Dockerfile for SOGo v4 image (forked from https://github.com/JensErat/docker-sogo)
SOGo is fully supported and trusted groupware server with a focus on scalability and open standards. SOGo is released under the GNU GPL/LGPL v2 and above.
This Dockerfile packages SOGo as packaged by Inverse, SOGo's creators, together with Apache 2 and memcached.
There are different flavors of this Docker image, added as tags. To checkout a specific flavor, use jenserat/docker:[tag]
as image name. By default, latest
wil be used.
-
latest: normal SOGo release
-
nightly: nightly builds, rebuild automatically
-
activesync: like latest, but includes ActiveSync module
Please be aware that ActiveSync uses patented technology and might require negotiating with Microsoft. From the SOGo documentation:
In order to use the SOGo ActiveSync support code in production environments, you need to get a proper usage license from Microsoft. Please contact them directly to negotiate the fees associated to your user base.
-
activesync-nightly: like nightly, but includes ActiveSync module
The image stores configuration, logs and backups in /srv
, which you should persist somewhere. Example configuration is copied during each startup of the container, which you can adjust for your own use. For creating the initial directory hierarchy and example configuration, simply run the container with the /srv
volume already exposed or linked, for example using
docker run -v /srv/sogo:/srv jenserat/sogo
As soon as the files are created, stop the image again. You will now find following files:
.
├── etc
│ ├── apache-SOGo.conf.orig
│ └── sogo.conf.orig
└── lib
└── sogo
└── GNUstep
├── Defaults
└── Library
Create copies of the configuration files named apache-SOGo.conf
and sogo.conf.orig
. Don't change or link the .orig
files, as they will be overwritten each time the container is started. They can also be used to see differences on your configuration after SOGo upgrades.
A separate database is required, for example a PostgreSQL container as provided by the Docker image paintedfox/postgresql
, but also any other database management system SOGo supports can be used. Follow the Database Configuration chapter of the SOGo documentation on these steps, and modify the sogo.conf` file accordingly. The following documentation will expect the database to be available with the SOGo default credentials given by the official documentation, adjust them as needed. If you link a database container, remember that it will be automatically added to the hosts file and be available under the chosen name.
For a container named sogo-postgresql
linked as db
using --link="sogo-postgresql:db"
with default credentials, you would use following lines in the sogo.conf
:
SOGoProfileURL = "postgresql://sogo:sogo@db:5432/sogo/sogo_user_profile";
OCSFolderInfoURL = "postgresql://sogo:sogo@db:5432/sogo/sogo_folder_info";
OCSSessionsFolderURL = "postgresql://sogo:sogo@db:5432/sogo/sogo_sessions_folder";
SOGo performs schema initialziation lazily on startup, thus no database initialization scripts must be run.
As most users will not want to separate memcached, there is a built-in daemon. It can be controled by setting the environment variable memcached
. If set to false
, the built-in memcached will not start, make sure to configure an external one. Otherwise, the variable holds the amount of memory dedicated to memcached in MiB. If unset, a default of 64MiB will be used.
For convenience reasons, the gateway is added to the hostsfile as host GATEWAY
before starting the SOGo daemon. This enables you to use a local MTA in the host machine to forward mail using
SOGoMailingMechanism = "smtp";
SOGoSMTPServer = "GATEWAY";
For further details in MTA configuration including SMTP auth, refer to SOGo's documentation.
As already given above, the default Apache configuration is already available under etc/apache-SOGo.conf.orig
. The container exposes HTTP (80), HTTPS (443) and 8800, which is used by Apple devices, and 20000, the default port the SOGo daemon listens on. You can either directly include the certificates within the container, or use an external proxy for this. Make sure to only map the required ports to not unnecessarily expose daemons.
You need to adjust the <Proxy ...>
section and include port, server name and url to match your setup.
<Proxy http://127.0.0.1:20000/SOGo>
## adjust the following to your configuration
RequestHeader set "x-webobjects-server-port" "443"
RequestHeader set "x-webobjects-server-name" "sogo.example.net"
RequestHeader set "x-webobjects-server-url" "https://sogo.example.net"
If you want to support iOS-devices, add appropriate .well-known
-rewrites in either the Apache configuration or an external proxy.
For ActiveSync support, additionally add/uncomment the following lines:
ProxyPass /Microsoft-Server-ActiveSync \
http://127.0.0.1:20000/SOGo/Microsoft-Server-ActiveSync \
retry=60 connectiontimeout=5 timeout=360
SOGo heavily relies on cron jobs for different purposes. The image provides SOGo's original cron file as ./etc/cron.orig
. Copy and edit it as ./etc/cron
. The backup script is available and made executable at the predefined location /usr/share/doc/sogo/sogo-backup.sh
, so backup is fully functional immediately after uncommenting the respective cron job.
Unlike the Debian and probably other SOGo packages, the number of worker processes is not set in /etc/default/sogo
, but the normal sogo.conf
. Remember to start a reasonable number of worker processes matching to your needs (8 will not be enough for medium and larger instances):
WOWorkersCount = 8;
ActiveSync requires one worker per concurrent connection.
All other configuration options have no special considerations.
Run the image in a container, expose ports as needed and making /srv
permanent. An example run command, which links to a database container named db
and uses an external HTTP proxy for wrapping in HTTPS might be
docker run -d \
--name='sogo' \
--publish='127.0.0.1:80:80' \
--link='sogo-postgresql:db' \
--volume='/srv/sogo:/srv' \
jenserat/sogo
Most of the time, no special action must be performed for upgrading SOGo. Read the Upgrading section of the Installation Manual prior upgrading the container to verify whether anything special needs to be considered.
As the image builds on phusion/baseimage
, you can get a shell for running update scripts when necessary or perform similar maintenance operations by adding /sbin/my_init -- /bin/bash
as run command and subsequently attaching to the container:
docker run -t -i -d \
--name='sogo' \
--publish='127.0.0.1:80:80' \
--link='sogo-postgresql:db' \
--volume='/srv/sogo:/srv' \
jenserat/sogo /sbin/my_init -- /bin/bash
This is fine for running update scripts on the database. To be able to perform persistent changes to the file system (without creating new containers), red the phusion/baseimage
documentation on attaching to the container.