This Camunda BPM community project provides docker images of the latest Camunda BPM platform releases. The images can be used to demonstrate and test the Camunda BPM platform or can be extended with own process applications. It is planned to provide images on the official docker registry for every upcoming release, which includes alpha releases.
To start the latest release:
docker pull camunda/camunda-bpm-platform:latest
docker run -d --name camunda -p 8080:8080 camunda/camunda-bpm-platform:latest
The three Camunda webapps are accessible through the landing page: http://localhost:8080/camunda-welcome/index.html
The default credentials for admin access to the webapps is:
- Username:
demo - Password:
demo
The Camunda Rest-API is accessible through: http://localhost:8080/engine-rest
See the Rest-API documentation for more details on how to use it.
Note: The Rest-API does not require authentication by default. Please follow the instructions from the documentation to enable authentication for the Rest-API.
The following tag schema is used. The user has the choice between different
application server distributions of Camunda BPM platform. ${DISTRO} can
either be tomcat or wildfly. If no ${DISTRO} is specified the
tomcat distribution is used.
latest,${DISTRO}-latest: Alywas the latest minor release of Camunda BPM platform. WithoutSNAPSHOT,${VERSION}-SNAPSHOT,${DISTRO}-SNAPSHOT,${DISTRO}-${VERSION}-SNAPSHOT: The latest SNAPSHOT version of Camunda BPM platform, which is not released yet.${VERSION},${DISTRO}-${VERSION}: A specific version of Camunda BPM platform.
For all available tags see the docker hub tags.
All images use OpenJDK 8 in an alpine image.
To override the default Java options the environment variable JAVA_OPTS can
be set. The default value is set to limit the heap size to 768 MB and the
metaspace size to 256 MB.
JAVA_OPTS="-Xmx768m -XX:MaxMetaspaceSize=256m"
Instead of specifying the Java memory settings it is also possible to instruct
the JVM to respect the docker memory settings. As the image uses Java 8 it has
to be enabled using the JAVA_OPTS environment variable. Using the following
settings the JVM will respect docker memory limits specified during startup.
JAVA_OPTS="-XX:+UnlockExperimentalVMOptions -XX:+UseCGroupMemoryLimitForHeap"
The used database can be configured by providing the following environment variables:
DB_CONN_MAXACTIVEthe maximum number of active connections (default:20)DB_CONN_MAXIDLEthe maximum number of idle connections (default:20- ignored when app server =
wildfly)
- ignored when app server =
DB_CONN_MINIDLEthe minimum number of idle connections (default:5)DB_DRIVERthe database driver class name, supported are h2, mysql and postgresql:- h2:
DB_DRIVER=org.h2.Driver - mysql:
DB_DRIVER=com.mysql.jdbc.Driver - postgresql:
DB_DRIVER=org.postgresql.Driver
- h2:
DB_URLthe database jdbc urlDB_USERNAMEthe database usernameDB_PASSWORDthe database passwordSKIP_DB_CONFIGskips the automated database configuration to use manual configurationWAIT_FORwait for ahost:portto be available over TCP before startingWAIT_FOR_TIMEOUThow long to wait for the service to be avaiable - defaults to 30 seconds
For example to use a postgresql docker image as database you can start the platform as follows:
# start postgresql image with database and user configured
docker run -d --name postgresql ...
docker run -d --name camunda -p 8080:8080 --link postgresql:db \
-e DB_DRIVER=org.postgresql.Driver \
-e DB_URL=jdbc:postgresql://db:5432/process-engine \
-e DB_USERNAME=camunda \
-e DB_PASSWORD=camunda \
-e WAIT_FOR=db:5432 \
camunda/camunda-bpm-platform:latest
Another option is to save the database config to an environment file, i.e.
db-env.txt:
DB_DRIVER=org.postgresql.Driver
DB_URL=jdbc:postgresql://db:5432/process-engine
DB_USERNAME=camunda
DB_PASSWORD=camunda
WAIT_FOR=db:5432
and use this file to start the container:
docker run -d --name camunda -p 8080:8080 --link postgresql:db \
--env-file db-env.txt camunda/camunda-bpm-platform:latest
The docker image already contains drivers for h2, mysql and postgresql.
If you want to use other databases you have to add the driver to the container
and configure the database settings manually by linking the configuration file
into the container.
To skip the configuration of the database by the docker container and use your
own configuration set the environment variable SKIP_DB_CONFIG to a non
empty value:
docker run -d --name camunda -p 8080:8080 -e SKIP_DB_CONFIG=true \
camunda/camunda-bpm-platform:latest
Starting the Camunda BPM Docker image requires the database to be already available.
This is quite a challenge when the database and the Camunda BPM are both docker containers spawned simualtenously eg. by docker-compose or inside a Kubernetes Pod.
To help with that, the Camunda BPM Docker image includes wait-for-it.sh to allow the container to wait until a 'host:port' is ready.
The mechanism can be configured by two environment variables:
WAIT_FOR: the servicehost:portto wait forWAIT_FOR_TIMEOUT: how long to wait for the service to be available in seconds
Example with a PostgreSQL container
docker run -d --name postgresql ...
docker run -d --name camunda -p 8080:8080 --link postgresql:db \
-e DB_DRIVER=org.postgresql.Driver \
-e DB_URL=jdbc:postgresql://db:5432/process-engine \
-e DB_USERNAME=camunda \
-e DB_PASSWORD=camunda \
-e WAIT_FOR=db:5432 \
-e WAIT_FOR_TIMEOUT=60 \
camunda/camunda-bpm-platform:latest
The Camunda BPM Platform is installed inside the /camunda directory. Which
means the tomcat configuration files are inside the /camunda/conf/ directory
and the deployments on tomcat are in /camunda/webapps/. The directory
structure depends on the application server.
To enable JPDA inside the container you can set the environment variable
DEBUG=true on startup of the container. This will allow you to connect to the
container on port 8000 to debug your application.
The image can be used to build a Docker image for a given Camunda BPM platform version and distribution.
To build a community image specify the DISTRO and VERSION build
argument. Possible values for DISTRO are tomcat and wildfly (if the
Camunda BPM platform version already supported it). The VERSION is the
Camunda BPM platform version you want to build, i.e. 7.10.0.
docker build -t camunda-bpm-platform \
--build-arg DISTRO=${DISTRO} \
--build-arg VERSION=${VERSION} \
.
Additonally you can build SNAPSHOT versions for the upcoming releases by
setting the SNAPSHOT build argument to true.
docker build -t camunda-bpm-platform \
--build-arg DISTRO=${DISTRO} \
--build-arg VERSION=${VERSION} \
--build-arg SNAPSHOT=true \
.
If you are a Camunda enterprise customer you can use this image to build
an enterprise version of the Docker image. Therefore set the VERSION
build argument to the Camunda version with out the ee suffix, i.e. 7.8.1,
set the EE build argument to true and
the USER and PASSWORD build argument to your enterprise credentials.
Note: As the image uses a multi stage Dockerfile the credentials are not part of the Docker image history of the final image. But please be aware that you should not distribute this image outside of your company.
docker build -t camunda-bpm-platform \
--build-arg EE=true \
--build-arg DISTRO=${DISTRO} \
--build-arg VERSION=${VERSION} \
--build-arg USER=${USER} \
--build-arg PASSWORD=${PASSWORD} \
.
You can use docker volumes to link your own configuration files inside the
container. For example if you want to change the bpm-platform.xml on tomcat:
docker run -d --name camunda -p 8080:8080 \
-v $PWD/bpm-platform.xml:/camunda/conf/bpm-platform.xml \
camunda/camunda-bpm-platform:latest
If you want to add an own process application to the docker container also use volumes. For example if you want to deploy the twitter demo on tomcat:
docker run -d --name camunda -p 8080:8080 \
-v /PATH/TO/DEMO/twitter.war:/camunda/webapps/twitter.war \
camunda/camunda-bpm-platform:latest
This also allows you to modify the app outside of the container and it will be redeployed inside the platform.
To remove all webapps and examples from the distro and only deploy your own applications or your own configured cockpit also use volumes. You only have to overlay the deployment folder of the application server with a directory on your local machine. So in tomcat you would mount a directory to `/camunda/webapps/'
docker run -d --name camunda -p 8080:8080 \
-v $PWD/webapps/:/camunda/webapps/ \
camunda/camunda-bpm-platform:latest
As we release these docker images on the offical docker registry it is
easy to create your own image. This way you can deploy your applications
with docker or provided an own demo image. Just specify in the FROM
clause which Camunda image you want to use as a base image:
FROM camunda/camunda-bpm-platform:tomcat-latest
ADD my.war /camunda/webapps/my.war
To change the timezone of the docker container you can set the environment variable TZ.
docker run -d --name camunda -p 8080:8080 \
-e TZ=Europe/Berlin \
camunda/camunda-bpm-platform:latest
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