aptly in a container backed by nginx
aptly is a swiss army knife for Debian repository management: it allows you to mirror remote repositories, manage local package repositories, take snapshots, pull new versions of packages along with dependencies, publish as Debian repository. aptly.info
nginx [engine x] is an HTTP and reverse proxy server, a mail proxy server, and a generic TCP proxy server, originally written by Igor Sysoev nginx.org
NOTE: This container and the scripts within are written to make hosting an Ubuntu mirror "as-close-to-turnkey" as possible. If you want to host a Debian mirror, you'll need to build the image yourself, see Building the Container below
The following command will run aptly and nginx in a container, if you want to customize or build the container locally, skip to Building the Container below
docker run \
--detach=true \
--log-driver=syslog \
--name="aptly" \
--restart=always \
--env FULL_NAME="First Last" \
--env EMAIL_ADDRESS="youremail@example.com" \
--env GPG_PASSWORD="PickAPassword" \
--env HOSTNAME=aptly.example.com \
--volume /dockerhost/dir/with/lots/of/space:/opt/aptly \
--publish 80:80 \
bryanhong/aptly:latest
--detach=true
run the container in the background
--name="aptly"
name of the container
--restart=always
automatically start the container when the Docker daemon starts
--env FULL_NAME="First Last"
the first and last name that will be associated with the GPG apt signing key
--env EMAIL_ADDRESS="youremail@example.com"
the email address that will be associated with the GPG apt signing key
--env GPG_PASSWORD="PickAPassword"
the password that will be used to encrypt the GPG apt signing key
--env HOSTNAME=aptly.example.com
the hostname of the Docker host that this container is running on
--volume /dockerhost/dir/with/lots/of/space:/opt/aptly
path that aptly will use to store its data : mapped path in the container
--volume /dockerhost/dir/for/gpg/secrets:/root/.gnupg
path that will store gnu gpg keys used to sign published aptly repositories
--publish 80:80
Docker host port : mapped port in the container
- The initial download of the repository may take quite some time depending on your bandwidth limits, it may be in your best interest to open a screen or tmux session before proceeding.
- Attach to the container
docker exec -it aptly /bin/bash
or runshell.sh
- By default,
/opt/update_mirror.sh
will automate the creation of an Ubuntu 20.04 "Focal" repository with the main and universe components, you can adjust the variables in the script to suit your needs. - Run
/opt/update_mirror.sh
- If the script fails due to network disconnects etc, just re-run it.
When the script completes, you should have a functional mirror that you can point a client to.
- Fetch the public PGP key from your aptly repository and add it to your trusted repositories
wget http://FQDN.OF.APTLY/aptly_repo_signing.key
apt-key add aptly_repo_signing.key
- Backup then replace /etc/apt/sources.list
cp /etc/apt/sources.list /etc/apt/sources.list.bak
echo "deb http://FQDN.OF.APTLY/ ubuntu main" > /etc/apt/sources.list
apt-get update
You should be able to install packages at this point!
Checkout the excellent aptly documentation here
If you want to make modifications to the image or simply see how things work, check out this repository:
git clone https://github.com/bryanhong/docker-aptly.git
vars
: Variables for Docker registry, the application, and aptly repository data locationbuild.sh
: Build the Docker image locally, this script will take the name of a Dockerfile as an argument, by default will build Dockerfile.run.sh
: Starts the Docker container, it the image hasn't been built locally, it is fetched from the repository set in varspush.sh
: Pushes the latest locally built image to the repository set in varsshell.sh
: get a shell within the container
Data
All of aptly's data (including PGP keys and GPG keyrings) is bind mounted outside of the container to preserve it if the container is removed or rebuilt. Set the location for the bind mount in vars
before starting the container. If you're going to host a mirror of Ubuntu's main repository, you'll need upwards of 80GB+ (x86_64 only) of free space as of Feb 2016, plan for growth.
Networking
By default, Docker will map port 80 on the Docker host to port 80 within the container where nginx is configured to listen. You can change the external listening port in vars
to map to any port you like.
Security
The GPG password you set in vars
is stored in plain text and is visible as an environment variable inside the container. It is set as an enviornment variable to allow for automation of repository updates without user interaction. The GPG password can be removed completely but it is safer to encrypt the GPG keyrings because they are bind mounted outside the container to avoid the necessity of regenerating/redistributing keys if the container is removed or rebuilt.
- Configure application specific variables in
vars
- Run
./build.sh
To build a Debian-based mirror/aptly run
./build.sh Dockerfile.debian
- Run
./run.sh
- Wait until the GPG keyrings are created (not 0 bytes) before proceeding (it can take a few minutes). They will be in the bind mount location you chose in
vars
If you're happy with your container and ready to share with others, push your image up to a Docker registry and save any other changes you've made so the image can be easily changed or rebuilt in the future.
- Authenticate to the Docker Registry
docker login
- Run
./push.sh
- Log into your Docker hub account and add a description, etc.
NOTE: If your image will be used FROM other containers you might want to use
./push.sh flatten
to consolidate the AUFS layers into a single layer. Keep in mind, you may lose Dockerfile attributes when your image is flattened.