "{{ .Values.TALK_MAX_STREAM_BITRATE }}"
- name: TALK_MAX_SCREEN_BITRATE
value: "{{ .Values.TALK_MAX_SCREEN_BITRATE }}"
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: INTERNAL_SECRET
value: "{{ .Values.TALK_INTERNAL_SECRET }}"
- name: NC_DOMAIN
@@ -56,7 +54,7 @@ spec:
value: "{{ .Values.TURN_SECRET }}"
- name: TZ
value: "{{ .Values.TIMEZONE }}"
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-talk:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-talk:20260409_094910
readinessProbe:
exec:
command:
@@ -36,8 +36,6 @@ spec:
{{- end }}
containers:
- env:
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: INTERNAL_SECRET
value: "{{ .Values.TALK_INTERNAL_SECRET }}"
- name: NC_DOMAIN
@@ -46,7 +44,7 @@ spec:
value: "{{ .Values.RECORDING_SECRET }}"
- name: TZ
value: "{{ .Values.TIMEZONE }}"
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-talk-recording:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-talk-recording:20260409_094910
readinessProbe:
exec:
command:
@@ -34,8 +34,6 @@ spec:
{{- end }}
containers:
- env:
- name: AIO_LOG_LEVEL
value: "{{ .Values.AIO_LOG_LEVEL }}"
- name: BACKUP_DIR
value: /tmp
- name: JWT_SECRET_KEY
@@ -52,7 +50,7 @@ spec:
value: redis
- name: TZ
value: "{{ .Values.TIMEZONE }}"
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-whiteboard:20260527_140826
image: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-whiteboard:20260409_094910
readinessProbe:
exec:
command:
+2 -2
View File
@@ -133,7 +133,7 @@ for variable in "${DEPLOYMENTS[@]}"; do
sed -i "/^ spec:/r /tmp/initcontainers.clamav" "$variable"
elif echo "$variable" | grep -q "nextcloud-deployment.yaml"; then
sed -i "/^ spec:/r /tmp/initcontainers.nextcloud" "$variable"
elif echo "$variable" | grep -q "fulltextsearch" || echo "$variable" | grep -q "onlyoffice" || echo "$variable" | grep -q "eurooffice" || echo "$variable" | grep -q "collabora"; then
elif echo "$variable" | grep -q "fulltextsearch" || echo "$variable" | grep -q "onlyoffice" || echo "$variable" | grep -q "collabora"; then
sed -i "/^ spec:/r /tmp/initcontainers" "$variable"
fi
volumeNames="$(grep -A1 mountPath "$variable" | grep -v mountPath | sed 's|.*name: ||' | sed '/^--$/d')"
@@ -499,7 +499,7 @@ cat << EOL > /tmp/security.conf
{{- end }}
EOL
# shellcheck disable=SC1083
find ./ \( -not -name '*collabora-deployment.yaml*' -not -name '*apache-deployment.yaml*' -not -name '*onlyoffice-deployment.yaml*' -not -name '*eurooffice-deployment.yaml*' -name "*deployment.yaml" \) -exec sed -i "/^ securityContext:$/r /tmp/security.conf" \{} \;
find ./ \( -not -name '*collabora-deployment.yaml*' -not -name '*apache-deployment.yaml*' -not -name '*onlyoffice-deployment.yaml*' -name "*deployment.yaml" \) -exec sed -i "/^ securityContext:$/r /tmp/security.conf" \{} \;
# shellcheck disable=SC1083
find ./ -name '*collabora-deployment.yaml*' -exec sed -i "/ADDITIONAL_COLLABORA_OPTIONS_PLACEHOLDER/d" \{} \;
+1 -2
View File
@@ -21,7 +21,6 @@ TALK_ENABLED: "no" # Setting this to "yes" (with quotes) enables the op
TALK_RECORDING_ENABLED: "no" # Setting this to "yes" (with quotes) enables the option in Nextcloud automatically.
WHITEBOARD_ENABLED: "no" # Setting this to "yes" (with quotes) enables the option in Nextcloud automatically.
AIO_LOG_LEVEL: warn # Allows to adjust the global AIO log level. Valid values are debug, info, warn and error.
APACHE_MAX_SIZE: "17179869184" # This needs to be an integer and in sync with NEXTCLOUD_UPLOAD_LIMIT
APACHE_PORT: 443 # Changing this to a different value than 443 will allow you to run it behind a web server or reverse proxy (like Apache, Nginx, Caddy, Cloudflare Tunnel and else).
ADDITIONAL_COLLABORA_OPTIONS: ['--o:security.seccomp=true'] # You can add additional collabora options here by using the array syntax.
@@ -32,7 +31,7 @@ NEXTCLOUD_ADDITIONAL_APKS: imagemagick # This allows to add additional pa
NEXTCLOUD_ADDITIONAL_PHP_EXTENSIONS: imagick # This allows to add additional php extensions to the Nextcloud container permanently. Default is imagick but can be overwritten by modifying this value.
NEXTCLOUD_MAX_TIME: 3600 # This allows to change the upload time limit of the Nextcloud container
NEXTCLOUD_MEMORY_LIMIT: 512M # This allows to change the PHP memory limit of the Nextcloud container
NEXTCLOUD_STARTUP_APPS: deck twofactor_totp tasks calendar contacts notes # Allows to modify the Nextcloud apps that are installed on starting AIO the first time. You can also disable apps by using a hyphen in front of them. E.g. -app_api
NEXTCLOUD_STARTUP_APPS: deck twofactor_totp tasks calendar contacts notes # Allows to modify the Nextcloud apps that are installed on starting AIO the first time
NEXTCLOUD_TRUSTED_CACERTS_DIR: # Setting this to any value allows to automatically import root certificates into the Nextcloud container
NEXTCLOUD_UPLOAD_LIMIT: 16G # This allows to change the upload limit of the Nextcloud container
REMOVE_DISABLED_APPS: "yes" # Setting this to "no" keep Nextcloud apps that are disabled via their switch and not uninstall them if they should be installed in Nextcloud.

Some files were not shown because too many files have changed in this diff Show More