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README.md |
README.md
MinIO Docker Quickstart Guide
See our web documentation on [Deploying MinIO in Standalone Mode](Deploy Standalone MinIO in a Container) for a more structured tutorial on deploying MinIO in a container.
Prerequisites
Docker installed on your machine. Download the relevant installer from here.
Run Standalone MinIO on Docker
Note: Standalone MinIO is intended for early development and evaluation. For production clusters, deploy a Distributed MinIO deployment.
MinIO needs a persistent volume to store configuration and application data. For testing purposes, you can launch MinIO by simply passing a directory (/data
in the example below). This directory gets created in the container filesystem at the time of container start. But all the data is lost after container exits.
docker run \
-p 9000:9000 \
-p 9001:9001 \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_USER=AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE" \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD=wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY" \
quay.io/minio/minio server /data --console-address ":9001"
To create a MinIO container with persistent storage, you need to map local persistent directories from the host OS to virtual config. To do this, run the below commands
GNU/Linux and macOS
mkdir -p ~/minio/data
docker run \
-p 9000:9000 \
-p 9001:9001 \
--name minio1 \
-v ~/minio/data:/data \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_USER=AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE" \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD=wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY" \
quay.io/minio/minio server /data --console-address ":9001"
The command creates a new local directory ~/minio/data
in your user home directory. It then starts the MinIO container with the -v
argument to map the local path (~/minio/data
) to the specified virtual container directory (/data
). When MinIO writes data to /data
, that data is actually written to the local path ~/minio/data
where it can persist between container restarts.
Windows
docker run \
-p 9000:9000 \
-p 9001:9001 \
--name minio1 \
-v D:\data:/data \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_USER=AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE" \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD=wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY" \
quay.io/minio/minio server /data --console-address ":9001"
Run Distributed MinIO on Docker
Distributed MinIO can be deployed via Docker Compose. This means Docker Compose lets you quickly get started with Distributed MinIO on your computer - ideal for development, testing, staging environments. We recommend kubernetes based deployment for production level deployment https://github.com/minio/operator.
MinIO Docker Tips
MinIO Custom Access and Secret Keys
To override MinIO's auto-generated keys, you may pass secret and access keys explicitly as environment variables. MinIO server also allows regular strings as access and secret keys.
GNU/Linux and macOS (custom access and secret keys)
docker run \
-p 9000:9000 \
-p 9001:9001 \
--name minio1 \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_USER=AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE" \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD=wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY" \
-v /mnt/data:/data \
quay.io/minio/minio server /data --console-address ":9001"
Windows (custom access and secret keys)
docker run \
-p 9000:9000 \
-p 9001:9001 \
--name minio1 \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_USER=AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE" \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD=wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY" \
-v D:\data:/data \
quay.io/minio/minio server /data --console-address ":9001"
Run MinIO Docker as a regular user
Docker provides standardized mechanisms to run docker containers as non-root users.
GNU/Linux and macOS (regular user)
On Linux and macOS you can use --user
to run the container as regular user.
NOTE: make sure --user has write permission to ${HOME}/data prior to using
--user
.
mkdir -p ${HOME}/data
docker run \
-p 9000:9000 \
-p 9001:9001 \
--user $(id -u):$(id -g) \
--name minio1 \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_USER=AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE" \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD=wJalrXUtnFEMIK7MDENGbPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY" \
-v ${HOME}/data:/data \
quay.io/minio/minio server /data --console-address ":9001"
Windows (regular user)
On windows you would need to use Docker integrated windows authentication and Create a container with Active Directory Support
NOTE: make sure your AD/Windows user has write permissions to D:\data prior to using
credentialspec=
.
docker run \
-p 9000:9000 \
-p 9001:9001 \
--name minio1 \
--security-opt "credentialspec=file://myuser.json"
-e "MINIO_ROOT_USER=AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE" \
-e "MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD=wJalrXUtnFEMIK7MDENGbPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY" \
-v D:\data:/data \
quay.io/minio/minio server /data --console-address ":9001"
MinIO Custom Access and Secret Keys using Docker secrets
To override MinIO's auto-generated keys, you may pass secret and access keys explicitly by creating access and secret keys as Docker secrets. MinIO server also allows regular strings as access and secret keys.
echo "AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE" | docker secret create access_key -
echo "wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY" | docker secret create secret_key -
Create a MinIO service using docker service
to read from Docker secrets.
docker service create --name="minio-service" --secret="access_key" --secret="secret_key" quay.io/minio/minio server /data
Read more about docker service
here
MinIO Custom Access and Secret Key files
To use other secret names follow the instructions above and replace access_key
and secret_key
with your custom names (e.g. my_secret_key
,my_custom_key
). Run your service with
docker service create --name="minio-service" \
--secret="my_access_key" \
--secret="my_secret_key" \
--env="MINIO_ROOT_USER_FILE=my_access_key" \
--env="MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD_FILE=my_secret_key" \
quay.io/minio/minio server /data
MINIO_ROOT_USER_FILE
and MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD_FILE
also support custom absolute paths, in case Docker secrets are mounted to custom locations or other tools are used to mount secrets into the container. For example, HashiCorp Vault injects secrets to /vault/secrets
. With the custom names above, set the environment variables to
MINIO_ROOT_USER_FILE=/vault/secrets/my_access_key
MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD_FILE=/vault/secrets/my_secret_key
Retrieving Container ID
To use Docker commands on a specific container, you need to know the Container ID
for that container. To get the Container ID
, run
docker ps -a
-a
flag makes sure you get all the containers (Created, Running, Exited). Then identify the Container ID
from the output.
Starting and Stopping Containers
To start a stopped container, you can use the docker start
command.
docker start <container_id>
To stop a running container, you can use the docker stop
command.
docker stop <container_id>
MinIO container logs
To access MinIO logs, you can use the docker logs
command.
docker logs <container_id>
Monitor MinIO Docker Container
To monitor the resources used by MinIO container, you can use the docker stats
command.
docker stats <container_id>