Documentation

Docker Compose

Instead of using the standard Docker commands, you may wish for a bit more automated management of the deployment. This is where the use of Docker-compose may come in handy.

Start the mongodb server by:

docker-compose up -d mongo

The first time you start mongo, you’ll also need to initialize it before being able to use Rocket.Chat. Ensure that mongo is in the running state, then:

docker-compose up -d mongo-init-replica

Mongo supports 24 x 7 operations and live backup. You should not need to restart it too frequently. See mongodb documentations for proper operation and management of a mongo server.

Once you’re sure that mongodb is up and running:

docker-compose up -d rocketchat

Optionally, if you want to manage your messages and configuration information, edit the file again to uncomment the volume mounts. Make sure you have a data subdirectory to mount and store the data.

Optionally, if you want a bot, so you don’t have to talk to yourself, after you’ve created an admin user and also a bot user, edit the file docker-compose.yml again to change the variables ROCKETCHAT_USER and ROCKETCHAT_PASSWORD in the hubot section and then start up hubot:

docker-compose up -d hubot

To update the rocketchat docker image to the latest version, you can use the following commands. Your data should not be affected by this, since it’s located in the mongo image.

docker pull rocketchat/rocket.chat:develop
docker-compose stop rocketchat
docker-compose rm rocketchat
docker-compose up -d rocketchat