tree: cf00fa05e2daceb05b37e261e247d904254cf376 [path history] [tgz]
  1. sh/
  2. .dockerignore
  3. DockerBuild.sh
  4. Dockerfile
  5. DockerImage.txt
  6. DockerRun.sh
  7. pom.xml
  8. README.md
nifi-docker/dockerhub/README.md

Latest changes

1.14.0

  • Updated default container configuration to use HTTPS with Single User Authentication

1.12.0

  • The NiFi Toolkit has been added to the image under the path /opt/nifi/nifi-toolkit-current also set as the environment variable NIFI_TOOLKIT_HOME
  • The installation directory and related environment variables are changed to be version-agnostic to /opt/nifi/nifi-current:
docker run --rm --entrypoint /bin/bash apache/nifi:1.12.0 -c 'env | grep NIFI'
NIFI_HOME=/opt/nifi/nifi-current
NIFI_LOG_DIR=/opt/nifi/nifi-current/logs
NIFI_TOOLKIT_HOME=/opt/nifi/nifi-toolkit-current
NIFI_PID_DIR=/opt/nifi/nifi-current/run
NIFI_BASE_DIR=/opt/nifi
  • A symlink refer to the new path for backward compatibility:
docker run --rm --entrypoint /bin/bash apache/nifi:1.12.0 -c 'readlink /opt/nifi/nifi-1.12.0'                                   /opt/nifi/nifi-current

Docker Image Quickstart

Capabilities

This image currently supports running in standalone mode either unsecured or with user authentication provided through:

This image also contains the NiFi Toolkit (as of version 1.8.0) preconfigured to use either in secure and unsecure mode.

Building

The Docker image can be built using the following command:

docker build -t apache/nifi:latest .

This build will result in an image tagged apache/nifi:latest

# user @ puter in ~/Development/code/apache/nifi/nifi-docker/dockerhub
$ docker images
REPOSITORY               TAG                 IMAGE ID            CREATED                 SIZE
apache/nifi              latest              f0f564eed149        A long, long time ago   1.62GB

Note: The default version of NiFi specified by the Dockerfile is typically that of one that is unreleased if working from source. To build an image for a prior released version, one can override the NIFI_VERSION build-arg with the following command:

docker build --build-arg=NIFI_VERSION={Desired NiFi Version} -t apache/nifi:latest .

There is, however, no guarantee that older versions will work as properties have changed and evolved with subsequent releases. The configuration scripts are suitable for at least 1.4.0+.

Running a container

Standalone Instance secured with HTTPS and Single User Authentication

The minimum to run a NiFi instance is as follows:

docker run --name nifi \
  -p 8443:8443 \
  -d \
  apache/nifi:latest

This will provide a running instance, exposing the instance UI to the host system on at port 8443, viewable at https://localhost:8443/nifi.

Environment variables can be used to set the NiFi communication ports and hostname using the Docker ‘-e’ switch as follows:

docker run --name nifi \
  -p 9443:9443 \
  -d \
  -e NIFI_WEB_HTTPS_PORT='9443' \
  apache/nifi:latest

Single User Authentication credentials can be specified using environment variables as follows:

docker run --name nifi \
  -p 8443:8443 \
  -d \
  -e SINGLE_USER_CREDENTIALS_USERNAME=admin \
  -e SINGLE_USER_CREDENTIALS_PASSWORD=ctsBtRBKHRAx69EqUghvvgEvjnaLjFEB \
  apache/nifi:latest

See secure.sh and start.sh scripts for supported environment variables.

Standalone Instance secured with HTTPS and Mutual TLS Authentication

In this configuration, the user will need to provide certificates and associated configuration information. Of particular note, is the AUTH environment variable which is set to tls. Additionally, the user must provide an the DN as provided by an accessing client certificate in the INITIAL_ADMIN_IDENTITY environment variable. This value will be used to seed the instance with an initial user with administrative privileges. Finally, this command makes use of a volume to provide certificates on the host system to the container instance.

docker run --name nifi \
  -v /User/dreynolds/certs/localhost:/opt/certs \
  -p 8443:8443 \
  -e AUTH=tls \
  -e KEYSTORE_PATH=/opt/certs/keystore.jks \
  -e KEYSTORE_TYPE=JKS \
  -e KEYSTORE_PASSWORD=QKZv1hSWAFQYZ+WU1jjF5ank+l4igeOfQRp+OSbkkrs \
  -e TRUSTSTORE_PATH=/opt/certs/truststore.jks \
  -e TRUSTSTORE_PASSWORD=rHkWR1gDNW3R9hgbeRsT3OM3Ue0zwGtQqcFKJD2EXWE \
  -e TRUSTSTORE_TYPE=JKS \
  -e INITIAL_ADMIN_IDENTITY='CN=Random User, O=Apache, OU=NiFi, C=US' \
  -d \
  apache/nifi:latest

Standalone Instance secured with HTTPS and LDAP Authentication

In this configuration, the user will need to provide certificates and associated configuration information. Optionally, if the LDAP provider of interest is operating in LDAPS or START_TLS modes, certificates will additionally be needed. Of particular note, is the AUTH environment variable which is set to ldap. Additionally, the user must provide a DN as provided by the configured LDAP server in the INITIAL_ADMIN_IDENTITY environment variable. This value will be used to seed the instance with an initial user with administrative privileges. Finally, this command makes use of a volume to provide certificates on the host system to the container instance.

For a minimal, connection to an LDAP server using SIMPLE authentication:

docker run --name nifi \
  -v /User/dreynolds/certs/localhost:/opt/certs \
  -p 8443:8443 \
  -e AUTH=ldap \
  -e KEYSTORE_PATH=/opt/certs/keystore.jks \
  -e KEYSTORE_TYPE=JKS \
  -e KEYSTORE_PASSWORD=QKZv1hSWAFQYZ+WU1jjF5ank+l4igeOfQRp+OSbkkrs \
  -e TRUSTSTORE_PATH=/opt/certs/truststore.jks \
  -e TRUSTSTORE_PASSWORD=rHkWR1gDNW3R9hgbeRsT3OM3Ue0zwGtQqcFKJD2EXWE \
  -e TRUSTSTORE_TYPE=JKS \
  -e INITIAL_ADMIN_IDENTITY='cn=admin,dc=example,dc=org' \
  -e LDAP_AUTHENTICATION_STRATEGY='SIMPLE' \
  -e LDAP_MANAGER_DN='cn=admin,dc=example,dc=org' \
  -e LDAP_MANAGER_PASSWORD='password' \
  -e LDAP_USER_SEARCH_BASE='dc=example,dc=org' \
  -e LDAP_USER_SEARCH_FILTER='cn={0}' \
  -e LDAP_IDENTITY_STRATEGY='USE_DN' \
  -e LDAP_URL='ldap://ldap:389' \
  -d \
  apache/nifi:latest

The following, optional environment variables may be added to the above command when connecting to a secure LDAP server configured with START_TLS or LDAPS

-e LDAP_TLS_KEYSTORE: ''
-e LDAP_TLS_KEYSTORE_PASSWORD: ''
-e LDAP_TLS_KEYSTORE_TYPE: ''
-e LDAP_TLS_TRUSTSTORE: ''
-e LDAP_TLS_TRUSTSTORE_PASSWORD: ''
-e LDAP_TLS_TRUSTSTORE_TYPE: ''

Clustering can be enabled by using the following properties to Docker environment variable mappings.

nifi.properties
PropertyEnvironment Variable
nifi.cluster.is.nodeNIFI_CLUSTER_IS_NODE
nifi.cluster.node.addressNIFI_CLUSTER_ADDRESS
nifi.cluster.node.protocol.portNIFI_CLUSTER_NODE_PROTOCOL_PORT
nifi.cluster.node.protocol.threadsNIFI_CLUSTER_NODE_PROTOCOL_THREADS
nifi.cluster.node.protocol.max.threadsNIFI_CLUSTER_NODE_PROTOCOL_MAX_THREADS
nifi.zookeeper.connect.stringNIFI_ZK_CONNECT_STRING
nifi.zookeeper.root.nodeNIFI_ZK_ROOT_NODE
nifi.cluster.flow.election.max.wait.timeNIFI_ELECTION_MAX_WAIT
nifi.cluster.flow.election.max.candidatesNIFI_ELECTION_MAX_CANDIDATES
state-management.xml
Property NameEnvironment Variable
Connect StringNIFI_ZK_CONNECT_STRING
Root NodeNIFI_ZK_ROOT_NODE

Using the Toolkit

Start the container:

docker run -d --name nifi apache/nifi

After NiFi has been started, it is possible to run toolkit commands against the running instance:

docker exec -ti nifi nifi-toolkit-current/bin/cli.sh nifi current-user
anonymous

Configuration Information

The following ports are specified by default in Docker for NiFi operation within the container and can be published to the host.

FunctionPropertyPort
HTTP Portnifi.web.http.port8080
HTTPS Portnifi.web.https.port8443
Remote Input Socket Portnifi.remote.input.socket.port10000
JVM Debuggerjava.arg.debug8000

The Variable Registry can be configured for the docker image using the NIFI_VARIABLE_REGISTRY_PROPERTIES environment variable.

The JVM Memory initial and maximum heap size can be set using the NIFI_JVM_HEAP_INIT and NIFI_JVM_HEAP_MAX environment variables. These use values acceptable to the JVM Xmx and Xms parameters such as 1g or 512m.

The JVM Debugger can be enabled by setting the environment variable NIFI_JVM_DEBUGGER to any value.

======= NOTE: If NiFi is proxied at context paths other than the root path of the proxy, the paths need to be set in the nifi.web.proxy.context.path property, which can be assigned via the environment variable NIFI_WEB_PROXY_CONTEXT_PATH.

NOTE: If mapping the HTTPS port specifying trusted hosts should be provided for the property nifi.web.proxy.host. This property can be specified to running instances via specifying an environment variable at container instantiation of NIFI_WEB_PROXY_HOST.