https://gitlab.com/tozd/docker/meteor
Available as:
tozd/base
← tozd/dinit
← tozd/meteor
See also tozd/meteor-testing
.
ubuntu-xenial-*
: Meteor versions using Ubuntu 16.04 LTS (Xenial) as baseubuntu-bionic-*
: Meteor versions using Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (Bionic) as baseubuntu-focal-*
: Meteor versions using Ubuntu 20.04 LTS (Focal) as baseubuntu-jammy-*
: Meteor versions using Ubuntu 22.04 LTS (Jammy) as base
Some versions are not build because they have issues.
/var/log/meteor
: Log files.
ROOT_URL
: Used by Meteor to construct absolute URLs. It should not contain a trailing/
. Example:http://example.com
.MAIL_URL
: Used to configure e-mail server. Example:smtp://user:password@mailhost:port/
.METEOR_SETTINGS
: JSON string of your Meteor settings.MONGO_URL
: MongoDB database URL. Example:mongodb://mongodb/meteor
.MONGO_OPLOG_URL
: MongoDB database oplog URL. Example:mongodb://mongodb/local
.LOG_TO_STDOUT
: If set to1
output logs to stdout (retrievable usingdocker logs
) instead of log volumes.
3000/tcp
: HTTP port on which Meteor app listens.
Image which can serve as a base Docker image for dockerizing Meteor applications.
In the root directory of your Meteor application (the one with .meteor
directory) create a Dockerfile
file
with the following content:
FROM registry.gitlab.com/tozd/docker/meteor:ubuntu-focal-<Meteor version>
For example:
FROM registry.gitlab.com/tozd/docker/meteor:ubuntu-focal-1.10.2
Meteor version should be the version of Meteor you want to use to build your Meteor application. By using a fixed version of Meteor you achieve reproducible builds of your application. You can also specify the Ubuntu LTS version you want to use as the basis of your Docker image. In the example above, this is Ubuntu Focal. See all available tags on Docker Hub.
And your Meteor application is dockerized. To optimize image building, especially if you are building the image from a directory where you are also developing the application, add .dockerignore
file with something like:
.meteor/local
packages/*/.build*
node_modules
The intended use of this image is that it is run alongside the tozd/meteor-mongodb image for MongoDB database for your Meteor application. You will probably want a HTTP reverse proxy in front. You can use tozd/docker-nginx-proxy image which provides nginx configured as a reverse proxy with automatic SSL support provided by Let's encrypt.
When running Docker image with your Meteor application, you should configure at least ROOT_URL
, MONGO_URL
, and MONGO_OPLOG_URL
environment variables.
You can specify those environment variables when running an image, but you can also export them from the script
file volume mounted under /etc/service/meteor/run.config
.
Example of a run.config
file:
MONGODB_ADMIN_PWD='<pass>'
MONGODB_CREATE_PWD='<pass>'
MONGODB_OPLOGGER_PWD='<pass>'
export MONGO_URL="mongodb://meteor:${MONGODB_CREATE_PWD}@mongodb/meteor"
export MONGO_OPLOG_URL="mongodb://oplogger:${MONGODB_OPLOGGER_PWD}@mongodb/local?authSource=admin"
Only export
lines are necessary for this image, but others are used by tozd/meteor-mongodb
image.
You can export also other environment variables.
When you are extending this image, you can add a script /etc/service/meteor/run.initialization
which will be run at a container startup, after the container is initialized, but before the
Meteor application is run.
If you have to do anything to the base Docker image, before your Meteor application starts building (e.g., installing
an Ubuntu package), add a docker-source.sh
file to the root of your Meteor application and it will be run
before the build.
When LOG_TO_STDOUT
is set to 1
, Docker image logs output to stdout and stderr. All stdout output is JSON.
For testing Meteor applications, use tozd/meteor-testing
Docker image instead.
There is also a read-only GitHub mirror available, if you need to fork the project there.