@ -7,12 +7,12 @@ The idea is to provide tt-rss working (and updating) out of the box with minimal
General outline of the configuration is as follows:
- separate containers (frontend: caddy, database: pgsql, app and updater: php/fpm)
- separate containers (frontend: nginx, database: pgsql, app and updater: php/fpm)
- tt-rss updates from git master repository on container restart
- tt-rss source code is stored on a persistent volume so plugins, etc. could be easily added
- ``config.php`` is generated if it is missing
- database schema is installed automatically if it is missing
- Caddy has its http port exposed to the outside
- nginx has its http port exposed to the outside
- optional SSL support via Caddy w/ automatic letsencrypt certificates
- feed updates are handled via update daemon started in a separate container (updater)
- optional backups container which performs tt-rss database backup once a week
@ -29,21 +29,23 @@ git clone https://git.tt-rss.org/fox/ttrss-docker-compose.git ttrss-docker && cd
Copy ``.env-dist`` to ``.env`` and edit any relevant variables you need changed.
* You will likely have to change ``SELF_URL_PATH`` which should equal fully qualified tt-rss
You will likely have to change ``SELF_URL_PATH`` which should equal fully qualified tt-rss
URL as seen when opening it in your web browser. If this field is set incorrectly, you will
likely see the correct value in the tt-rss fatal error message.
Note: ``SELF_URL_PATH`` is updated in generated tt-rss ``config.php`` automatically on container
restart. You don't need to modify ``config.php`` manually for this.
* By default, container binds to **localhost** port **8280**. If you want the container to be
By default,`web` container binds to **localhost** port **8280**. If you want the container to be
accessible on the net, without using a reverse proxy sharing same host, you will need to
remove ``127.0.0.1:`` from ``HTTP_PORT`` variable in ``.env``.
Please don't rename the services inside `docker-compose.yml` unless you know what you're doing. Web container expects application container to be named `app`, if you rename it and it's not accessible via Docker DNS as `http://app` you will run into 502 errors on startup.
#### Build and start the container
```sh
docker-compose up --build
docker-compose up --build -d
```
See docker-compose documentation for more information and available options.