- Introduction
- Contributing
- Issues
- Installation
- Quick Start
- Configuration
- Plugins
- Themes
- Maintenance
- References
Dockerfile to build a Redmine container image.
Current Version: sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
P.S.: If your installation depends on various third party plugins, please stick with 2.6.xx series to avoid breakage.
If you find this image useful here's how you can help:
- Send a Pull Request with your awesome new features and bug fixes
- Help new users with Issues they may encounter
- Support the development of this image with a donation
Docker is a relatively new project and is active being developed and tested by a thriving community of developers and testers and every release of docker features many enhancements and bugfixes.
Given the nature of the development and release cycle it is very important that you have the latest version of docker installed because any issue that you encounter might have already been fixed with a newer docker release.
Install the most recent version of the Docker Engine for your platform using the official Docker releases, which can also be installed using:
wget -qO- https://get.docker.com/ | sh
Fedora and RHEL/CentOS users should try disabling selinux with setenforce 0
and check if resolves the issue. If it does than there is not much that I can help you with. You can either stick with selinux disabled (not recommended by redhat) or switch to using ubuntu.
If using the latest docker version and/or disabling selinux does not fix the issue then please file a issue request on the issues page.
In your issue report please make sure you provide the following information:
- The host distribution and release version.
- Output of the
docker version
command. - Output of the
docker info
command. - The
docker run
command you used to run the image (mask out the sensitive bits).
Automated builds of the image are available on Dockerhub and is the recommended method of installation.
Note: Builds are also available on Quay.io
docker pull sameersbn/redmine:latest
Since version 2.4.2
, the image builds are being tagged. You can now pull a particular version of redmine by specifying the version number. For example,
docker pull sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
Alternately you can build the image yourself.
docker build -t sameersbn/redmine github.com/sameersbn/docker-redmine
The quickest way to get started is using docker-compose.
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sameersbn/docker-redmine/master/docker-compose.yml
docker-compose up
Alternately, you can manually launch the redmine
container and the supporting postgresql
container by following this two step guide.
Step 1. Launch a postgresql container
docker run --name=postgresql-redmine -d \
--env='DB_NAME=redmine_production' \
--env='DB_USER=redmine' --env='DB_PASS=password' \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/postgresql:/var/lib/postgresql \
sameersbn/postgresql:9.5-3
Step 2. Launch the redmine container
docker run --name=redmine -d \
--link=postgresql-redmine:postgresql --publish=10083:80 \
--env='REDMINE_PORT=10083' \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
NOTE: Please allow a minute or two for the Redmine application to start.
Point your browser to http://localhost:10083
and login using the default username and password:
- username: admin
- password: admin
Make sure you visit the Administration
link and Load the default configuration
before creating any projects.
You now have the Redmine application up and ready for testing. If you want to use this image in production the please read on.
The rest of the document will use the docker command line. You can quite simply adapt your configuration into a docker-compose.yml
file if you wish to do so.
For the file storage we need to mount a volume at the following location.
/home/redmine/data
NOTE
Existing users need to move the existing files directory inside
/srv/docker/redmine/redmine/
.mkdir -p /srv/docker/redmine/redmine mv /opt/redmine/files /srv/docker/redmine/redmine
SELinux users are also required to change the security context of the mount point so that it plays nicely with selinux.
mkdir -p /srv/docker/redmine/redmine
sudo chcon -Rt svirt_sandbox_file_t /srv/docker/redmine/redmine
Volumes can be mounted in docker by specifying the '-v' option in the docker run command.
docker run --name=redmine -it --rm \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
Redmine uses a database backend to store its data.
The internal mysql server has been removed from the image. Please use a linked mysql or postgresql container instead or connect with an external mysql or postgresql server.
If you have been using the internal mysql server follow these instructions to migrate to a linked mysql container:
Assuming that your mysql data is available at /srv/docker/redmine/mysql
docker run --name=mysql-redmine -d \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/mysql:/var/lib/mysql \
sameersbn/mysql:latest
This will start a mysql container with your existing mysql data. Now login to the mysql container and create a user for the existing redmine_production
database.
All you need to do now is link this mysql container to the redmine container using the --link=mysql-redmine:mysql
option and provide the DB_NAME
, DB_USER
and DB_PASS
parameters.
Refer to Linking to MySQL Container for more information.
The image can be configured to use an external MySQL database instead of starting a MySQL server internally. The database configuration should be specified using environment variables while starting the Redmine image.
Before you start the Redmine image create user and database for redmine.
mysql -uroot -p
CREATE USER 'redmine'@'%.%.%.%' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';
CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS `redmine_production` DEFAULT CHARACTER SET `utf8` COLLATE `utf8_unicode_ci`;
GRANT SELECT, LOCK TABLES, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, CREATE, DROP, INDEX, ALTER ON `redmine_production`.* TO 'redmine'@'%.%.%.%';
We are now ready to start the redmine application.
docker run --name=redmine -it --rm \
--env='DB_ADAPTER=mysql2' \
--env='DB_HOST=192.168.1.100' --env='DB_NAME=redmine_production' \
--env='DB_USER=redmine' --env='DB_PASS=password' \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
This will initialize the redmine database and after a couple of minutes your redmine instance should be ready to use.
You can link this image with a mysql container for the database requirements. The alias of the mysql server container should be set to mysql while linking with the redmine image.
If a mysql container is linked, only the DB_ADAPTER
, DB_HOST
and DB_PORT
settings are automatically retrieved using the linkage. You may still need to set other database connection parameters such as the DB_NAME
, DB_USER
, DB_PASS
and so on.
To illustrate linking with a mysql container, we will use the sameersbn/mysql image. When using docker-mysql in production you should mount a volume for the mysql data store. Please refer the README of docker-mysql for details.
First, lets pull the mysql image from the docker index.
docker pull sameersbn/mysql:latest
For data persistence lets create a store for the mysql and start the container.
SELinux users are also required to change the security context of the mount point so that it plays nicely with selinux.
mkdir -p /srv/docker/redmine/mysql
sudo chcon -Rt svirt_sandbox_file_t /srv/docker/redmine/mysql
The run command looks like this.
docker run --name=mysql-redmine -d \
--env='DB_NAME=redmine_production' \
--env='DB_USER=redmine' --env='DB_PASS=password' \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/mysql:/var/lib/mysql \
sameersbn/mysql:latest
The above command will create a database named redmine_production
and also create a user named redmine
with the password password
with full/remote access to the redmine_production
database.
We are now ready to start the redmine application.
docker run --name=redmine -it --rm --link=mysql-redmine:mysql \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
Here the image will also automatically fetch the DB_NAME
, DB_USER
and DB_PASS
variables from the mysql container as they are specified in the docker run
command for the mysql container. This is made possible using the magic of docker links and works with the following images:
The image also supports using an external PostgreSQL Server. This is also controlled via environment variables.
CREATE ROLE redmine with LOGIN CREATEDB PASSWORD 'password';
CREATE DATABASE redmine_production;
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE redmine_production to redmine;
We are now ready to start the redmine application.
docker run --name=redmine -it --rm \
--env='DB_ADAPTER=postgresql' \
--env='DB_HOST=192.168.1.100' --env='DB_NAME=redmine_production' \
--env='DB_USER=redmine' --env='DB_PASS=password' \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
This will initialize the redmine database and after a couple of minutes your redmine instance should be ready to use.
You can link this image with a postgresql container for the database requirements. The alias of the postgresql server container should be set to postgresql while linking with the redmine image.
If a postgresql container is linked, only the DB_ADAPTER
, DB_HOST
and DB_PORT
settings are automatically retrieved using the linkage. You may still need to set other database connection parameters such as the DB_NAME
, DB_USER
, DB_PASS
and so on.
To illustrate linking with a postgresql container, we will use the sameersbn/postgresql image. When using postgresql image in production you should mount a volume for the postgresql data store. Please refer the README of docker-postgresql for details.
First, lets pull the postgresql image from the docker index.
docker pull sameersbn/postgresql:9.5-3
For data persistence lets create a store for the postgresql and start the container.
SELinux users are also required to change the security context of the mount point so that it plays nicely with selinux.
mkdir -p /srv/docker/redmine/postgresql
sudo chcon -Rt svirt_sandbox_file_t /srv/docker/redmine/postgresql
The run command looks like this.
docker run --name=postgresql-redmine -d \
--env='DB_NAME=redmine_production' \
--env='DB_USER=redmine' --env='DB_PASS=password' \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/postgresql:/var/lib/postgresql \
sameersbn/postgresql:9.5-3
The above command will create a database named redmine_production
and also create a user named redmine
with the password password
with access to the redmine_production
database.
We are now ready to start the redmine application.
docker run --name=redmine -it --rm --link=postgresql-redmine:postgresql \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
Here the image will also automatically fetch the DB_NAME
, DB_USER
and DB_PASS
variables from the postgresql container as they are specified in the docker run
command for the postgresql container. This is made possible using the magic of docker links and works with the following images:
This image can (optionally) be configured to use a memcached server to speed up Redmine. This is particularly useful when you have a large number users.
The image can be configured to use an external memcached server. The memcached server host and port configuration should be specified using environment variables MEMCACHE_HOST
and MEMCACHE_PORT
like so:
Assuming that the memcached server host is 192.168.1.100
docker run --name=redmine -it --rm \
--env='MEMCACHE_HOST=192.168.1.100' --env='MEMCACHE_PORT=11211' \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
Alternately you can link this image with a memcached container. The alias of the memcached server container should be set to memcached while linking with the redmine image.
To illustrate linking with a memcached container, we will use the sameersbn/memcached image. Please refer the README of docker-memcached for details.
First, lets pull and launch the memcached image from the docker index.
docker run --name=memcached-redmine -d sameersbn/memcached:latest
Now you can link memcached to the redmine image:
docker run --name=redmine -it --rm --link=memcached-redmine:memcached \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
The mail configuration should be specified using environment variables while starting the redmine image. The configuration defaults to using gmail to send emails and requires the specification of a valid username and password to login to the gmail servers.
Please refer the Available Configuration Parameters section for the list of SMTP parameters that can be specified.
docker run --name=redmine -it --rm \
--env='[email protected]' --env='SMTP_PASS=PASSWORD' \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
If you are not using google mail, then please configure the SMTP host and port using the SMTP_HOST
and SMTP_PORT
configuration parameters.
If you are using a google apps account with a custom domain (other than google.com), you need to set the SMTP_DOMAIN
parameters or else you will get internal server error when doing an action that would normally send a mail.
Similary you can configure receiving emails using the IMAP_
configuration options. Please refer Available Configuration Parameters for details. When receiving emails is enabled users can comment on issues by replying to emails.
P.S. The receiving emails feature is only available since versions 2.6.6-2
, 3.0.4-2
and 3.1.0-2
. Refer the Changelog for details.
Access to the redmine application can be secured using SSL so as to prevent unauthorized access. While a CA certified SSL certificate allows for verification of trust via the CA, a self signed certificates can also provide an equal level of trust verification as long as each client takes some additional steps to verify the identity of your website. I will provide instructions on achieving this towards the end of this section.
To secure your application via SSL you basically need two things:
- Private key (.key)
- SSL certificate (.crt)
When using CA certified certificates, these files are provided to you by the CA. When using self-signed certificates you need to generate these files yourself. Skip the following section if you are armed with CA certified SSL certificates.
Jump to the Using HTTPS with a load balancer section if you are using a load balancer such as hipache, haproxy or nginx.
Generation of self-signed SSL certificates involves a simple 3 step procedure.
STEP 1: Create the server private key
openssl genrsa -out redmine.key 2048
STEP 2: Create the certificate signing request (CSR)
openssl req -new -key redmine.key -out redmine.csr
STEP 3: Sign the certificate using the private key and CSR
openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in redmine.csr -signkey redmine.key -out redmine.crt
Congratulations! you have now generated an SSL certificate thats valid for 365 days.
This section provides you with instructions to strengthen your server security. To achieve this we need to generate stronger DHE parameters.
openssl dhparam -out dhparam.pem 2048
Out of the four files generated above, we need to install the redmine.key
, redmine.crt
and dhparam.pem
files at the redmine server. The CSR file is not needed, but do make sure you safely backup the file (in case you ever need it again).
The default path that the redmine application is configured to look for the SSL certificates is at /home/redmine/data/certs
, this can however be changed using the SSL_KEY_PATH
, SSL_CERTIFICATE_PATH
and SSL_DHPARAM_PATH
configuration options.
If you remember from above, the /home/redmine/data
path is the path of the data store, which means that we have to create a folder named certs inside /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/
and copy the files into it and as a measure of security we will update the permission on the redmine.key
file to only be readable by the owner.
mkdir -p /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/certs
cp redmine.key /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/certs/
cp redmine.crt /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/certs/
cp dhparam.pem /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/certs/
chmod 400 /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/certs/redmine.key
Great! we are now just one step away from having our application secured.
HTTPS support can be enabled by setting the REDMINE_HTTPS
option to true
.
docker run --name=redmine -d \
--publish=10083:80 --publish 10445:443 \
--env='REDMINE_PORT=10445' --env='REDMINE_HTTPS=true' \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
In this configuration, any requests made over the plain http protocol will automatically be redirected to use the https protocol. However, this is not optimal when using a load balancer.
HSTS if supported by the browsers makes sure that your users will only reach your server via HTTPS. When the user comes for the first time it sees a header from the server which states for how long from now this site should only be reachable via HTTPS - that's the HSTS max-age value.
With NGINX_HSTS_MAXAGE
you can configure that value. The default value is 31536000
seconds. If you want to disable a already sent HSTS MAXAGE value, set it to 0
.
docker run --name=redmine -d \
--env='REDMINE_HTTPS=true' \
--env='NGINX_HSTS_MAXAGE=2592000'
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
If you want to completely disable HSTS set NGINX_HSTS_ENABLED
to false
.
Load balancers like nginx/haproxy/hipache talk to backend applications over plain http and as such the installation of ssl keys and certificates are not required and should NOT be installed in the container. The SSL configuration has to instead be done at the load balancer. Hoewever, when using a load balancer you MUST set REDMINE_HTTPS
to true
.
With this in place, you should configure the load balancer to support handling of https requests. But that is out of the scope of this document. Please refer to Using SSL/HTTPS with HAProxy for information on the subject.
When using a load balancer, you probably want to make sure the load balancer performs the automatic http to https redirection. Information on this can also be found in the link above.
In summation, when using a load balancer, the docker command would look for the most part something like this:
docker run --name=redmine -d --publish=10083:80 \
--env='REDMINE_HTTPS=true' \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
By default redmine expects that your application is running at the root (eg. /). This section explains how to run your application inside a directory.
Let's assume we want to deploy our application to '/redmine'. Redmine needs to know this directory to generate the appropriate routes. This can be specified using the REDMINE_RELATIVE_URL_ROOT
configuration option like so:
docker run --name=redmine -d --publish=10083:80 \
--env='REDMINE_RELATIVE_URL_ROOT=/redmine' \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
Redmine will now be accessible at the /redmine
path, e.g. http://www.example.com/redmine
.
Note: The REDMINE_RELATIVE_URL_ROOT
parameter should always begin with a slash and SHOULD NOT have any trailing slashes.
Per default the container is configured to run redmine as user and group redmine
with uid
and gid
1000
. The host possibly uses this ids for different purposes leading to unfavorable effects. From the host it appears as if the mounted data volumes are owned by the host's user/group 1000
.
Also the container processes seem to be executed as the host's user/group 1000
. The container can be configured to map the uid
and gid
of redmine
user to different ids on host by passing the environment variables USERMAP_UID
and USERMAP_GID
. The following command maps the ids to user and group redmine
on the host.
docker run --name=redmine -it --rm [options] \
--env="USERMAP_UID=500" --env="USERMAP_GID=500" \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
Please refer the docker run command options for the --env-file
flag where you can specify all required environment variables in a single file. This will save you from writing a potentially long docker run command.
Below is the complete list of parameters that can be set using environment variables.
- REDMINE_HTTPS: Enable HTTPS (SSL/TLS) port on server. Defaults to
false
- REDMINE_PORT: The port of the Redmine server. Defaults to
80
for plain http and443
when https is enabled. - REDMINE_RELATIVE_URL_ROOT: The relative url of the Redmine server, e.g.
/redmine
. No default. - REDMINE_ATTACHMENTS_DIR: The attachments directory. Defaults to
/home/redmine/data/files
- REDMINE_SECRET_TOKEN: Secret key for verifying cookie session data integrity. Defaults to a random alphanumeric string.
- REDMINE_CONCURRENT_UPLOADS: Maximum number of simultaneous AJAX uploads. Defaults to
2
. - REDMINE_SUDO_MODE_ENABLED: Requires users to re-enter their password for sensitive actions. Defaults to
false
. - REDMINE_SUDO_MODE_TIMEOUT: Sudo mode timeout. Defaults to
15
minutes. - REDMINE_FETCH_COMMITS: Setup cron job to fetch commits. Possible values
disable
,hourly
,daily
ormonthly
. Disabled by default. - REDMINE_AUTOLOGIN_COOKIE_NAME: The name of autologin-cookie. Defaults to
autologin
. - REDMINE_AUTOLOGIN_COOKIE_PATH: The path of autologin-cookie. Defaults to
/
. - REDMINE_AUTOLOGIN_COOKIE_SECURE: Set autologin-cookie to secure. Defaults to
true
whenREDMINE_HTTPS
istrue
, else defaults tofalse
. - REDMINE_BACKUPS_DIR: The backup folder in the container. Defaults to
/home/redmine/data/backups
- REDMINE_BACKUP_SCHEDULE: Setup cron job to schedule automatic backups. Possible values
disable
,daily
,weekly
ormonthly
. Disabled by default - REDMINE_BACKUP_EXPIRY: Configure how long (in seconds) to keep backups before they are deleted. By default when automated backups are disabled backups are kept forever (0 seconds), else the backups expire in 7 days (604800 seconds).
- REDMINE_BACKUP_TIME: Set a time for the automatic backups in
HH:MM
format. Defaults to04:00
. - DB_ADAPTER: The database type. Possible values:
mysql2
,postgresql
. Defaults tomysql
. - DB_ENCODING: The database encoding. For
DB_ADAPTER
valuespostresql
andmysql2
, this parameter defaults tounicode
andutf8
respectively. - DB_HOST: The database server hostname. Defaults to
localhost
. - DB_PORT: The database server port. Defaults to
3306
. - DB_NAME: The database name. Defaults to
redmine_production
- DB_USER: The database user. Defaults to
root
- DB_PASS: The database password. Defaults to no password
- DB_POOL: The database connection pool count. Defaults to
5
. - NGINX_ENABLED: Enable/disable the nginx server. Disabling Nginx is not recommended (see #148), use at your discretion. Defaults to
true
. When disabled publish port8080
instead of the usual port80
or443
. - NGINX_WORKERS: The number of nginx workers to start. Defaults to
1
. - NGINX_MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE: Maximum acceptable upload size. Defaults to
20m
. - NGINX_X_FORWARDED_PROTO: Advanced configuration option for the
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto
setting in the redmine nginx vHost configuration. Defaults tohttps
whenREDMINE_HTTPS
istrue
, else defaults to$scheme
. - NGINX_HSTS_ENABLED: Advanced configuration option for turning off the HSTS configuration. Applicable only when SSL is in use. Defaults to
true
. See #138 for use case scenario. - NGINX_HSTS_MAXAGE: Advanced configuration option for setting the HSTS max-age in the redmine nginx vHost configuration. Applicable only when SSL is in use. Defaults to
31536000
. - UNICORN_WORKERS: The number of unicorn workers to start. Defaults to
2
. - UNICORN_TIMEOUT: Sets the timeout of unicorn worker processes. Defaults to
60
seconds. - MEMCACHE_HOST: The host name of the memcached server. No defaults.
- MEMCACHE_PORT: The connection port of the memcached server. Defaults to
11211
. - SSL_CERTIFICATE_PATH: The path to the SSL certificate to use. Defaults to
/app/setup/certs/redmine.crt
. - SSL_KEY_PATH: The path to the SSL certificate's private key. Defaults to
/app/setup/certs/redmine.key
. - SSL_DHPARAM_PATH: The path to the Diffie-Hellman parameter. Defaults to
/app/setup/certs/dhparam.pem
. - SSL_VERIFY_CLIENT: Enable verification of client certificates using the
SSL_CA_CERTIFICATES_PATH
file. Defaults tofalse
- SSL_CA_CERTIFICATES_PATH: List of SSL certificates to trust. Defaults to
/home/redmine/data/certs/ca.crt
. - SMTP_ENABLED: Enable mail delivery via SMTP. Defaults to
true
ifSMTP_USER
is defined, else defaults tofalse
. - SMTP_DOMAIN: SMTP domain. Defaults to
www.gmail.com
- SMTP_HOST: SMTP server host. Defaults to
smtp.gmail.com
- SMTP_PORT: SMTP server port. Defaults to
587
. - SMTP_USER: SMTP username.
- SMTP_PASS: SMTP password.
- SMTP_METHOD: SMTP delivery method. Possible values:
smtp
,async_smtp
. Defaults tosmtp
. - SMTP_OPENSSL_VERIFY_MODE: SMTP openssl verification mode. Accepted values are
none
,peer
,client_once
andfail_if_no_peer_cert
. SSL certificate verification is performed by default. - SMTP_STARTTLS: Enable STARTTLS. Defaults to
true
. - SMTP_TLS: Enable SSL/TLS. Defaults to
false
. - SMTP_AUTHENTICATION: Specify the SMTP authentication method. Defaults to
:login
ifSMTP_USER
is set. - SMTP_CA_ENABLED: Enable custom CA certificates for SMTP email configuration. Defaults to
false
. - SMTP_CA_PATH: Specify the
ca_path
parameter for SMTP email configuration. Defaults to/home/redmine/data/certs
. - SMTP_CA_FILE: Specify the
ca_file
parameter for SMTP email configuration. Defaults to/home/redmine/data/certs/ca.crt
. - IMAP_ENABLED: Enable receiving email via IMAP. Defaults to
false
. - IMAP_USER: IMAP username. Defaults to value of
SMTP_USER
. - IMAP_PASS: IMAP password. Defaults to value of
SMTP_PASS
. - IMAP_HOST: IMAP server host. Defaults to
imap.gmail.com
. - IMAP_PORT: IMAP server port. Defaults to
993
. - IMAP_SSL: IMAP enable SSL. Defaults to
true
. - IMAP_INTERVAL: The interval in minutes between checking emails. Defaults to
30
. Values allowed in the range1 - 60
. - INCOMING_EMAIL_UNKNOWN_USER: How to handle emails from an unknown user. Accepted values are
ignore
,accept
andcreate
. Defaults toignore
. - INCOMING_EMAIL_NO_PERMISSION_CHECK: Disable permission checking when receiving the email. Defaults to
false
. - INCOMING_EMAIL_NO_ACCOUNT_NOTICE: Disable new user account notification. Defaults to
true
. - INCOMING_EMAIL_DEFAULT_GROUP: Adds created user to foo and bar groups.
- INCOMING_EMAIL_PROJECT: Identifier of the target project.
- INCOMING_EMAIL_STATUS: Name of the target status.
- INCOMING_EMAIL_TRACKER: Name of the target tracker.
- INCOMING_EMAIL_CATEGORY: Name of the target category.
- INCOMING_EMAIL_PRIORITY: Name of the target priority.
- INCOMING_EMAIL_PRIVATE: Create new issues as private.
- INCOMING_EMAIL_ALLOW_OVERRIDE: Allow email content to override attributes specified by previous options. Value is a comma separated list of attributes. See redmine documentation for acceptable values.
The functionality of redmine can be extended using plugins developed by the community. You can find a list of available plugins in the Redmine Plugins Directory. You can also search for plugins on github.
Please check the plugin compatibility with the redmine version before installing a plugin.
Plugins should be installed in the plugins
directory at the data store. If you are following the readme verbatim, on the host this location would be /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/plugins
.
mkdir -p /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/plugins
To install a plugin, simply copy the plugin assets to the plugins
directory. For example, to install the recurring tasks plugin:
cd /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/plugins
git clone https://github.com/nutso/redmine-plugin-recurring-tasks.git
For most plugins this is all you need to do. With the plugin installed you can start the docker image normally. The image will detect that a plugin has been added (or removed) and automatically install the required gems and perform the plugin migrations and will be ready for use.
If the gem installation fails after adding a new plugin, please retry after removing the /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/tmp
directory
In some cases it might be necessary to install additional packages and/or perform some post installation setup for a plugin to function correctly. For such case the image allows you to install a pre-install.sh
and post-install.sh
script at the /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/plugins
directory that will be executed everytime the image is started.
For example, the recurring tasks plugin requires that you create a cron job to periodically execute a rake task. To achieve this, create the /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/plugins/post-install.sh
file with the following content:
## Recurring Tasks Configuration
# get the list existing cron jobs for the redmine user
crontab -u redmine -l 2>/dev/null >/tmp/cron.redmine
# add new job for recurring tasks if it does not exist
if ! grep -q redmine:recur_tasks /tmp/cron.redmine; then
echo '@hourly cd /home/redmine/redmine && bundle exec rake redmine:recur_tasks RAILS_ENV=production >> log/cron_rake.log 2>&1' >>/tmp/cron.redmine
crontab -u redmine /tmp/cron.redmine 2>/dev/null
fi
# remove the temporary file
rm -rf /tmp/cron.redmine
## End of Recurring Tasks Configuration
Now whenever the image is started the post-install.sh
script will be executed and the required cron job will be installed.
If you need to install additional packages to satisfy a plugins dependencies then install such packages using the pre-install.sh
script.
Previously this image packaged a couple of plugins by default. Existing users would notice that those plugins are no longer available. If you want them back, follow these instructions:
cd /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/plugins
wget http://goo.gl/iJcvCP -O - | sh
Please Note: this plugin install script is not maintained and you would need to fix it if required (especially broken links)
To uninstall plugins you need to first tell redmine about the plugin you need to uninstall. This is done via a rake task:
docker run --name=redmine -it --rm \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1 \
app:rake redmine:plugins:migrate NAME=plugin_name VERSION=0
Once the rake task has been executed, the plugin should be removed from the /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/plugins/
directory.
rm -rf /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/plugins/plugin_name
Any configuration that you may have added in the /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/plugins/post-install.sh
script for the plugin should also be removed.
For example, to remove the recurring tasks plugin:
docker run --name=redmine -it --rm \
--volume=/srv/docker/redmine/redmine:/home/redmine/data \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1 \
app:rake redmine:plugins:migrate NAME=recurring_tasks VERSION=0
rm -rf /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/plugins/recurring_tasks
Now when the image is started the plugin will be gone.
Just like plugins, redmine allows users to install additional themes. You can find a list of available themes in the Redmine Themes Directory
Themes should be installed in the themes
directory at the data store. If you are following the readme verbatim, on the host this location would be /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/themes
.
mkdir -p /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/themes
To install a theme, simply copy the theme assets to the themes
directory. For example, to install the gitmike theme:
cd /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/themes
git clone https://github.com/makotokw/redmine-theme-gitmike.git gitmike
With the theme installed you can start the docker image normally and the newly installed theme should be available for use.
Previously this image packaged a couple of themes by default. Existing users would notice that those themes are no longer available. If you want them back, follow these instructions:
cd /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/themes
wget http://goo.gl/deKDpp -O - | sh
Please Note: this theme install script is not maintained and you would need to fix it if required (especially broken links)
To uninstall themes you simply need to remove the theme from the /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/themes/
directory and restart the image.
rm -rf /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/themes/theme_name
For example, to remove the gitmike theme:
rm -rf /srv/docker/redmine/redmine/themes/gitmike
Now when the image is started the theme will be not be available anymore.
Only available in versions >3.2.0-2
, >3.1.3-1
, >3.0.7-1
and >2.6.9-1
The image allows users to create backups of the Redmine installation using the app:backup:create
command or the redmine-backup-create
helper script. The generated backup consists of configuration files, uploaded files and the sql database.
Before generating a backup — stop and remove the running instance.
docker stop redmine && docker rm redmine
Relaunch the container with the app:backup:create
argument.
docker run --name redmine -it --rm [OPTIONS] \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1 app:backup:create
The backup will be created in the backups/
folder of the Data Store. You can change the location using the REDMINE_BACKUPS_DIR
configuration parameter.
NOTE
Backups can also be generated on a running instance using:
docker exec -it redmine redmine-backup-create
To avoid undesired side-effects, you are advised against creating a backup on a running instance.
Only available in versions >3.2.0-2
, >3.1.3-1
, >3.0.7-1
and >2.6.9-1
Backups created using instructions from the Creating backups section can be restored using the app:backup:restore
argument.
Before restoring a backup — stop and remove the running instance.
docker stop redmine && docker rm redmine
Relaunch the container with the app:backup:restore
argument. Ensure you launch the container in the interactive mode -it
.
docker run --name redmine -it --rm [OPTIONS] \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1 app:backup:restore
A list of existing backups will be displayed. Select a backup you wish to restore.
To avoid this interaction you can specify the backup filename using the BACKUP
argument to app:backup:restore
, eg.
docker run --name redmine -it --rm [OPTIONS] \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1 app:backup:restore BACKUP=1417624827_redmine_backup.tar
Only available in versions >3.2.0-2
, >3.1.3-1
, >3.0.7-1
and >2.6.9-1
The image can be configured to automatically create backups daily
, weekly
or monthly
using the REDMINE_BACKUP_SCHEDULE
configuration option.
Daily backups are created everyday at REDMINE_BACKUP_TIME
, which defaults to 04:00
. Weekly backups are created every Sunday at REDMINE_BACKUP_TIME
. Monthly backups are created on the 1st of every month at REDMINE_BACKUP_TIME
.
By default when automated backups are enabled, backups are held for a period of 7 days before they are deleted. When disabled, the backups are held for an infinite period of time. This behavior can be modified using the REDMINE_BACKUP_EXPIRY
option.
The app:rake
command allows you to run redmine rake tasks. To run a rake task simply specify the task to be executed to the app:rake
command. For example, if you want to send a test email to the admin user.
docker run --name=redmine -d [OPTIONS] \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1 app:rake redmine:email:test[admin]
You can also use docker exec
to run rake tasks on running redmine instance. For example,
docker exec -it redmine sudo -u redmine -H bundle exec rake redmine:email:test[admin] RAILS_ENV=production
Similarly, to remove uploaded files left unattached
docker run --name=redmine -d [OPTIONS] \
sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1 app:rake redmine:attachments:prune
Or,
docker exec -it redmine sudo -u redmine -H bundle exec rake redmine:attachments:prune RAILS_ENV=production
For a complete list of available rake tasks please refer www.redmine.org/projects/redmine/wiki/RedmineRake.
To upgrade to newer redmine releases, simply follow this 4 step upgrade procedure.
- Step 1: Update the docker image.
docker pull sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
- Step 2: Stop and remove the currently running image
docker stop redmine
docker rm redmine
- Step 3: Create a backup
docker run --name redmine -it --rm [OPTIONS] \
sameersbn/redmine:x.x.x app:backup:create
Replace x.x.x
with the version you are upgrading from. For example, if you are upgrading from version 2.6.4
, set x.x.x
to 2.6.4
- Step 4: Start the image
docker run --name=redmine -d [OPTIONS] sameersbn/redmine:3.3.1
For debugging and maintenance purposes you may want access the containers shell. If you are using docker version 1.3.0
or higher you can access a running containers shell using docker exec
command.
docker exec -it redmine bash
* http://www.redmine.org/
* http://www.redmine.org/projects/redmine/wiki/Guide
* http://www.redmine.org/projects/redmine/wiki/RedmineInstall