Docker: Custom dockerfiles, docker and image rendering docs update (#20492)

Adds support for using custom dockerfiles to pre-install image 
renderer plugins.
Updates docs for docker and image rendering.

Fixes #20241

Co-Authored-By: Leonard Gram <leo@xlson.com>
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Marcus Efraimsson 2019-11-21 18:05:26 +01:00 committed by GitHub
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@ -17,19 +17,22 @@ When an image is being rendered the PNG-image is temporary written to the filesy
A background job runs each 10 minutes and will remove temporary images. You can configure how long time an image should be stored before being removed by configuring the [temp-data-lifetime](/installation/configuration/#temp-data-lifetime) setting.
## Requirements
Rendering images may require quite a lot of memory, mainly because there are "browser instances" started in the
background responsible for the actual rendering. Further, if multiple images are being rendered in parallel it most
certainly has a bigger memory footprint. Minimum free memory recommendation is 1GB.
Depending on [rendering method](#rendering-methods) you would need that memory available in the system where the
rendering process is running. For [Grafana Image renderer plugin](#grafana-image-renderer-plugin) and [PhantomJS](#phantomjs)
it's the system which Grafana is installed on. For [Remote rendering service](#remote-rendering-service) it is the system where
that's installed.
## Rendering methods
### PhantomJS
> PhantomJS is deprecated since Grafana v6.4 and will be removed in a future release. Please migrate to Grafana image renderer plugin or remote rendering service.
[PhantomJS](https://phantomjs.org/) have been the only supported and default image renderer since Grafana v2.x and is shipped with Grafana.
Please note that for macOS and Windows, you will need to ensure that a phantomjs binary is available under tools/phantomjs/phantomjs. For Linux, a phantomjs binary is included - however, you should ensure that any required libraries, e.g. libfontconfig1, are available.
### Grafana image renderer plugin
> This plugin currently does not work if it is installed in Grafana docker image.
> This plugin currently does not work if it is installed in the Grafana docker image. See [Install in Grafana docker image](#install-in-grafana-docker-image).
The [Grafana image renderer plugin](https://grafana.com/grafana/plugins/grafana-image-renderer) is a plugin that runs on the backend and handles rendering panels and dashboards as PNG-images using headless chrome.
@ -39,7 +42,13 @@ You can install it using grafana-cli:
grafana-cli plugins install grafana-image-renderer
```
For further information and instructions refer to the [plugin details](https://grafana.com/grafana/plugins/grafana-image-renderer).
For further information and instructions refer to [troubleshooting](#troubleshooting) and the [plugin details](https://grafana.com/grafana/plugins/grafana-image-renderer).
#### Install in Grafana docker image
This plugin is not compatible with the current Grafana Docker image without installing further system-level dependencies. We recommend setting up another Docker container for rendering and using remote rendering, see [Remote rendering service](#remote-rendering-service) for reference.
If you still want to install the plugin in the Grafana docker image we provide instructions for how to build a custom Grafana image, see [Installing using Docker](/installation/docker/#custom-image-with-grafana-image-renderer-plugin-pre-installed).
### Remote rendering service
@ -102,7 +111,86 @@ callback_url = http://localhost:3000/
```
4. Restart Grafana
For further information and instructions refer to [troubleshooting](#troubleshooting) and the [plugin details](https://grafana.com/grafana/plugins/grafana-image-renderer).
### PhantomJS
> PhantomJS is deprecated since Grafana v6.4 and will be removed in a future release. Please migrate to Grafana image renderer plugin or remote rendering service.
[PhantomJS](https://phantomjs.org/) have been the only supported and default image renderer since Grafana v2.x and is shipped with Grafana.
PhantomJS binaries are included for Linux (x64), Windows (x64) and Darwin (x64). For Linux you should ensure that any required libraries, e.g. libfontconfig1, are available.
Please note that PhantomJS binaries are not included for ARM. To support this you will need to ensure that a phantomjs binary is available under tools/phantomjs/phantomjs.
## Alerting and render limits
Alert notifications can include images, but rendering many images at the same time can overload the server where the renderer is running. For instructions of how to configure this, see [concurrent_render_limit](/installation/configuration/#concurrent-render-limit).
## Troubleshooting
Enable debug log messages for rendering in the Grafana configuration file and inspect the Grafana server log.
```bash
[log]
filters = rendering:debug
```
### Grafana image renderer plugin and remote rendering service
The plugin and rendering service uses [Chromium browser](https://www.chromium.org/) which depends on certain libraries.
If you don't have all of those libraries installed in your system you may encounter errors when trying to render an image, e.g.
```bash
Rendering failed: Error: Failed to launch chrome!/var/lib/grafana/plugins/grafana-image-renderer/chrome-linux/chrome:
error while loading shared libraries: libX11.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory\n\n\nTROUBLESHOOTING: https://github.com/GoogleChrome/puppeteer/blob/master/docs/troubleshooting.md
```
In general you can use the [`ldd`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ldd_(Unix)) utility to figure out what shared libraries
are missing/not installed in your system:
```bash
$ cd <grafana-image-render plugin directiry>
$ ldd chrome-linux/chrome
linux-vdso.so.1 (0x00007fff1bf65000)
libdl.so.2 => /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libdl.so.2 (0x00007f2047945000)
libpthread.so.0 => /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0 (0x00007f2047924000)
librt.so.1 => /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/librt.so.1 (0x00007f204791a000)
libX11.so.6 => not found
libX11-xcb.so.1 => not found
libxcb.so.1 => not found
libXcomposite.so.1 => not found
...
```
**Ubuntu:**
On Ubuntu 18.10 the following dependencies have been confirmed as needed for the image rendering to function.
```bash
libx11-6 libx11-xcb1 libxcomposite1 libxcursor1 libxdamage1 libxext6 libxfixes3 libxi6 libxrender1 libxtst6 libglib2.0-0 libnss3 libcups2 libdbus-1-3 libxss1 libxrandr2 libgtk-3-0 libgtk-3-0 libasound2
```
**Centos:**
On a minimal Centos install the following dependencies have been confirmed as needed for the image rendering to function.
```bash
libXcomposite libXdamage libXtst cups libXScrnSaver pango atk adwaita-cursor-theme adwaita-icon-theme at at-spi2-atk at-spi2-core cairo-gobject colord-libs dconf desktop-file-utils ed emacs-filesystem gdk-pixbuf2 glib-networking gnutls gsettings-desktop-schemas gtk-update-icon-cache gtk3 hicolor-icon-theme jasper-libs json-glib libappindicator-gtk3 libdbusmenu libdbusmenu-gtk3 libepoxy liberation-fonts liberation-narrow-fonts liberation-sans-fonts liberation-serif-fonts libgusb libindicator-gtk3 libmodman libproxy libsoup libwayland-cursor libwayland-egl libxkbcommon m4 mailx nettle patch psmisc redhat-lsb-core redhat-lsb-submod-security rest spax time trousers xdg-utils xkeyboard-config
```
#### Using custom Chrome/Chromium
As a last resort, if you already have [Chrome](https://www.google.com/chrome/) or [Chromium](https://www.chromium.org/)
installed on your system you can configure [Grafana Image renderer plugin](#grafana-image-renderer-plugin) to use this
instead of the pre-packaged version of Chromium.
> Please note that this is not recommended since you may encounter problems if the installed version of Chrome/Chromium is not
> is compatible with the [Grafana Image renderer plugin](#grafana-image-renderer-plugin).
To override the path to the Chrome/Chromium executable you can set an environment variable and make sure that
it's available for the Grafana process, e.g.
```bash
export GF_RENDERER_PLUGIN_CHROME_BIN="/usr/bin/chromium-browser"
```

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@ -25,8 +25,7 @@ variables by using the syntax `GF_<SectionName>_<KeyName>`.
For example:
```bash
$ docker run \
-d \
$ docker run -d \
-p 3000:3000 \
--name=grafana \
-e "GF_SERVER_ROOT_URL=http://grafana.server.name" \
@ -53,20 +52,38 @@ GF_PATHS_LOGS | /var/log/grafana
GF_PATHS_PLUGINS | /var/lib/grafana/plugins
GF_PATHS_PROVISIONING | /etc/grafana/provisioning
## Image Variants
The official Grafana Docker image comes in two variants.
**`grafana/grafana:<version>`:**
> **Note:** This image was based on [Ubuntu](https://ubuntu.com/) before version 6.4.0.
This is the default image. This image is based on the popular [Alpine Linux project](http://alpinelinux.org), available in [the alpine official image](https://hub.docker.com/_/alpine). Alpine Linux is much smaller than most distribution base images, and thus leads to slimmer and more secure images.
This variant is highly recommended when security and final image size being as small as possible is desired. The main caveat to note is that it does use [musl libc](http://www.musl-libc.org) instead of [glibc and friends](http://www.etalabs.net/compare_libcs.html), so certain software might run into issues depending on the depth of their libc requirements. However, most software doesn't have an issue with this, so this variant is usually a very safe choice.
**`grafana/grafana:<version>-ubuntu`:**
> **Note:** This image is available since version 6.5.0.
This image is based on [Ubuntu](https://ubuntu.com/), available in [the ubuntu official image](https://hub.docker.com/_/ubuntu).
This is an alternative image for those who prefer an [Ubuntu](https://ubuntu.com/) based image and/or who are dependent on certain
tooling not available for Alpine.
## Running a specific version of Grafana
```bash
# specify right tag, e.g. 5.1.0 - see Docker Hub for available tags
$ docker run \
-d \
-p 3000:3000 \
--name grafana \
grafana/grafana:5.1.0
# specify right tag, e.g. 6.5.0 - see Docker Hub for available tags
$ docker run -d -p 3000:3000 --name grafana grafana/grafana:6.5.0
# ubuntu based images available since Grafana 6.5.0
$ docker run -d -p 3000:3000 --name grafana grafana/grafana:6.5.0-ubuntu
```
## Running the master branch
For every successful build of the master branch we update the `grafana/grafana:master` tag and create a new tag `grafana/grafana-dev:master-<commit hash>` with the hash of the git commit that was built. This means you can always get the latest version of Grafana.
For every successful build of the master branch we update the `grafana/grafana:master` and `grafana/grafana:master-ubuntu`. Additionally, two new tags are created, `grafana/grafana-dev:master-<commit hash>` and `grafana/grafana-dev:master-<commit hash>-ubuntu`, which includes the hash of the git commit that was built. This means you can always get the latest version of Grafana.
When running Grafana master in production we **strongly** recommend that you use the `grafana/grafana-dev:master-<commit hash>` tag as that will guarantee that you use a specific version of Grafana instead of whatever was the most recent commit at the time.
@ -77,8 +94,7 @@ For a list of available tags, check out [grafana/grafana](https://hub.docker.com
Pass the plugins you want installed to docker with the `GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS` environment variable as a comma separated list. This will pass each plugin name to `grafana-cli plugins install ${plugin}` and install them when Grafana starts.
```bash
docker run \
-d \
docker run -d \
-p 3000:3000 \
--name=grafana \
-e "GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS=grafana-clock-panel,grafana-simple-json-datasource" \
@ -87,25 +103,49 @@ docker run \
> If you need to specify the version of a plugin, you can add it to the `GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS` environment variable. Otherwise, the latest will be assumed. For example: `-e "GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS=grafana-clock-panel 1.0.1,grafana-simple-json-datasource 1.3.5"`
## Building a custom Grafana image with pre-installed plugins
## Building a custom Grafana image
In the [grafana-docker](https://github.com/grafana/grafana/tree/master/packaging/docker) there is a folder called `custom/` which includes a `Dockerfile` that can be used to build a custom Grafana image. It accepts `GRAFANA_VERSION` and `GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS` as build arguments.
In the [Grafana GitHub repository](https://github.com/grafana/grafana/tree/master/packaging/docker) there is a folder called `custom/` which two includes Dockerfiles, `Dockerfile` and `ubuntu.Dockerfile`, that can be used to build a custom Grafana image.
It accepts `GRAFANA_VERSION`, `GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS` and `GF_INSTALL_IMAGE_RENDERER_PLUGIN` as build arguments.
### With pre-installed plugins
> If you need to specify the version of a plugin, you can add it to the `GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS` build argument. Otherwise, the latest will be assumed. For example: `--build-arg "GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS=grafana-clock-panel 1.0.1,grafana-simple-json-datasource 1.3.5"`
Example of how to build and run:
```bash
cd custom
docker build -t grafana:latest-with-plugins \
docker build \
--build-arg "GRAFANA_VERSION=latest" \
--build-arg "GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS=grafana-clock-panel,grafana-simple-json-datasource" .
--build-arg "GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS=grafana-clock-panel,grafana-simple-json-datasource" \
-t grafana-custom -f Dockerfile .
docker run \
-d \
-p 3000:3000 \
--name=grafana \
grafana:latest-with-plugins
docker run -d -p 3000:3000 --name=grafana grafana-custom
```
> If you need to specify the version of a plugin, you can add it to the `GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS` build argument. Otherwise, the latest will be assumed. For example: `--build-arg "GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS=grafana-clock-panel 1.0.1,grafana-simple-json-datasource 1.3.5"`
Replace `Dockerfile` in above example with `ubuntu.Dockerfile` to build a custom Ubuntu based image (Grafana 6.5+).
### With Grafana Image Renderer plugin pre-installed
> Only available in Grafana v6.5+ and experimental.
The [Grafana Image Renderer plugin](/administration/image_rendering/#grafana-image-renderer-plugin) does not
currently work if it is installed in Grafana docker image.
You can build a custom docker image by using the `GF_INSTALL_IMAGE_RENDERER_PLUGIN` build argument.
This will install additional dependencies needed for the Grafana Image Renderer plugin to run.
Example of how to build and run:
```bash
cd custom
docker build \
--build-arg "GRAFANA_VERSION=latest" \
--build-arg "GF_INSTALL_IMAGE_RENDERER_PLUGIN=true" \
-t grafana-custom -f Dockerfile .
docker run -d -p 3000:3000 --name=grafana grafana-custom
```
Replace `Dockerfile` in above example with `ubuntu.Dockerfile` to build a custom Ubuntu based image.
## Installing plugins from other sources
@ -114,8 +154,7 @@ docker run \
It's possible to install plugins from custom url:s by specifying the url like this: `GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS=<url to plugin zip>;<plugin name>`
```bash
docker run \
-d \
docker run -d \
-p 3000:3000 \
--name=grafana \
-e "GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS=http://plugin-domain.com/my-custom-plugin.zip;custom-plugin" \
@ -125,8 +164,7 @@ docker run \
## Configuring AWS credentials for CloudWatch Support
```bash
$ docker run \
-d \
$ docker run -d \
-p 3000:3000 \
--name=grafana \
-e "GF_AWS_PROFILES=default" \
@ -152,12 +190,7 @@ Supported variables:
docker volume create grafana-storage
# start grafana
docker run \
-d \
-p 3000:3000 \
--name=grafana \
-v grafana-storage:/var/lib/grafana \
grafana/grafana
docker run -d -p 3000:3000--name=grafana -v grafana-storage:/var/lib/grafana grafana/grafana
```
## Grafana container using bind mounts
@ -249,6 +282,14 @@ chown -R root:root /etc/grafana && \
chown -R grafana:grafana /usr/share/grafana
```
## Migration from a previous version of the docker container to 6.4 or later
Grafanas docker image was changed to be based on [Alpine](http://alpinelinux.org) instead of [Ubuntu](https://ubuntu.com/).
## Migration from a previous version of the docker container to 6.5 or later
Grafana Docker image now comes in two variants, one [Alpine](http://alpinelinux.org) based and one [Ubuntu](https://ubuntu.com/) based, see [Image Variants](#image-variants) for details.
## Logging in for the first time
To run Grafana open your browser and go to http://localhost:3000/. 3000 is the default HTTP port that Grafana listens to if you haven't [configured a different port](/installation/configuration/#http-port).

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@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ Grafana does not use a lot of resources and is very lightweight in use of memory
Depending on what features are being used and to what extent the requirements varies. Features that consume and requires more resources:
- Server side rendering of images
- [Server side rendering of images](/administration/image_rendering/#requirements)
- [Alerting](/alerting/rules/)
- Data source proxy

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@ -196,9 +196,15 @@ is `7.0+` and `max concurrent shard requests` properly configured. 256 was the d
## Upgrading to v6.4
### Annotations database migration
One of the database migrations included in this release will merge multiple rows used to represent an annotation range into a single row. If you have a large number of region annotations the database migration may take a long time to complete. See [Upgrading to v5.2](#upgrading-to-v5-2) for tips on how to manage this process.
Plugins that need updating:
### Docker
Grafanas docker image is now based on [Alpine](http://alpinelinux.org) instead of [Ubuntu](https://ubuntu.com/).
### Plugins that need updating
- [Splunk](https://grafana.com/grafana/plugins/grafana-splunk-datasource)

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@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ if [ ${UBUNTU_BASE} = "0" ]; then
DOCKERFILE="Dockerfile"
else
TAG_SUFFIX="-ubuntu"
DOCKERFILE="Dockerfile.ubuntu"
DOCKERFILE="ubuntu.Dockerfile"
fi
echo "Building and deploying ${_docker_repo}:${_grafana_tag}${TAG_SUFFIX}"

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@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ docker_build () {
base_image="${base_arch}alpine:3.10"
else
libc=""
dockerfile="Dockerfile.ubuntu"
dockerfile="ubuntu.Dockerfile"
base_image="${base_arch}ubuntu:18.10"
fi

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@ -2,8 +2,31 @@ ARG GRAFANA_VERSION="latest"
FROM grafana/grafana:${GRAFANA_VERSION}
USER root
ARG GF_INSTALL_IMAGE_RENDERER_PLUGIN="false"
RUN if [ $GF_INSTALL_IMAGE_RENDERER_PLUGIN = "true" ]; then \
echo "http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/community" >> /etc/apk/repositories && \
echo "http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/main" >> /etc/apk/repositories && \
echo "http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/testing" >> /etc/apk/repositories && \
apk --no-cache upgrade && \
apk add --no-cache udev ttf-opensans chromium && \
rm -rf /tmp/* && \
rm -rf /usr/share/grafana/tools/phantomjs; \
fi
USER grafana
ENV GF_RENDERER_PLUGIN_CHROME_BIN="/usr/bin/chromium-browser"
RUN if [ $GF_INSTALL_IMAGE_RENDERER_PLUGIN = "true" ]; then \
grafana-cli \
--pluginsDir "$GF_PATHS_PLUGINS" \
--pluginUrl https://github.com/grafana/grafana-image-renderer/releases/latest/download/plugin-linux-x64-glibc-no-chromium.zip \
plugins install grafana-image-renderer; \
fi
ARG GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS=""
RUN if [ ! -z "${GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS}" ]; then \

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@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
ARG GRAFANA_VERSION="latest-ubuntu"
FROM grafana/grafana:${GRAFANA_VERSION}-ubuntu
USER root
# Set DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive in environment at build-time
ARG DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
ARG GF_INSTALL_IMAGE_RENDERER_PLUGIN="false"
RUN if [ $GF_INSTALL_IMAGE_RENDERER_PLUGIN = "true" ]; then \
apt-get update && \
apt-get upgrade -y && \
apt-get install -y chromium-browser && \
apt-get autoremove -y && \
rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/* && \
rm -rf /usr/share/grafana/tools/phantomjs; \
fi
USER grafana
ENV GF_RENDERER_PLUGIN_CHROME_BIN="/usr/bin/chromium-browser"
RUN if [ $GF_INSTALL_IMAGE_RENDERER_PLUGIN = "true" ]; then \
grafana-cli \
--pluginsDir "$GF_PATHS_PLUGINS" \
--pluginUrl https://github.com/grafana/grafana-image-renderer/releases/latest/download/plugin-linux-x64-glibc-no-chromium.zip \
plugins install grafana-image-renderer; \
fi
ARG GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS=""
RUN if [ ! -z "${GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS}" ]; then \
OLDIFS=$IFS; \
IFS=','; \
for plugin in ${GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS}; do \
IFS=$OLDIFS; \
grafana-cli --pluginsDir "$GF_PATHS_PLUGINS" plugins install ${plugin}; \
done; \
fi