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README.md

CKAN Docker Compose - Open Data & GIS

ckan-docker

OverviewBranch roadmapEnvironment: dockerInstall CKANCKAN imagesExtending guideApplying patchesAddonsInfo & BackupsAPI

Requirements:

Overview

Contains Docker images for the different components of CKAN Cloud and a Docker compose environment (based on ckan) for development and testing Open Data portals.

Warning:
This is a custom installation of Docker Compose with specific extensions for spatial data and GeoDCAT-AP/INSPIRE metadata profiles. For official installations, please have a look: CKAN documentation: Installation.

CKAN Docker Platform

Available components:

  • CKAN custom multi-stage build with spatial capabilities from ckan-docker-spatial1, an image used as a base and built from the official CKAN repo. The following versions of CKAN are available:
CKAN Version Type Docker tag Notes
2.9.8 custom image ghcr.io/mjanez/ckan-spatial:ckan-2.9.8 Stable version with CKAN 2.9.8
2.9.9 custom image ghcr.io/mjanez/ckan-docker:ckan-2.9.9 Stable version with CKAN 2.9.9
2.9.9 latest custom image ghcr.io/mjanez/ckan-docker:master Latest ckan-docker image.

The non-CKAN images are as follows:

  • PostgreSQL: Custom image based on official PostgreSQL image. Database files are stored in a named volume.
  • Solr: Custom image based on official CKAN pre-configured Solr image. The index data is stored in a named volume and has a custom spatial schema upgrades. 2
  • Redis: Standard Redis image
  • NGINX: Latest stable nginx image that includes SSL and Non-SSL endpoints.
  • ckan-pycsw: Custom image based on pycsw CKAN harvester ISO19139 for INSPIRE Metadata CSW Endpoint.

Optional HTTP Endpoint (docker-compose.apache.yml):

  • docker-compose.apache.yml:
    • Apache HTTP Server: Custom image based on official latest stable httpd image. Configured to serve multiple routes for the ckan-pycsw CSW endpoint ({CKAN_SITE_URL}/csw) and CKAN ({CKAN_SITE_URL}/catalog). Only HTTP.
Compose files Repository Type Docker tag Size Notes
docker-compose.yml / docker-compose.apache.yml CKAN 2.9.9 custom image mjanez/ckan-docker:ckan-2.9.9 800 MB Custom Dockerfile: ckan/Dockerfile
docker-compose.yml / docker-compose.apache.yml PostgreSQL 15.2 base image postgres/postgres:15-alpine 89.74 MB Custom Dockerfile: postgresql/Dockerfile
docker-compose.yml / docker-compose.apache.yml Solr 8.11.1 custom image ckan/ckan-solr:2.9-solr9-spatial 331.1 MB CKAN's pre-configured spatial Solr image.
docker-compose.yml / docker-compose.apache.yml Redis 7.0.10 base image redis/redis:7-alpine 11.82 MB -
docker-compose.yml Apache HTTP Server 2.4 custom image httpd/httpd:2.4 54.47 MB Custom Dockerfile: apache/Dockerfile
docker-compose.yml pycsw CKAN harvester ISO19139 custom image mjanez/ckan-pycsw:latest 175 MB Custom Dockerfile: ckan-pycsw/Dockerfile
docker-compose.apache.yml NGINX 1.22.1 base image nginx:stable-alpine 9.74 MB No routing, only CKAN. Custom Dockerfile: nginx/Dockerfile

The site is configured using environment variables that you can set in the .env file for an NGINX and ckan-pycsw deployment (default .env.example), or replace it with the .env.apache.example for a Apache HTTP Server deployment using the Docker Compose file: docker-compose.apache.yml.

ckan-docker roadmap

Information about extensions installed in the main image. More info described in the Extending the base images

Note
Switch branches to see the roadmap for other projects: ckan-docker/branches

Element Description version Status DEV3 PRO4 Remarks
Core CKAN 2.9.9 Completed ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation for version 2.9.9 (Production & Dev images) via Docker Compose based on official images). Initial configuration, basic customisation and operation guide.
Core + Datastore 2.9.9 Completed ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation (Production & Dev images) via Docker Compose.
Core + Datapusher 0.0.19 Deprecated Updated to xloader, an express Loader - quickly load data into DataStore.
Extension ckanext-xloader 1.0.1 Completed ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation, a replacement for DataPusher because it offers ten times the speed and more robustness
Extension ckanext-harvest 1.5.1 Completed ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation, necessary for the implementation of the Collector (ogc_ckan)
Extension ckanext-geoview 0.0.20 Completed ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation.
Extension ckanext-spatial 2.0.0 Completed ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation, necessary for the implementation of the Collector (ogc_ckan)
Extension ckanext-dcat 1.1.0 Completed ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation, include DCAT-AP 2.1 profile compatible with GeoDCAT-AP.
Extension ckanext-scheming 3.0.0 WIP ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation. Customised ckanext schema5 based on the Spanish Metadata Core with the aim of completing the minimum metadata elements included in the current datasets in accordance with GeoDCAT-AP and INSPIRE.
Extension ckanext-resourcedictionary v1.0.1 Completed ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation. This extension extends the default CKAN Data Dictionary functionality by adding possibility to create data dictionary before actual data is uploaded to datastore.
Extension ckanext-pages 0.5.2 Completed ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation. This extension gives you an easy way to add simple pages to CKAN.
Extension ckanext-pdfview 0.0.8 Completed ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation. This extension provides a view plugin for PDF files using an html object tag.
Extension ckanext-scheming_dcat 1.2.0 Completed ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation for 1.2.0 version, provides functions and templates specifically designed to extend ckanext-scheming and includes DCAT enhancements to adapt CKAN Schema to GeoDCAT-AP.
Software ckan-pycsw main Completed ✔️ ✔️ Stable installation. PyCSW Endpoint of Open Data Portal with docker compose config. Harvest the CKAN catalogue in a CSW endpoint based on existing spatial datasets in the open data portal.

Environment: docker

docker compose vs docker-compose

All Docker Compose commands in this README will use the V2 version of Compose ie: docker compose. The older version (V1) used the docker-compose command. Please see Docker Compose for more information.

Upgrade docker-engine

To upgrade Docker Engine, first run sudo apt-get update, then follow the installation instructions, choosing the new version you want to install.

To verify a successful Docker installation, run docker run hello-world and docker version. These commands should output versions for client and server.

Note
Learn more about Docker/Docker Compose basic commands.

Install (build and run) CKAN plus dependencies

Base mode

Use this if you are a maintainer and will not be making code changes to CKAN or to CKAN extensions.

  1. Clone project

    cd /path/to/my/project
    git clone https://github.com/mjanez/ckan-docker.git
    
  2. Copy the .env.example template (or use another from /samples/) and modify the resulting .env to suit your needs.

    cp .env.example .env
    
    • NGINX & CKAN/ckan-pycsw endpoints: Modifiy the variables about the site URL or locations (CKAN_SITE_URL CKAN_URL, PYCSW_URL, CKANEXT__DCAT__BASE_URI, PROXY_SERVER_NAME, PROXY_CKAN_LOCATION, PROXY_PYCSW_LOCATION, etc.).

    • Apache HTTP Server: Replace the .env with the /samples/.env.apache.example and modify the variables as needed.

    Note:
    Please note that when accessing CKAN directly (via a browser) ie: not going through Apache/NGINX you will need to make sure you have "ckan" set up to be an alias to localhost in the local hosts file. Either that or you will need to change the .env entry for CKAN_SITE_URL

    Warning:
    Using the default values on the .env file will get you a working CKAN instance. There is a sysadmin user created by default with the values defined in CKAN_SYSADMIN_NAME and CKAN_SYSADMIN_PASSWORD (ckan_admin and test1234 by default). All ennvars with API_TOKEN are automatically regenerated when CKAN is loaded, no editing is required.

    This should be obviously changed before running this setup as a public CKAN instance.

  3. Build the images:

    docker compose build 
    

    Note
    You can use a deploy in 5 minutes if you just want to test the package.

  4. Start the containers:

    docker compose up
    

This will start up the containers in the current window. By default the containers will log direct to this window with each container using a different colour. You could also use the -d "detach mode" option ie: docker compose up -d if you wished to use the current window for something else.

Note

  • Or docker compose up --build to build & up the containers.
  • Or docker compose -f docker-compose.apache.yml up -d --build to use the Apache HTTP Server version.

Note
Learn more about configuring this ckan docker:

At the end of the container start sequence there should be 6 containers running (or 5 if use NGINX Docker Compose file)

After this step, CKAN should be running at {PROXY_SERVER_NAME}{PROXY_CKAN_LOCATION} and ckan-pycsw at {PROXY_SERVER_NAME}{PROXY_PYCSW_LOCATION}, i.e: http://localhost/catalog or http://localhost/csw

CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
0217537f717e ckan-docker-nginx /docker-entrypoint.… 6 minutes ago Up 4 minutes 80/tcp,0.0.0.0:80->80/tcp,0.0.0.0:8443->443/tcp nginx
7b06ab2e060a ckan-docker-ckan /srv/app/start_ckan… 6 minutes ago Up 5 minutes (healthy) 0.0.0.0:5000->5000/tcp ckan
1b8d9789c29a redis:7-alpine docker-entrypoint.s… 6 minutes ago Up 4 minutes (healthy) 6379/tcp redis
7f162741254d ckan/ckan-solr:2.9-solr9-spatial docker-entrypoint.s… 6 minutes ago Up 4 minutes (healthy) 8983/tcp solr
2cdd25cea0de ckan-docker-db docker-entrypoint.s… 6 minutes ago Up 4 minutes (healthy) 5432/tcp db
9cdj25dae6gr ckan-docker-pycsw docker-entrypoint.s… 6 minutes ago Up 4 minutes (healthy) 8000/tcp pycsw

Quick mode

If you just want to test the package and see the general functionality of the platform, you can use the ckan-docker image from the Github container registry:

cp .env.example .env
# Edit the envvars in the .env as you like and start the containers.
docker compose -f docker-compose.ghcr.yml up -d --build 

It will download the pre-built image and deploy all the containers. Remember to use your own domain by changing localhost in the .env file.

Development mode

Use this mode if you are making code changes to CKAN and either creating new extensions or making code changes to existing extensions. This mode also uses the .env file for config options.

To develop local extensions use the docker compose.dev.yml file:

To build the images:

docker compose -f docker-compose.dev.yml build

To start the containers:

docker compose -f docker-compose.dev.yml up

See CKAN Images for more details of what happens when using development mode.

Create an extension

You can use the ckan extension instructions to create a CKAN extension, only executing the command inside the CKAN container and setting the mounted src/ folder as output:

docker compose -f docker compose.dev.yml exec ckan-dev /bin/sh -c "ckan generate extension --output-dir /srv/app/src_extensions"

extension

The new extension files and directories are created in the /srv/app/src_extensions/ folder in the running container. They will also exist in the local src/ directory as local /src directory is mounted as /srv/app/src_extensions/ on the ckan container. You might need to change the owner of its folder to have the appropiate permissions.

CKAN images

CKAN Docker Platform

The Docker image config files used to build your CKAN project are located in the ckan/ folder. There are two Docker files:

  • Dockerfile: this is based on mjanez/ckan-base-spatial:<version>, a base image located in the Github Package Registry, that has CKAN installed along with all its dependencies, properly configured and running on uWSGI (production setup)

  • Dockerfile.dev: this is based on mjanez/ckan-base-spatial:<version>-dev also located located in the Github Package Registry, and extends mjanez/ckan-base-spatial:<version> to include:

    • Any extension cloned on the ./src folder will be installed in the CKAN container when booting up Docker Compose (docker compose up). This includes installing any requirements listed in a requirements.txt (or pip-requirements.txt) file and running python setup.py develop.
    • CKAN is started running this: /usr/bin/ckan -c /srv/app/ckan.ini run -H 0.0.0.0.
    • Make sure to add the local plugins to the CKAN__PLUGINS env var in the .env file.
  • Any custom changes to the scripts run during container start up can be made to scripts in the setup/ directory. For instance if you wanted to change the port on which CKAN runs you would need to make changes to the Docker Compose yaml file, and the start_ckan.sh.override file. Then you would need to add the following line to the Dockerfile ie: COPY setup/start_ckan.sh.override ${APP_DIR}/start_ckan.sh. The start_ckan.sh file in the locally built image would override the start_ckan.sh file included in the base image

Note
If you get an error like doesn't have execute permissions:

Daemon error response: failed to create shim task: OCI runtime create failed: runc create failed: unable to start container process: exec: "/srv/app/start_ckan.sh": permission denied: unknown

It may be necessary to give execute permissions to the file in the Dockerfile:

...
# Override start_ckan.sh
COPY setup/start_ckan.sh.override ${APP_DIR}/start_ckan.sh
RUN chmod +x ${APP_DIR}/start_ckan.sh
...

CKAN images enhancement

Extending the base images

You can modify the docker files to build your own customized image tailored to your project, installing any extensions and extra requirements needed. For example here is where you would update to use a different CKAN base image ie: ckan/ckan-base-spatial:<new version>

To perform extra initialization steps you can add scripts to your custom images and copy them to the /docker-entrypoint.d folder (The folder should be created for you when you build the image). Any *.sh and *.py file in that folder will be executed just after the main initialization script (prerun.py) is executed and just before the web server and supervisor processes are started.

For instance, consider the following custom image:

ckan
├── docker-entrypoint.d
│   └── setup_validation.sh
├── Dockerfile
└── Dockerfile.dev

We want to install an extension like ckanext-validation that needs to create database tables on startup time. We create a setup_validation.sh script in a docker-entrypoint.d folder with the necessary commands:

#!/bin/bash

# Create DB tables if not there
ckan -c /srv/app/ckan.ini validation init-db 

And then in our Dockerfile.dev file we install the extension and copy the initialization scripts:

FROM ckan/ckan-base-spatial:2.9.9

RUN pip install -e git+https://github.com/frictionlessdata/ckanext-validation.git#egg=ckanext-validation && \
    pip install -r https://raw.githubusercontent.com/frictionlessdata/ckanext-validation/master/requirements.txt

COPY docker-entrypoint.d/* /docker-entrypoint.d/

NB: There are a number of extension examples commented out in the Dockerfile.dev file

Applying patches

When building your project specific CKAN images (the ones defined in the ckan/ folder), you can apply patches to CKAN core or any of the built extensions. To do so create a folder inside ckan/patches with the name of the package to patch (ie ckan or ckanext-??). Inside you can place patch files that will be applied when building the images. The patches will be applied in alphabetical order, so you can prefix them sequentially if necessary.

For instance, check the following example image folder:

ckan
├── patches
│   ├── ckan
│   │   ├── 01_datasets_per_page.patch
│   │   ├── 02_groups_per_page.patch
│   │   ├── 03_or_filters.patch
│   └── ckanext-harvest
│       └── 01_resubmit_objects.patch
├── setup
├── Dockerfile
└── Dockerfile.dev

Note:
Git diff is a command to output the changes between two sources inside the Git repository. The data sources can be two different branches, commits, files, etc.

  • Show changes between working directory and staging area: git diff > [file.patch]
  • Shows any changes between the staging area and the repository: git diff --staged [file]

ckan-docker addons

Debugging

VSCode dev containers

The Visual Studio Code Dev Containers extension is a powerful tool that enables developers to use a container as a complete development environment. With this extension, developers can open any folder inside a container and take advantage of the full range of features provided by Visual Studio Code. To do this, developers create a devcontainer.json file in their project that specifies how to access or create a development container with a predefined tool and runtime stack. This allows developers to work in an isolated environment, ensuring that the development environment is consistent across team members and that project dependencies are easy to manage.

Developing inside a Container

  1. Install VSCode.

  2. Install the Remote Development extension for VSCode.

  3. In your project directory, create a file named devcontainer.json. This file will contain the configuration for your dev container.

  4. In the devcontainer.json file, specify the Docker image that you want to use for your dev container.

  5. Specify any additional configuration settings for your dev container, such as environment variables, ports to expose, and startup commands.

  6. Open your project in a dev container by using the Remote Development extension in VSCode. You can do this by clicking the Open Folder in Container button in the command palette or by opening the folder using the Remote-Containers: Open Folder in Container command. Also you can attach to an active container Attach to Running Container.

  7. VSCode will start a new container based on the configuration settings in your devcontainer.json file. Once the container is started, you can work on your project just like you would on your local machine.

pdb

Add these lines to the ckan-dev service in the docker compose.dev.yml file

pdb

Debug with pdb (example) - Interact with docker attach $(docker container ls -qf name=ckan)

command: python -m pdb /usr/lib/ckan/venv/bin/ckan --config /srv/app/ckan.ini run --host 0.0.0.0 --passthrough-errors

Reverse proxy

NGINX

The default Docker Compose configuration (docker-compose.yml) uses an NGINX image as the front-end (ie: reverse proxy). It includes HTTPS running on port number 8443 and an HTTP port (81). A "self-signed" SSL certificate is generated beforehand and the server certificate and key files are included. The NGINX server_name (ENV: PROXY_SERVER_NAME) directive and the CN field in the SSL certificate have been both set to 'localhost'. This should obviously not be used for production.

The proxy locations, ports and other NGINX options can be modified in the .env file:

# Host Ports
NGINX_PORT_HOST=81
NGINX_SSLPORT_HOST=8443

# NGINX
NGINX_PORT=80
NGINX_SSLPORT=443
NGINX_LOG_DIR=/var/log/nginx

# Check CKAN__ROOT_PATH and CKANEXT__DCAT__BASE_URI. If you don't need to use domain locations, it is better to use the nginx configuration. Leave blank or use the root `/`.
PROXY_SERVER_NAME=localhost
PROXY_CKAN_LOCATION=/catalog
PROXY_PYCSW_LOCATION=/csw

The base Docker Compose configuration uses an NGINX image as the front-end (ie: reverse proxy). It includes HTTPS running on port number 8443. A "self-signed" SSL certificate is generated as part of the ENTRYPOINT. The ENV PROXY_SERVER_NAME, NGINX server_name directive and the CN field in the SSL certificate have been both set to 'localhost'. This should obviously not be used for production.

Creating the SSL cert and key files as follows: openssl req -new -newkey rsa:4096 -days 365 -nodes -x509 -subj "/C=DE/ST=Berlin/L=Berlin/O=None/CN=localhost" -keyout ckan-local.key -out ckan-local.crt The ckan-local.* files will then need to be moved into the nginx/setup/ directory

Apache HTTP Server

The Docker Compose configuration (docker-compose.apache.yml) uses an httpd image as the front-end. It has two routes for the ckan (default location: /catalog) and ckan-pycsw (default location: /csw) services.

The proxy locations, ports and other Apache Web Server options can be modified in the .env file:

# Host Ports
APACHE_PORT_HOST=81

# Apache HTTP Server
APACHE_VERSION=2.4-alpine
APACHE_PORT=80
APACHE_LOG_DIR=/var/log/apache

# Check CKAN__ROOT_PATH and CKANEXT__DCAT__BASE_URI. If you don't need to use domain locations, it is better to use the nginx configuration. Leave blank or use the root `/`.
PROXY_SERVER_NAME=localhost
PROXY_CKAN_LOCATION=/catalog
PROXY_PYCSW_LOCATION=/csw

envvars

The ckanext-envvars extension is used in the CKAN Docker base repo to build the base images. This extension checks for environmental variables conforming to an expected format and updates the corresponding CKAN config settings with its value.

For the extension to correctly identify which env var keys map to the format used for the config object, env var keys should be formatted in the following way:

All uppercase
Replace periods ('.') with two underscores ('__')
Keys must begin with 'CKAN' or 'CKANEXT', if they do not you can prepend them with 'CKAN___'

For example:

  • CKAN__PLUGINS="envvars image_view text_view recline_view datastore datapusher"
  • CKAN__DATAPUSHER__CALLBACK_URL_BASE=http://ckan:5000
  • CKAN___BEAKER__SESSION__SECRET=CHANGE_ME

These parameters can be added to the .env file

For more information please see ckanext-envvars

Datastore

The Datastore database and user is created as part of the entrypoint scripts for the db container.

xloader

To replacing DataPusher with XLoader check out the wiki page for this: https://github.com/ckan/ckan-docker/wiki/Replacing-DataPusher-with-XLoader

ckan-pycsw

ckan-pycsw is a docker compose environment (based on pycsw) for development and testing with CKAN Open Data portals.5

Available components:

  • pycsw: The pycsw app. An OARec and OGC CSW server implementation written in Python.
  • ckan2pycsw: Software to achieve interoperability with the open data portals based on CKAN. To do this, ckan2pycsw reads data from an instance using the CKAN API, generates ISO-19115/ISO-19139 metadata using pygeometa, or a custom schema that is based on a customized CKAN schema, and populates a pycsw instance that exposes the metadata using CSW and OAI-PMH.

ckan-docker tips

CKAN. Backups

PostgreSQL offers the command line tools pg_dump and pg_restore for dumping and restoring a database and its content to/from a file.

Backup service for db container

  1. Create a new file called ckan_backup_custom.sh and open it in your preferred text editor.

  2. Add the following code to the script, replacing the placeholders with your actual values:

    #!/bin/bash
    
    # Set the necessary variables
    POSTGRESQL_CONTAINER_NAME="db"
    DATABASE_NAME="ckan"
    POSTGRES_USER="ckan"
    POSTGRES_PASSWORD="your_postgres_password"
    BACKUP_DIRECTORY="/path/to/your/backup/directory"
    DATE=$(date +%Y%m%d%H%M%S)
    
    # Run the backup command
    docker exec -e PGPASSWORD=$POSTGRES_PASSWORD $POSTGRESQL_CONTAINER_NAME pg_dump -U $POSTGRES_USER -Fc $DATABASE_NAME > $BACKUP_DIRECTORY/ckan_backup_$DATE.dump
    
  3. Replace the following placeholders with your actual values:

    • your_postgres_password: The password for the PostgreSQL user.
    • /path/to/your/backup/directory: The path to the directory where you want to store the backup files.

    Warning
    If you have changed the values of the PostgreSQL container, database or user, change them too.

  4. Save and close the file.

  5. Make the script executable:

    chmod +x ckan_backup_custom.sh
    
  6. Open the crontab for the current user:

    crontab -e
    
  7. Add the following line to schedule the backup to run daily at midnight (adjust the schedule as needed):

    0 0 * * * /path/to/your/script/ckan_backup_custom.sh
    

    Info
    Replace /path/to/your/script with the actual path to the ckan_backup_custom.sh script.

  8. Save and close the file.

The cronjob is now set up and will backup your CKAN PostgreSQL database daily at midnight using the custom format. The backups will be stored in the specified directory with the timestamp in the filename.

Info
Sample scripts for backing up CKAN: doc/scripts

Restore a backup

If need to use a backup, restore it:

  1. First clean the database. Caution, this will delete all data from your CKAN database!

    docker exec -it ckan /bin/bash -c "export TERM=xterm; exec bash"
    
    # Delete everything in the CKAN database, including the tables, to start from scratch
    ckan -c $CKAN_INI db clean
    
  2. After cleaning the database you must do either initialize it or import a previously created dump.

    docker exec -e PGPASSWORD=$POSTGRES_PASSWORD $POSTGRESQL_CONTAINER_NAME pg_restore -U $POSTGRES_USER --clean --if-exists -d $DATABASE_NAME < /path/to/your/backup/directory/ckan.dump
    

CKAN. Manage new users

  1. Create a new user from the Docker host, for example to create a new user called 'admin'

    docker exec -it <container-id> ckan -c ckan.ini user add admin email=admin@localhost
    

    To delete the 'admin' user

    docker exec -it <container-id> ckan -c ckan.ini user remove admin`
    
  2. Create a new user from within the ckan container. You will need to get a session on the running container

    ckan -c ckan.ini user add admin email=admin@localhost`
    

    To delete the 'admin' user

    ckan -c ckan.ini user remove admin`
    

Docker. Basic commands

Linux post-install steps

These optional post-installation procedures shows you how to configure your Linux host machine to work better with Docker. For example, managing docker with a non-root user.

Configure Docker to start on boot

sudo systemctl enable docker

# To disable this behavior, use disable instead.
sudo systemctl disable docker

Clear all Docker unused objects (images, containers, networks, local volumes)

docker system prune # Clear all
docker system prune -a # Clear all (includes unused and dangling containers)

# By default, volumes are not removed to prevent important data from being deleted if there is currently no container using the volume. Use the `--volumes` flag when running the command to prune volumes: `docker system prune -a --volumes`

docker image prune # Clear unused images
docker container prune # Clear unused containers
docker volume prune # Clear unused volumes
docker network prune # Clear unused networks

Docker Compose. Basic commands

More info about Docker Compose commands at docker compose reference.

# Basic. All containers or specific container: <container>
## Starts existing containers for a service.
docker compose start <container>

## Restarts existing containers/container for a service.
docker compose restart <container>

## Stops running containers without removing them.
docker compose stop <container>

## Pauses running containers of a service.
docker compose pause <container>

## Unpauses paused containers of a service.
docker compose unpause <container>

# Display the logs of a container. Is it possible to retrieve only the last n seconds or other
docker logs [--since 60s]  <container> -f 

## Lists containers.
docker compose ps

## Remove all docker compose project
docker compose rm <container>


# Build.
## Builds, (re)creates, starts, and attaches to containers for a service.
docker compose [-f <docker compose-file>] up

## Build & up all the containers.
docker compose [-f <docker compose-file>] up -d --build

## Build & up an specific container.
docker compose [-f <docker compose-file>] up -d --build <container>

## To avoid using a cache of the previous build while creating a new image.
docker compose [-f <docker compose-file>] build --no-cache

## Build a project with a specific Docker Compose prefix.
docker compose [-f <docker compose-file>] -p <my_project> up -d --build

## Log the build
docker compose build --no-cache &> docker_build.log


# Down
# Stops containers and removes containers, networks, volumes, and images created by up.
docker compose [-p <my_project>] down

Docker Compose. Configure a docker compose service to start on boot

To have Docker Compose run automatically when you reboot a machine, you can follow the steps below:

  1. Create a systemd service file for Docker Compose. You can create a file named ckan-docker-compose.service in the /etc/systemd/system/ folder with the following content:

    [Unit]
    Description=CKAN Docker Compose Application Service
    Requires=docker.service
    After=docker.service
    
    [Service]
    User=docker
    Group=docker
    Type=oneshot
    RemainAfterExit=yes
    WorkingDirectory=/path/to/project/ckan-docker/
    ExecStart=/bin/docker compose up -d
    ExecStop=/bin/docker compose down
    TimeoutStartSec=0
    
    [Install]
    WantedBy=multi-user.target
    
  2. Replace /path/to/project/ckan-docker/ with the path where your project's docker-compose.yml file is located and and check the path to the docker compose binary on execution and stop: /bin/docker. Also change the User / Group to execute the service.

  3. Load the systemd service file with the following command:

    sudo systemctl daemon-reload
    
  4. Enables the service to start automatically when the machine boots up:

    sudo systemctl enable ckan-docker-compose
    
  5. You can now start the service with the following command:

    sudo systemctl start ckan-docker-compose
    
  6. If you want to stop or check the status of the service, use the following commands:

    # Stop the service
    sudo systemctl stop ckan-docker-compose
    
    # Check the status
    sudo systemctl status ckan-docker-compose
    

CKAN API

Note
params: Parameters to pass to the action function. The parameters are specific to each action function.

  • fl (text): Fields of the dataset to return. The parameter controls which fields are returned in the solr query. fl can be None or a list of result fields, such as: id,name,extras_custom_schema_field.

    Example: All datasets with the fields id, name, title and a custom schema field extras_inspire_id: {ckan-instance}/api/3/action/package_search?fl=id,name,title,extras_inspire_id

  • fq (text): Any filter queries to apply. Example: All datasets that have tag economy: http://demo.ckan.org/api/3/action/package_search?fq=tags:economy

  • rows (int): The maximum number of matching rows (datasets) to return. (optional, default: 10, upper limit: 1000 unless set in sites configuration ckan.search.rows_max)

More info: CKAN API Documentation and data.gov.uk

List datasets by fields

Request: {ckan-instance}/api/3/action/package_search?fl=id,extras_publisher_name

Response:

{
  "help": "{ckan-instance}/api/3/action/help_show?name=package_search",
  "success": true,
  "result": {
    "count": 32,
    "facets": {},
    "results": [
      {
        "id": "e4a607d0-0875-4043-b8c7-36f731ba5ca8",
        "publisher_name": "Example publisher"
      },
      {
        "id": "5319a6b3-f439-4f53-9732-71699b9f62c8",
        "publisher_name": "Example publisher"
      },
      {
        "id": "02a30269-7665-4f6a-a43d-c288003f5cbb",
        "publisher_name": "Example publisher"
      }
    ],
    "sort": "score desc, metadata_modified desc",
    "search_facets": {}
  }
}

All datasets in organization (with some fields)

Request: {ckan-instance}/api/3/action/package_search?fq=organization:iepnb&fl=id,name,extras_alternate_identifier&rows=100

Response:

{
  "help": "{ckan-instance}/api/3/action/help_show?name=package_search",
  "success": true,
  "result": {
    "count": 56,
    "facets": {},
    "results": [
      {
        "id": "fe757d64-436c-482d-b65b-f24348139fd6",
        "name": "example_dataset_1",
        "alternate_identifier": "IDEXAMPLEDATASET1"
      },
      {
        "id": "fc21c1a5-4c02-4157-9d2f-9a2cd200f908",
        "name": "example_dataset_2",
        "alternate_identifier": "IDEXAMPLEDATASET2"
      },
      {
        "id": "fb326c11-18d4-4ee1-aa23-a40cb90cf8d8",
        "name": "example_dataset_3",
        "alternate_identifier": "IDEXAMPLEDATASET3"
      }
    ],
    "sort": "score desc, metadata_modified desc",
    "search_facets": {}
  }
}

All info about a dataset by field

Request: {ckan-instance}/api/3/action/package_search?q=name:"spa_example_dataset_1_2023"

Response:

{
  "help": "https://demo.ckan.org/api/3/action/help_show?name=package_search",
  "success": true,
  "result": {
    "count": 1,
    "facets": {},
    "results": [
      {
        "author": "Test Author",
        "author_email": "test@email.com",
        "creator_user_id": "47c7f1b1-0ef5-4d7b-b43c-811c51c9e349",
        "id": "c322307a-b871-44fe-a602-32ee8437ff04",
        "isopen": true,
        "license_id": "cc-by",
        "license_title": "Creative Commons Attribution",
        "license_url": "http://www.opendefinition.org/licenses/cc-by",
        "maintainer": "Test Maintainer",
        "maintainer_email": "test@email.com",
        "metadata_created": "2021-04-09T11:39:37.657233",
        "metadata_modified": "2022-05-20T09:20:43.998956",
        "name": "sample-dataset-1",
        "notes": "A CKAN Dataset is a collection of data resources (such as files), together with a description and other information (what is known as metadata), at a fixed URL. \r\n\r\n",
        "num_resources": 9,
        "num_tags": 8,
        "organization": {
          "id": "1fa89238-ee96-4439-a885-22d15244d070",
          "name": "sample-organization",
          "title": "Sample Organization",
          "type": "organization",
          "description": "This is a sample organization.",
          "image_url": "2022-05-20-084702.929838siurana.jpg",
          "created": "2021-04-09T14:27:17.753798",
          "is_organization": true,
          "approval_status": "approved",
          "state": "active"
        },
        "owner_org": "1fa89238-ee96-4439-a885-22d15244d070",
        "private": false,
        "state": "active",
        "title": "Sample Dataset",
        "type": "dataset",
        "url": "",
        "version": "1.0",
        "groups": [
          {
            "description": "",
            "display_name": "Test Group",
            "id": "5d423f6b-137e-4d15-a156-868763fa7a64",
            "image_display_url": "https://demo.ckan.org/uploads/group/2021-04-21-153504.571229064c7c.png",
            "name": "test-group",
            "title": "Test Group"
          }
        ],
        "resources": [
          {
            "cache_last_updated": null,
            "cache_url": null,
            "created": "2021-04-09T14:31:09.032858",
            "datastore_active": true,
            "description": "This is a sample resource added via url.",
            "format": "CSV",
            "hash": "",
            "id": "e687245d-7835-44b0-8ed3-0827de123895",
            "last_modified": null,
            "metadata_modified": "2021-04-09T14:31:09.021596",
            "mimetype": "text/csv",
            "mimetype_inner": null,
            "name": "sample-linked.csv",
            "package_id": "c322307a-b871-44fe-a602-32ee8437ff04",
            "position": 0,
            "resource_type": null,
            "size": null,
            "state": "active",
            "url": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/datopian/CKAN_Demo_Datasets/main/resources/org1_sample.csv",
            "url_type": null
          },
          {
            "cache_last_updated": null,
            "cache_url": null,
            "created": "2021-04-09T14:31:45.092631",
            "datastore_active": true,
            "description": "Sample csv (uploaded).",
            "format": "CSV",
            "hash": "",
            "id": "b53c9e72-6b59-4cda-8c0c-7d6a51dad12a",
            "last_modified": "2021-04-09T16:13:57.353205",
            "metadata_modified": "2021-04-09T16:13:57.367140",
            "mimetype": "application/csv",
            "mimetype_inner": null,
            "name": "sample.csv",
            "package_id": "c322307a-b871-44fe-a602-32ee8437ff04",
            "position": 1,
            "resource_type": null,
            "size": 6731,
            "state": "active",
            "url": "https://demo.ckan.org/dataset/c322307a-b871-44fe-a602-32ee8437ff04/resource/b53c9e72-6b59-4cda-8c0c-7d6a51dad12a/download/sample.csv",
            "url_type": "upload"
          }
        ],
        "tags": [
          {
            "display_name": "csv",
            "id": "b5e651dd-8f42-445c-b9c4-2f09a3268427",
            "name": "csv",
            "state": "active",
            "vocabulary_id": null
          },
          {
            "display_name": "economy",
            "id": "0c4f9ad5-a372-4bda-a59b-e560cf264b0f",
            "name": "economy",
            "state": "active",
            "vocabulary_id": null
          }
        ],
        "extras": [],
        "relationships_as_subject": [],
        "relationships_as_object": []
      }
    ],
    "sort": "score desc, metadata_modified desc",
    "search_facets": {}
  }
}

Copying and License

This material is copyright (c) 2006-2023 Open Knowledge Foundation and contributors.

It is open and licensed under the GNU Affero General Public License (AGPL) v3.0 whose full text may be found at:

http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/agpl-3.0.html


  1. Official CKAN repo: https://github.com/ckan/ckan-docker-base ↩︎

  2. Contains fields needed for the ckanext-spatial geo search ↩︎

  3. Development environment. ↩︎

  4. Production environment. ↩︎

  5. ckan_geodcatap, more info: https://github.com/mjanez/ckanext-scheming/pull/1 ↩︎