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The project now includes a `Dockerfile` and a `docker-compose.yml` file (which requires at least docker-compose version `1.10.0`).
Review the settings in `docker-compose.yml`. Note that it is **not default** to store the postgresql database and redis databases in a persistent storage location. If you plan on running your instance in production, you **must** uncomment the [`volumes` directive](https://github.com/tootsuite/mastodon/blob/972f6bc861affd9bc40181492833108f905a04b6/docker-compose.yml#L7-L16) in `docker-compose.yml`.
Then, you need to fill in the `.env.production` file:
cp .env.production.sample .env.production
nano .env.production
Do NOT change the `REDIS_*` or `DB_*` settings when running with the default docker configurations.
You will need to fill in, at least: `LOCAL_DOMAIN`, `LOCAL_HTTPS`, `PAPERCLIP_SECRET`, `SECRET_KEY_BASE`, `OTP_SECRET`, and the `SMTP_*` settings. To generate the `PAPERCLIP_SECRET`, `SECRET_KEY_BASE`, and `OTP_SECRET`, you may use:
rake secret
## Building the app
Before running the first time, you need to build the images:
docker-compose build
docker-compose run --rm web rake secret
Do this once for each of those keys, and copy the result into the `.env.production` file in the appropriate field.
Then you should run the `db:migrate` command to create the database, or migrate it from an older release:
to configure Nginx to make your Mastodon instance available to the rest of the world.
The container has two volumes, for the assets and for user uploads, and optionally two more, for the postgresql and redis databases.
The default docker-compose.yml maps them to the repository's `public/assets` and `public/system` directories, you may wish to put them somewhere else. Likewise, the PostgreSQL and Redis images have data containers that you may wish to map somewhere where you know how to find them and back them up.
**Note**: The `--rm` option for docker-compose will remove the container that is created to run a one-off command after it completes. As data is stored in volumes it is not affected by that container clean-up.
## Running tasks
Running any of these tasks via docker-compose would look like this:
docker-compose run --rm web rake mastodon:media:clear
## Updating
This approach makes updating to the latest version a real breeze.