Docker Images for Release
This topic explains the Docker images available for Digital.ai Release.
The following Docker images are available:
- A regular image based on Debian (slim) Linux flavor of the OpenJDK base image
- The Red Hat certified image based on the
rhel7-atomic
base image
Note: For production deployments it is advised to use Kubernetes to orchestrate the deployment of the applications. Docker compose is not ideal for production setup. Proceed at your own risk.
Requirements and prerequisites
To run the Docker image for Digital.ai Release you must have:
- A Digital.ai Release valid license
- Docker version 18.03.1-ce or later installed
For Digital.ai Release valid license and docker images
- See
ACCEPT_EULA
in Docker environment variables. - See Release Docker images.
Hosting environment support
Private cloud
- Physical servers
- Virtual machines vSphere
Public cloud
- Amazon Elastic Container Services (ECS):
- Amazon ECS with EC2 via AWS Quick Start
- AWS AMI via the AMI marketplace
Docker environment support
- Docker engine - Community (Linux/Windows)
- Docker Enterprise Edition (Linux/Windows Server)
Persistent configuration setup
To use the software in optimal conditions, you must make sure that all the data (repository, configuration, plugins) is stored outside the container. This is required to maintain the container life cycle (for example: during updates and to perform proper back up).
You can do this in Docker containers by specifying volume mount points. These are links that allow a file system directory outside the container to be used inside the container.
Create the folders that you are referring to the docker run command on your machine for the volume mapping before you run a particular command. See Release setup for production using persistent volumes.
Set environment variables
To change the default setup procedure that runs when a fresh installation is detected, the Release image exposes the following environment variables:
ADMIN_PASSWORD
: sets the admin password for a new installation. If this environment variable is not set, a random admin password is generated and printed to the console of the container.REPOSITORY_KEYSTORE_PASSPHRASE
: sets the passphrase of the repository encryption key for a new installation. If this environment variable is not set, a random passphrase is generated and printed to the console of the container.
Ports exposed
The Release image exposes port 5516
over which the Release user interface and REST API are served.
Set volumes as mount points
The Release image exposes the following directories as mount points:
/opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/archive
/opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/conf
/opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/ext
/opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/hotfix
/opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/plugins
/opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/repository
/opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/reports
Providing volumes for these mount points is optional and guarantees persistence across container runs. The sections below describe how the mount points are handled.
Configuration directory (conf
)
The /opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/conf
folder on the image is empty. The first time the container is started, the content of the /opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/default-conf
directory is copied into the conf
directory. The files in the default-conf
are similar to the files in a regular Release installation ZIP. except that they have been tweaked for Release running in a container.
If a volume is provided for the /opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/conf
mount point, the configuration (including the admin password and the product license) is persisted across all container runs. If any files are present on the volume the first time that the container starts, they will not be overwritten by the files from the default-conf
directory. This allows you to set configurations like the logback.xml
ahead of time.
The image also contains the /opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/node-conf
directory. This directory contains an xl-release.conf
file with two properties: xl.cluster.node.id
and xl.cluster.node.hostname
. Every time the container starts, the IP address of the container is stored in these properties. This configuration file overrides the values in the /opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/conf/xl-release.conf
configuration file and can be used to configure Release in cluster mode.
Plugins directory (plugins
)
The /opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/plugins
folder on the image is empty. The first time that the container is started, the content of the /opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/default-plugins
directory is copied into the plugins
directory.
If a plugin is already present in a volume mounted on the plugins
mount point, it is not overwritten. This behavior also identifies different versions of the same plugin.
If you provide a volume for the /opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/plugins
directory, you can use it to pre-select specific plugins before startup. You must upgrade the plugins manually, see Upgrade scenarios Release for more information for your specific upgrade scenario.
Data directories (repository
and archive
)
In the default setup, the embedded H2 and Derby databases are used to persist the repository and the archive data respectively, and are stored in the /opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/repository
and /opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/archive
directories. Provide a mount point for these volumes to ensure that the repository and archive data are preserved across container runs. To set up an external database server, refer to the documentation for Release.
Audit report directories (reports
)
All Release instances should see same the content in this volume. In a cluster setup, ensure that this volume is mounted to a filesystem and is shared across all Release instances.
Customizations and hotfixes directories (ext
and hotfix
)
The /opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/ext
and /opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/hotfix
volumes are provided to allow customizations for custom tasks and to install hotfixes.
Persistent configuration example
The mount points are passed to the Docker command using the -v
parameter.
For example, the following command starts a Release container with persistent configuration and storage:
$ docker run -d -p 5516:5516 \
-v ${HOME}/XebiaLabs/xl-release-docker/conf:/opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/conf:rw \
-v ${HOME}/XebiaLabs/xl-release-docker/repository:/opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/repository:rw \
-v ${HOME}/XebiaLabs/xl-release-docker/archive:/opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/archive:rw \
-v ${HOME}/XebiaLabs/xl-release-docker/reports:/opt/xebialabs/xl-release-server/reports:rw \
--name xlr xebialabs/xl-release:23.1
Before starting the containers, save the license file in the local conf
directory:
<USER_HOME>/XebiaLabs/xl-release-docker/conf/xl-release-license.lic