MariaDB is a fast, reliable, scalable, and easy to use open-source relational database system. MariaDB Server is intended for mission-critical, heavy-load production systems as well as for embedding into mass-deployed software.
docker run --name mariadb bitnami/mariadb
mariadb:
image: bitnami/mariadb
The recommended way to get the Bitnami MariaDB Docker Image is to pull the prebuilt image from the Docker Hub Registry.
docker pull bitnami/mariadb:latest
To use a specific version, you can pull a versioned tag. You can view the list of available versions in the Docker Hub Registry.
docker pull bitnami/mariadb:[TAG]
If you wish, you can also build the image yourself.
git clone https://github.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-mariadb.git
cd bitnami-docker-mariadb
docker build -t bitnami/mariadb .
If you remove the container all your data will be lost, and the next time you run the image the database will be reinitialized. To avoid this loss of data, you should mount a volume that will persist even after the container is removed.
Note! If you have already started using your database, follow the steps on backing up and restoring to pull the data from your running container down to your host.
The MariaDB image exposes a volume at /bitnami/mariadb/data
, you can mount a directory from your
host to serve as the data store. If the directory you mount is empty, the database will be
initialized.
docker run -v /path/to/data:/bitnami/mariadb/data bitnami/mariadb
or using Docker Compose:
mariadb:
image: bitnami/mariadb
volumes:
- /path/to/data:/bitnami/mariadb/data
If you want to connect to your MariaDB server inside another container, you can use the linking system provided by Docker.
The first step is to start our MariaDB server.
Docker's linking system uses container ids or names to reference containers. We can explicitly specify a name for our MariaDB server to make it easier to connect to other containers.
docker run --name mariadb bitnami/mariadb
Now that we have our MariaDB server running, we can create another container that links to it by
giving Docker the --link
option. This option takes the id or name of the container we want to link
it to as well as a hostname to use inside the container, separated by a colon. For example, to have
our MariaDB server accessible in another container with server
as it's hostname we would pass
--link mariadb:server
to the Docker run command.
The Bitnami MariaDB Docker Image also ships with a MySQL client, but by default it will start a server. To start the client instead, we can override the default command Docker runs by stating a different command to run after the image name.
docker run --rm -it --link mariadb:server bitnami/mariadb mysql -h server -u root
We started the MySQL client passing in the -h
option that allows us to specify the hostname of the
server, which we set to the hostname we created in the link.
Note! You can also run the MySQL client in the same container the server is running in using the Docker exec command.
docker exec -it mariadb mysql -u root
Copy the snippet below into your docker-compose.yml
to add MariaDB to your application.
mariadb:
image: bitnami/mariadb
Update the definitions for containers you want to access your MariaDB server from to include a link
to the mariadb
entry you added in Step 1.
myapp:
image: myapp
links:
- mariadb:mariadb
Inside myapp
, use mariadb
as the hostname for the MariaDB server.
Passing the MARIADB_PASSWORD
environment variable when running the image for the first time will
set the password of the root user to the value of MARIADB_PASSWORD
.
docker run --name mariadb -e MARIADB_PASSWORD=password123 bitnami/mariadb
or using Docker Compose:
mariadb:
image: bitnami/mariadb
environment:
- MARIADB_PASSWORD=password123
By passing the MARIADB_DATABASE
environment variable when running the image for the first time, a
database will be created. This is useful if your application requires that a database already
exists, saving you from having to manually create the database using the MySQL client.
docker run --name mariadb -e MARIADB_DATABASE=my_database bitnami/mariadb
or using Docker Compose:
mariadb:
image: bitnami/mariadb
environment:
- MARIADB_DATABASE=my_database
You can create a restricted database user that only has permissions for the database created with
the MARIADB_DATABASE
environment variable. To do this,
provide the MARIADB_USER
environment variable.
Warning! In this case, a root user will not be created, and your restricted user will not have permissions to create a new database.
docker run --name mariadb -e MARIADB_USER=my_user -e MARIADB_DATABASE=my_database bitnami/mariadb
or using Docker Compose:
mariadb:
image: bitnami/mariadb
environment:
- MARIADB_USER=my_user
- MARIADB_DATABASE=my_database
Note!
When MARIADB_PASSWORD
is specified along with MARIADB_USER
, the value specified in MARIADB_PASSWORD
is set as the password of the newly created user specified in MARIADB_USER
.
The simplest way to configure your MariaDB server is to pass custom command-line options when running the image.
docker run bitnami/mariadb --open-files-limit=2
or using Docker Compose:
mariadb:
image: bitnami/mariadb
command: --open-files-limit=2
Further Reading:
This image looks for configuration in /bitnami/mariadb/conf
. You can mount a volume there with
your own configuration, or the default configuration will be copied to your volume if it is empty.
Run the MariaDB image, mounting a directory from your host.
docker run --name mariadb -v /path/to/mariadb/conf:/bitnami/mariadb/conf bitnami/mariadb
or using Docker Compose:
mariadb:
image: bitnami/mariadb
volumes:
- /path/to/mariadb/conf:/bitnami/mariadb/conf
Edit the configuration on your host using your favorite editor.
vi /path/to/mariadb/conf/my.cnf
After changing the configuration, restart your MariaDB container for changes to take effect.
docker restart mariadb
or using Docker Compose:
docker-compose restart mariadb
Further Reading:
The following options cannot be modified, to ensure that the image runs correctly.
--defaults-file=/opt/bitnami/mysql/my.cnf
--log-error=/opt/bitnami/mysql/logs/mysqld.log
--basedir=/opt/bitnami/mysql
--datadir=/opt/bitnami/mysql/data
--plugin-dir=/opt/bitnami/mysql/lib/plugin
--user=mysql
--socket=/opt/bitnami/mysql/tmp/mysql.sock
The Bitnami MariaDB Docker Image supports two different logging modes: logging to stdout, and logging to a file.
The default behavior is to log to stdout, as Docker expects. These will be collected by Docker,
converted to JSON and stored in the host, to be accessible via the docker logs
command.
docker logs mariadb
or using Docker Compose:
docker-compose logs mariadb
This method of logging has the downside of not being easy to manage. Without an easy way to rotate logs, they could grow exponentially and take up large amounts of disk space on your host.
To log to file, run the MariaDB image, mounting a directory from your host at
/bitnami/mariadb/logs
. This will instruct the container to send logs to a mysqld.log
file in the
mounted volume.
docker run --name mariadb -v /path/to/mariadb/logs:/bitnami/mariadb/logs bitnami/mariadb
or using Docker Compose:
mariadb:
image: bitnami/mariadb
volumes:
- /path/to/mariadb/logs:/bitnami/mariadb/logs
To perform operations (e.g. logrotate) on the logs, mount the same directory in a container designed to operate on log files, such as logstash.
To backup your data, configuration and logs, follow these simple steps:
docker stop mariadb
or using Docker Compose:
docker-compose stop mariadb
We need to mount two volumes in a container we will use to create the backup: a directory on your host to store the backup in, and the volumes from the container we just stopped so we can access the data.
docker run --rm -v /path/to/backups:/backups --volumes-from mariadb busybox \
cp -a /bitnami/mariadb /backups/latest
or using Docker Compose:
docker run --rm -v /path/to/backups:/backups --volumes-from `docker-compose ps -q mariadb` busybox \
cp -a /bitnami/mariadb /backups/latest
Note!
If you only need to backup database data, or configuration, you can change the first argument to
cp
to /bitnami/mariadb/data
or /bitnami/mariadb/conf
respectively.
Restoring a backup is as simple as mounting the backup as volumes in the container.
docker run -v /path/to/backups/latest/data:/bitnami/mariadb/data \
-v /path/to/backups/latest/conf:/bitnami/mariadb/conf \
-v /path/to/backups/latest/logs:/bitnami/mariadb/logs \
bitnami/mariadb
or using Docker Compose:
mariadb:
image: bitnami/mariadb
volumes:
- /path/to/backups/latest/data:/bitnami/mariadb/data
- /path/to/backups/latest/conf:/bitnami/mariadb/conf
- /path/to/backups/latest/logs:/bitnami/mariadb/logs
Bitnami provides up-to-date versions of MariaDB, including security patches, soon after they are made upstream. We recommend that you follow these steps to upgrade your container.
docker pull bitnami/mariadb:latest
or if you're using Docker Compose, update the value of the image property to
bitnami/mariadb:latest
.
Before continuing, you should backup your container's data, configuration and logs.
Follow the steps on creating a backup.
docker rm -v mariadb
or using Docker Compose:
docker-compose rm -v mariadb
Re-create your container from the new image, restoring your backup if necessary.
docker run --name mariadb bitnami/mariadb:latest
or using Docker Compose:
docker-compose start mariadb
This image is tested for expected runtime behavior, using the
Bats testing framework. You can run the tests on your machine
using the bats
command.
bats test.sh
We'd love for you to contribute to this container. You can request new features by creating an issue, or submit a pull request with your contribution.
If you encountered a problem running this container, you can file an issue. For us to provide better support, be sure to include the following information in your issue:
- Host OS and version
- Docker version (
docker version
) - Output of
docker info
- Version of this container (
echo $BITNAMI_APP_VERSION
inside the container) - The command you used to run the container, and any relevant output you saw (masking any sensitive information)
Copyright 2015 Bitnami
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.