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Nextcloud development environment on Docker Compose

Documentation | Nextcloud Developer Portal

Nextcloud's development environment using Docker Compose providing a large variety of services for Nextcloud server and app development and testing.

DO NOT USE THIS IN PRODUCTION Various settings in this setup are considered insecure and default passwords and secrets are used all over the place

Tutorial

You can find a step-by-step tutorial on how to use this setup in the Nextcloud Developer Portal. It will guide you through the setup and show you how to use it for app development: https://cloud.nextcloud.com/s/iyNGp8ryWxc7Efa?path=%2F1%20Setting%20up%20a%20development%20environment

In detail explanation of the setup and its features and configuration options can be found in the nextcloud-docker-dev documentation.

Quickstart

Persistent development setup

[!TIP] This is the recommended way to run the setup for development. You will have a local clone of all required source code.

To start the setup run the following commands to clone the repository and bootstrap the setup. This will prepare your setup and clone the Nextcloud server repository and required apps into the workspace folder.

git clone https://github.com/juliusknorr/nextcloud-docker-dev
cd nextcloud-docker-dev
./bootstrap.sh

Depending on your docker version you will need to use docker-compose instead of docker compose in the following commands.

This may take some time depending on your internet connection speed.

Once done you can start the Nextcloud container using:

docker compose up nextcloud

You can also start it in the background using docker compose up -d nextcloud.

You can then access your Nextcloud instance at http://nextcloud.local. The default username is admin and the password is admin. Other users can be found in the documentation.

[!WARN] Note that for performance reasons the server repository might have been cloned with --depth=1 by default. To get the full history it is highly recommended to run:

cd workspace/server
git fetch --unshallow
git config remote.origin.fetch "+refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*"
git fetch origin

Standalone containers

[!TIP] This is a very simple way but doesn't cover all features. If you are looking for a fully featured setup you may skip to the next section

There is a standalone version of the Nextcloud containers available that can be used to run Nextcloud without the other services. This is useful if you are just wanting to get started with app development against a specific server version, or to just have a quick way to develop, test or debug.

These containers support automatic fetching of the server source code and use SQLite as the database. The server source code is fetched from the official Nextcloud server repository and the version can be specified using the NEXTCLOUD_VERSION environment variable. The default version is master.

Running the containers does not need this repository to be cloned.

Example for running a Nextcloud server from the master branch of server:

docker run --rm -p 8080:80 ghcr.io/juliusknorr/nextcloud-dev-php81:latest

For app development you can mount your app directly into the container:

docker run --rm -p 8080:80 -v ~/path/to/appid:/var/www/html/apps-extra/appid ghcr.io/juliusknorr/nextcloud-dev-php81:latest

The SERVER_BRANCH environment variable can be used to run different versions of Nextcloud by specifying either a server branch or git tag.

docker run --rm -p 8080:80 -e SERVER_BRANCH=v24.0.1 ghcr.io/juliusknorr/nextcloud-dev-php81:latest

You can also mount your local server source code into the container to run a local version of Nextcloud:

docker run --rm -p 8080:80 -e SERVER_BRANCH=v24.0.1 -v /tmp/server:/var/www/html ghcr.io/juliusknorr/nextcloud-dev-php81:latest

More features

You can find documentation for more advanced features in nextcloud-docker-dev documentation for example: