This project is composed of three main parts:
- Ansible project: This project is maintained on GitHub: geerlingguy/drupal-container. Please file issues, support requests, etc. against this GitHub repository.
- Docker Hub Image: If you just want to use the
geerlingguy/drupal
Docker image in your project, you can pull it from Docker Hub. - Ansible Role: If you need a flexible Ansible role that's compatible with both traditional servers and containerized builds, check out
geerlingguy.docker
on Ansible Galaxy. (This is the Ansible role that does the bulk of the work in managing the Docker container.)
Currently maintained versions include:
latest
latest-arm64
latest-arm32v7
The easiest way to use this Docker image is to place the docker-compose.yml
file included with this project in your Drupal site's root directory, then customize it to your liking, and run:
docker compose up -d
You should be able to access the Drupal site at http://localhost/
, and if you're installing the first time, the Drupal installer UI should appear. Follow the directions and you'll end up with a brand new Drupal site!
The image downloads Drupal into /var/www/html
if you don't have a Drupal codebase mounted into that path by default.
You can override this behavior (if, for example, you are sharing your codebase into /var/www/html/web
or elsewhere) by setting the environment variable DRUPAL_DOWNLOAD_IF_NOT_PRESENT=false
.
There are three methods you can use to generate a Drupal codebase if you don't have one mounted into this container (or COPY
ed into the container via Dockerfile
):
DRUPAL_DOWNLOAD_METHOD=tarball
(default): Downloads the latest tarball version of Drupal core.DRUPAL_DOWNLOAD_METHOD=git
: Clones Drupal from the git source, with options:DRUPAL_CLONE_URL
: The URL from which Drupal is cloned.DRUPAL_CLONE_BRANCH
: The branch that is checked out.
DRUPAL_DOWNLOAD_METHOD=composer
: Creates a new Drupal project usingcomposer create-project
. If using this method, you should also override the following variables:DRUPAL_PROJECT_ROOT=/var/www/html
APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT=/var/www/html/web
To get your Drupal codebase into the container, you can either COPY
it in using a Dockerfile, or mount a volume (e.g. when using the image for development). The included docker-compose.yml
file assumes you have a Drupal codebase at the path ./web
, but you can customize the volume mount to point to wherever your Drupal docroot exists.
If you don't supply a Drupal codebase in the container in /var/www/html
, this container's docker-entrypoint.sh
script will download Drupal for you (using the DRUPAL_DOWNLOAD_VERSION
). By default the image uses the latest development release of Drupal, but you can override it and install a specific version by setting DRUPAL_DOWNLOAD_VERSION
to that version number (e.g. 10.3.1
).
Since it's best practice to not include secrets like database credentials in your codebase, this Docker container recommends putting connection details into runtime environment variables, which you can include in your Drupal site's settings.php
file via getenv()
.
For example, to set up the database connection, pass settings like DRUPAL_DATABASE_NAME
:
$databases['default']['default'] = [
'driver' => 'mysql',
'database' => getenv('DRUPAL_DATABASE_NAME'),
'username' => getenv('DRUPAL_DATABASE_USERNAME'),
'password' => getenv('DRUPAL_DATABASE_PASSWORD'),
'prefix' => getenv('DRUPAL_DATABASE_PREFIX'),
'host' => getenv('DRUPAL_DATABASE_HOST'),
'port' => getenv('DRUPAL_DATABASE_PORT'),
];
You may also want to set a DRUPAL_HASH_SALT
environment variable to drive the $settings['hash_salt']
setting.
The default Apache document root is /var/www/html
. If your codebase needs to use a different docroot (e.g. /var/www/html/web
for Composer-built Drupal projects), you should set the environment variable APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT
to the appropriate directory, and the container will change the docroot when it starts up.
Before using this project to build and maintain Drupal images for Docker, you need to have the following installed:
- Docker Community Edition (for Mac, Windows, or Linux)
- Ansible
Make sure Docker is running, and run the playbook to build the container image:
ansible-playbook main.yml
# Or just build one platform version (e.g. x86):
ansible-playbook main.yml --extra-vars "{build_amd64: true, build_arm64: false, build_arm32: false}"
Once the image is built, you can run docker images
to see the drupal
image that was generated.
Note: If you get an error like
Failed to import docker-py
, runpip install docker-py
.
If you want to quickly run the image and test that the docker-entrypoint.sh
script works to grab a copy of the Drupal codebase, run it with:
docker run -d -p 80:80 -v $PWD/web:/var/www/html:rw geerlingguy/drupal
Then visit http://localhost/, and (after Drupal is downloaded and expanded) you should see the Drupal installer! You can drop the volume mount (-v
) for a much faster startup, but then the codebase is downloaded and stored inside the container, and will vanish when you stop it.
Currently, the process for updating this image on Docker Hub is manual. Eventually this will be automated via Travis CI.
-
Log into Docker Hub on the command line:
docker login --username=geerlingguy
-
Push to Docker Hub:
docker push geerlingguy/drupal:latest docker push geerlingguy/drupal:latest-arm64 docker push geerlingguy/drupal:latest-arm32v7
MIT / BSD
This container build was created in 2018 by Jeff Geerling, author of Ansible for DevOps.