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DHIS2 with Docker

· 11 min read
caution

UPDATE (January 25, 2023) - some parts of this blog post are outdated, see the DHIS2 in Docker tutorial for the latest information.

The DHIS2 Core Team uses Docker to make development and testing efforts easier every day! It allows us to spin up various environments with any DHIS2 version, numerous tomcat versions and different components, such as Redis, NGINX, in no time. Because we wanted to share Docker with the community, we made publishing Docker images a part of our delivery pipeline. This guide aims to provide some guidelines on how to use Docker to quickly set up DHIS2.

This guide requires familiarity with containerization as a concept, running shell commands, and knowledge about how Docker and Docker Compose works. I encourage you to take a look at the resources section below to get up to speed.

Additionally, you will need:

  • Docker downloaded and installed on your machine.
  • Docker Compose downloaded and installed on your machine.

Introduction

Vocabulary

Image - a template that contains the application and all the dependencies that are required to run that application.
Container - a running instance of Docker image.
Dockerfile - text file, with lines and instructions on how to build the Docker image. More information about Dockerfile.

Docker Hub

Docker Hub is the official cloud-based repository where Docker users store and distribute their images. DHIS2 has its organization on Docker Hub. At the time of writing this guide, we have 4 active repositories: base-dev, base, core-dev, core.

Repositories

Sometimes we categorize repositories in channels and say that we have 2 image channels: dev and stable.

Channels

dev

Repositories suffixed with -dev contains images for latest DHIS2 versions. That means, that we can't fully guarantee its quality and we recommend to use it only for testing purposes. Also, for curious souls, wanting to peek into the latest DHIS2 development efforts. The -dev repositories are ideologically the same as dev demo instances on play. Images in this channel will be overwritten multiple times a day.

Links: core-dev, base-dev

stable

Repositories not suffixed by dev contains images for stable and released DHIS2 versions. These images represent the stable dhis2 versions, meaning it won't be rebuilt in the future.

Links: core, base

Images

core

Core repositories (core, core-dev) contains tomcat images that already have DHIS2 war baked-in. That means, that starting this image will result in a running DHIS2 instance.

base

Base repositories (base, base-dev) contains only DHIS2 war. Starting this image will not result in a running DHIS2 instance.

Versioning and tags

Docker tags are meant to convey useful information about a specific version/variant of the image. In DHIS2 repositories, we combine DHIS2 and tomcat versions with image variants into a tag to be as transparent as possible about what you will find in the image.

tag = dhis2 version + image variant

DHIS2 versions

dev channels images are versioned the same way we version branches in GitHub:

  • master tag will correspond to the latest major DHIS2 version being developed. At the time of writing this guide, the last version we released is 2.33, which means that we are currently working on the 2.34 version and that's what the version image dhis2/core-dev:master will contain.
  • 2.31 to 2.33 tags will have the war of the latest minor dhis2 version. So, if we released 5 patches for 2.31 version in total, we are working on the 6th patch and that will be represented by dhis2/core-dev:2.31 tag.

Versioning of stable images corresponds to the versioning scheme we use for DHIS2 releases and you might be already familiar with it. Examples: 2.31.5, 2.32.1, 2.33.0 and etc.

Image variants

Image variants describe what is the image based on and what environment DHIS2 will be running in. At the time of writing this guide, we create the following image variants:

Debian:

  • tomcat-9.0-jdk8-openjdk-slim
  • tomcat-8.5-jdk8-openjdk-slim
  • tomcat-8.5.46-jdk8-openjdk-slim
  • tomcat-8.0-jre8-slim

Alpine:

  • tomcat-8.5.34-jre8-alpine

For more information, see versioning scheme notes.

Pulling images

When you decide which DHIS2 version and image variant you are interested in, here's how you can pull it from Docker hub:

  • docker pull dhis2/core-dev:master-tomcat-9.0-jdk8-openjdk-slim - this command will pull the image from core-dev repository. The image has the DHIS2 war build from the master branch. The image is built on top of tomcat-9.0-jdk8-openjdk-slim base image.

  • docker pull dhis2/core:2.32.2-tomcat-8.5.34-jre8-alpine - this command will pull the image from core repository. The image has DHIS2 version 2.32.2 and is based on tomcat-8.5.34-jre8-alpine tomcat image.

If you don't care about image variant, you can use default one and pull the image like this:

  • docker pull dhis2/core:2.31.6 - this will pull the image with DHIS2 version 2.31.6. Before 2.33, the default image was based on tomcat-8.5.34-jre8-alpine, but we decided that 8.5-jdk8-openjdk-slim will suite us better. Note, that you should use this option only when you don't care about the tomcat version, java environment or OS variant. If you want more control, use the explicit image variants.

How-To's

Now that you know how to find the images you are looking for, we can go through the basic use cases you might have for DHIS2. If you have another use case that is not covered by this guide, let us know in the CoP. We will use Docker Compose to simplify the process.

DHIS2 Docker instance

DHIS2 instance running inside Docker container is not different from traditionally set up DHIS2 instance. The basic requirement for the instance is dhis.conf file where you define your database configuration and additional DHIS2 properties. To successfully run DHIS2 instance inside Docker you will need to attach this file as a volume to /DHIS2_home directory inside the Docker container. Here's the Docker command to achieve that:

docker run -v $pathToYourDhisConf:/DHIS2_home/dhis.conf dhis2/core:2.32.0

$pathToYourDhisConf should be a relative path of dhis.conf file in the machine you are running Docker on.

DHIS2 with empty Postgres database using Docker Compose

Here's an example docker-compose.yml file which will help you to run both DHIS2 and Postgres database instances inside separate Docker containers in no time.

version: '3'
services:
db:
image: mdillon/postgis:10-alpine
command: postgres -c max_locks_per_transaction=100
environment:
POSTGRES_USER: dhis
POSTGRES_DB: dhis2
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: dhis
web:
image: dhis2/core:2.33.0
volumes:
- ./config/dhis2_home/dhis.conf:/DHIS2_home/dhis.conf
ports:
- "8080:8080"
depends_on:
- db

Make sure, that your dhis.conf then includes the following properties:

connection.dialect = org.hibernate.dialect.PostgreSQLDialect
connection.driver_class = org.postgresql.Driver

# "db" maps to service name defined in Docker Compose
# "dhis2" maps to POSTGRES_DB environment variable defined in Docker Compose
connection.url = jdbc:postgresql://db/dhis2

# maps to POSTGRES_USER environment variable defined in Docker Compose.
connection.username = dhis

# maps to POSTGRES_PASSWORD environment variable in Docker Compose.
connection.password = dhis

To run this file with Docker Compose, execute the following command: docker-compose -f /pathToDockerComposeFile up

or, if the file is on your current directory: docker-compose up

Outcome: Docker Compose will start 2 containers for you, db and web and when tomcat fully starts up, you will be able to reach DHIS2 at http://localhost:8080. The database will be empty, so you will have a clean DHIS2 instance.

Tip: To destroy the instance, run docker-compose down.

DHIS2 with pre-populated Postgres database using Docker Compose

To achieve this, you will need an SQL file with the schema and data you want to pre-populate Postgres with. You will attach that file to Postgres container as a volume. Here's an example of the docker-compose.yml file.

version: '3'
services:
db:
image: mdillon/postgis:10-alpine
command: postgres -c max_locks_per_transaction=100
environment:
POSTGRES_USER: dhis
POSTGRES_DB: dhis2
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: dhis
volumes:
- ./config/init.sql:/docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/init.sql
web:
image: dhis2/core:2.33.0
volumes:
- ./config/dhis2_home/dhis.conf:/DHIS2_home/dhis.conf
environment:
- WAIT_FOR_DB_CONTAINER=db:5432 -t 0
ports:
- "8080:8080"
depends_on:
- db

You probably noticed, that most of the file is the same as in the previous step, but we added volumes and environment properties for db and web containers.

Attaching the SQL file to the db container will tell Postgres to pre-populate db before starting the container. Depending on the file size, Postgres might take a while to do this and we might run into race conditions when DHIS2 starts earlier than Postgres and fails to connect. To solve this, we tell the web container that it has to wait for Postgres to finish before starting. We do this by using the WAIT_FOR_DB_CONTAINER environment variable.

You will notice the -t option. The -t option stands for timeout. 0 means that web container will wait as long as it takes for db container to become ready, but you can set any timeout (in seconds) you want.

Note, that you still need to configure connection properties in dhis.conf:

connection.dialect = org.hibernate.dialect.PostgreSQLDialect
connection.driver_class = org.postgresql.Driver

# "db" maps to service name defined in Docker Compose
# "dhis2" maps to POSTGRES_DB defined in Docker Compose
connection.url = jdbc:postgresql://db/dhis2

# maps to POSTGRES_USER environment variable in Docker Compose.
connection.username = dhis

# maps to POSTGRES_PASSWORD environment variable in Docker Compose.
connection.password = dhis

To run this file with Docker Compose, execute the following command: docker-compose -f /pathToDockerComposeFile up

or, if the file is on your current directory: docker-compose up

Outcome: Docker-compose will start 2 containers: db and web and when tomcat fully starts up, you will be able to reach DHIS2 at http://localhost:8080. The database will be pre-populated.

Tip: To destroy the instance, run docker-compose down.


Tips

Setting context.path tomcat variable

If you are using nginx reverse proxy on the host machine and want to expose dhis2 running in docker in non-default location, the easiest way would be to create a custom server.xml file and set context.path property to the same value as location.

Example for setting context.path in server.xml:

<Engine name="Catalina" defaultHost="localhost">
<Realm className="org.apache.catalina.realm.LockOutRealm">
<Realm
className="org.apache.catalina.realm.UserDatabaseRealm"
resourceName="UserDatabase"
/>
</Realm>

<Host
name="localhost"
appBase="webapps"
unpackWARs="true"
autoDeploy="false"
deployOnStartup="false"
>
<Context path="*${context.path}*" docBase="ROOT/" />

<Valve
className="org.apache.catalina.valves.AccessLogValve"
directory="logs"
prefix="localhost_access_log" suffix=".txt"
pattern="%h %l %u %t &quot;%r&quot; %s %b"
/>
</Host>
</Engine>

When you have a custom configuration file, attach it as a volume and set context.path in the environment variables. If you are using docker-compose, your set up could look like this:

volumes: 
- ./dhis2/server.xml:/usr/local/tomcat/conf/server.xml
...
environment:
- CATALINA_OPTS: "-Dcontext.path=hmis"
...

Configuring file storage

By default, DHIS2 will use container's in-memory storage for file type data values and attributes. In production set ups, you should always configure a proper volume and set up routine back up of the system. Example of volume mapping container's file storage to host's file storage:

volumes: 
- ./dhis2/files:/DHIS2_home/files

Q&A

Q: How can I use your Docker images in production?
A: We can't recommend using Docker in production yet. We know that there are implementations that run DHIS2 in Docker successfully, but we can't recommend doing so just yet. If you decide to go for it, make sure you perform enough security, performance and stress tests.

Q: How can I contribute?
A: Great question! We value all contributions and we want to have as many as possible! Firstly, you can contribute by testing our images and raising feature requests as well as bugs. Do you have ideas on how to make images more secure, performant or functional? We want to hear it! If you are using your own Docker images, give our images a try and tell us how can we improve. We also accept code contributions. Docker stuff is located in dhis2-core git repository.

Q: Can I use this with d2 CLI?
A: Of course! D2 cluster supports --image flag, which allows you to do just that. Example: d2 cluster up myimage --image dhis2/core:2.32.2-tomcat-8.5.34-jre8-alpine. Read more on d2 cli README page.

Q: Can I set JAVA_OPTS for the docker container? A: Sure, it's simple. You need to add additional environment variable to the 'environment' section of your docker-compose.yml. Variable should be called JAVA_OPTS. Example with command line invocation: docker run -v $pathToYourDhisConf:/DHIS2_home/dhis.conf dhis2/core:2.33.0 -e JAVA_OPTS=$yourJavaOpts


Resources:

Great hands-on resources to help you to become a true Dockerist!