Official Image for Organizr. An HTPC/Homelab services organizer that is written in PHP.
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An HTPC/Homelab services organizer that is written in PHP.
docker create \
--name=organizr \
-v /path/to/data:/config \
-e PGID=1000 -e PUID=1000 \
-p 80:80 \
-e branch="v2-master" `#optional` \
ghcr.io/organizr/organizr
Entries marked with optional is showing the default value
Note: Organizr is not contained inside the image, this means that using the built-in updater does not break your install. However the prefered way to update organizr is to restart the container, as we grab the latest commit on startup.
The parameters are split into two halves, separated by a colon, the left hand side representing the host and the right the container side. For example with a port -p external:internal - what this shows is the port mapping from internal to external of the container. So -p 8080:80 would expose port 80 from inside the container to be accessible from the host's IP on port 8080 and http://192.168.x.x:8080 would show you what's running INSIDE the container on port 80.
-p 80 - The port(s)-v /config - Mapping the config files for Organizr-e PGID Used for GroupID - see below for explanation-e PUID Used for UserID - see below for explanation-e branch Used to switch between branches of organizr. Valid values are(comma separated) v2-master, master, v2-develop, develop, dev. v2-master and master will yield the v2-master branch. v2-develop, develop and dev will yield the v2-develop branchIt is based on Alpine Linux with an s6 overlay.
Sometimes when using data volumes (-v flags) permissions issues can arise between the host OS and the container. We avoid this issue by allowing you to specify the user PUID and group PGID. Ensure the data volume directory on the host is owned by the same user you specify and it will "just work" ™.
In this instance PUID=1001 and PGID=1001. To find yours use id user as below:
$ id <dockeruser>
uid=1001(dockeruser) gid=1001(dockergroup) groups=1001(dockergroup)
Sometimes we change files that is used by the container, in this case we backup your old files, and replace them with the new ones.
Manifested docker images built with buildkit.
Supported architetures:
| Architecture | Tag |
|---|---|
| x86-64 | linux-amd64 |
| arm64 | linux-arm64 |
| armhf | linux-arm-v7 |
This is a drop-in replacement coming from organizrtools/organizr-v2.
Key-changes:
The nginx config file for the healthcheck is moved to it's own file, under /config/nginx/site-confs/healthcheck.
Moving the install directory from /config/www/Dashboard to /config/www/organizr, Nginx should also be updated with this change.
One tag. While we could have set PHP to use the unix socket as default, we opted to using a environment varible We have now set up to use the unix socket exclusively. We also moved the branch selector to be a environment variable.
| Old | New |
|---|---|
organizrtools/organizr-v2 | ghcr.io/organizr/organizr |
organizrtools/organizr-v2:dev | -e branch=dev ghcr.io/organizr/organizr |
organizrtools/organizr-v2:php-fpm | ghcr.io/organizr/organizr |
organizrtools/organizr-v2:dev-php-fpm | -e branch=dev ghcr.io/organizr/organizr |
organizrtools/organizr-v2:plex and organizrtools/organizr-v2:dev-plex does not have a migration path.Setup accounts, service tabs, etc. via the webUI. More info can be found on the official Organizr GitHub repository.
docker exec -it organizr /bin/bashdocker logs -f organizrContent type
Image
Digest
sha256:1ce319d73…
Size
24.5 MB
Last updated
over 2 years ago
docker pull organizr/organizr