InfluxDB is a time series database built from the ground up to handle high write and query loads. InfluxDB is meant to be used as a backing store for any use case involving large amounts of timestamped data, including DevOps monitoring, application metrics, IoT sensor data, and real-time analytics.
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The InfluxDB image exposes a shared volume under /var/lib/influxdb, so you can mount a host directory to that point to access persisted container data. A typical invocation of the container might be:
$ docker run -p 8086:8086 \
-v $PWD:/var/lib/influxdb \
%%IMAGE%%
Modify $PWD to the directory where you want to store data associated with the InfluxDB container.
You can also have Docker control the volume mountpoint by using a named volume.
$ docker run -p 8086:8086 \
-v influxdb:/var/lib/influxdb \
%%IMAGE%%
The following ports are important and are used by InfluxDB.
The HTTP API port will be automatically exposed when using docker run -P.
The administrator interface is not automatically exposed when using docker run -P and is disabled by default. The adminstrator interface requires that the web browser have access to InfluxDB on the same port in the container as from the web browser. Since -P exposes the HTTP port to the host on a random port, the administrator interface is not compatible with this setting.
The administrator interface is deprecated as of 1.1.0 and will be removed in 1.3.0.
Find more about API Endpoints & Ports here.
InfluxDB can be either configured from a config file or using environment variables. To mount a configuration file and use it with the server, you can use this command:
Generate the default configuration file:
$ docker run --rm %%IMAGE%% influxd config > influxdb.conf
Modify the default configuration, which will now be available under $PWD. Then start the InfluxDB container.
$ docker run -p 8086:8086 \
-v $PWD/influxdb.conf:/etc/influxdb/influxdb.conf:ro \
%%IMAGE%% -config /etc/influxdb/influxdb.conf
Modify $PWD to the directory where you want to store the configuration file.
For environment variables, the format is INFLUXDB_$SECTION_$NAME. All dashes (-) are replaced with underscores (_). If the variable isn't in a section, then omit that part.
Examples:
INFLUXDB_REPORTING_DISABLED=true
INFLUXDB_META_DIR=/path/to/metadir
INFLUXDB_DATA_QUERY_LOG_ENABLED=false
Find more about configuring InfluxDB here.
InfluxDB supports the Graphite line protocol, but the service and ports are not exposed by default. To run InfluxDB with Graphite support enabled, you can either use a configuration file or set the appropriate environment variables. Run InfluxDB with the default Graphite configuration:
docker run -p 8086:8086 -p 2003:2003 \
-e INFLUXDB_GRAPHITE_ENABLED=true \
%%IMAGE%%
See the README on GitHub for more detailed documentation to set up the Graphite service. In order to take advantage of graphite templates, you should use a configuration file by outputting a default configuration file using the steps above and modifying the [[graphite]] section.
The administrator interface is deprecated as of 1.1.0 and will be removed in 1.3.0. It is disabled by default. If needed, it can still be enabled by setting an environment variable like below:
docker run -p 8086:8086 -p 8083:8083 \
-e INFLUXDB_ADMIN_ENABLED=true \
%%IMAGE%%
To use the administrator interface, both the HTTP API and the administrator interface API's must be forwarded to the same port.
Creating a DB named mydb:
$ curl -G http://localhost:8086/query --data-urlencode "q=CREATE DATABASE mydb"
Inserting into the DB:
$ curl -i -XPOST 'http://localhost:8086/write?db=mydb' --data-binary 'cpu_load_short,host=server01,region=us-west value=0.64 1434055562000000000'
Read more about this in the official documentation
Start the container:
$ docker run --name=influxdb -d -p 8086:8086 %%IMAGE%%
Run the influx client in this container:
$ docker exec -it influxdb influx
Or run the influx client in a separate container:
$ docker run --rm --link=influxdb -it %%IMAGE%% influx -host influxdb
The InfluxDB image contains some extra functionality for initializing a database. These options are not suggested for production, but are quite useful when running standalone instances for testing.
The database initialization script will only be called when running influxd. It will not be executed when running any other program.
The InfluxDB image uses several environment variables to automatically configure certain parts of the server. They may significantly aid you in using this image.
Automatically initializes a database with the name of this environment variable.
Enables authentication. Either this must be set or auth-enabled = true must be set within the configuration file for any authentication related options below to work.
The name of the admin user to be created. If this is unset, no admin user is created.
The password for the admin user configured with INFLUXDB_ADMIN_USER. If this is unset, a random password is generated and printed to standard out.
The name of a user to be created with no privileges. If INFLUXDB_DB is set, this user will be granted read and write permissions for that database.
The password for the user configured with INFLUXDB_USER. If this is unset, a random password is generated and printed to standard out.
The name of a user to be created with read privileges on INFLUXDB_DB. If INFLUXDB_DB is not set, this user will have no granted permissions.
The password for the user configured with INFLUXDB_READ_USER. If this is unset, a random password is generated and printed to standard out.
The name of a user to be created with write privileges on INFLUXDB_DB. If INFLUXDB_DB is not set, this user will have no granted permissions.
The password for the user configured with INFLUXDB_WRITE_USER. If this is unset, a random password is generated and printed to standard out.
If the Docker image finds any files with the extensions .sh or .iql inside of the /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d folder, it will execute them. The order they are executed in is determined by the shell. This is usually alphabetical order.
To manually initialize the database and exit, the /init-influxdb.sh script can be used directly. It takes the same parameters as the influxd run command. As an example:
$ docker run --rm \
-e INFLUXDB_DB=db0 -e INFLUXDB_ADMIN_ENABLED=true \
-e INFLUXDB_ADMIN_USER=admin -e INFLUXDB_ADMIN_PASSWORD=supersecretpassword \
-e INFLUXDB_USER=telegraf -e INFLUXDB_USER_PASSWORD=secretpassword \
-v $PWD:/var/lib/influxdb \
influxdb /init-influxdb.sh
The above would create the database db0, create an admin user with the password supersecretpassword, then create the telegraf user with your telegraf's secret password. It would then exit and leave behind any files it created in the volume that you mounted.