--- title: Build Setup --- This guide walks you through building Frappe images from the repository resources. # Prerequisites - git - docker (Engine **v23.0+** with buildx) or podman - docker compose v2 or podman compose > Install containerization software according to the official maintainer documentation. Avoid package managers when not recommended, as they frequently cause compatibility issues. > **Why Docker Engine v23+?** The build uses [BuildKit secrets](https://docs.docker.com/build/building/secrets/) (`--secret`) to keep `apps.json` tokens out of image layers. BuildKit is the default builder starting with Docker Engine 23.0 — older releases will fail or silently fall back to the legacy builder, which does not support secret mounts. # Clone this repo ```bash git clone https://github.com/frappe/frappe_docker cd frappe_docker ``` # Define custom apps If you don't want to include custom apps in the image, skip this section. To include custom apps in your image, create an `apps.json` file in the repository root: ```json [ { "url": "https://github.com/frappe/erpnext", "branch": "version-16" }, { "url": "https://github.com/frappe/hrms", "branch": "version-16" }, { "url": "https://github.com/frappe/helpdesk", "branch": "main" } ] ``` # Build custom images ## Manually Choose the appropriate build command based on your container runtime and desired image type. This example builds the `layered` image with the custom `apps.json` you created. > **Security note:** The `apps.json` file is passed as a [BuildKit secret](https://docs.docker.com/build/building/secrets/) so that private repository tokens are **never** stored in image layer metadata. Do not use `--build-arg` for `apps.json` — build arguments are permanently visible via `docker image history`. This requires **Docker Engine v23.0+** (where BuildKit is the default builder). `Docker`: ```bash docker build \ --no-cache \ --build-arg=FRAPPE_PATH=https://github.com/frappe/frappe \ --build-arg=FRAPPE_BRANCH=version-16 \ --secret=id=apps_json,src=apps.json \ --tag=custom:16 \ --file=images/layered/Containerfile . ``` `Podman`: ```bash podman build \ --no-cache \ --build-arg=FRAPPE_PATH=https://github.com/frappe/frappe \ --build-arg=FRAPPE_BRANCH=version-16 \ --secret=id=apps_json,src=apps.json \ --tag=custom:16 \ --file=images/layered/Containerfile . ``` ## Automated This repository is fully suited for automated builds, i.e. using CI/CD pipelines. See [Automated Builds and Deployment](../03-production/06-automated-builds-and-deployment.md) for more information. ## Build args, secrets and flags | Variable | Purpose | | -------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | **Frappe Framework** | | | FRAPPE_PATH | Repository URL for Frappe framework source code. Defaults to | | FRAPPE_BRANCH | Branch to use for Frappe framework. Defaults to version-16 | | **Custom Apps** | | | CACHE_BUST | Can be used to invalidate the cached layer. See [Build Cache](../03-production/06-automated-builds-and-deployment.md#build-cache) | | (secret) apps_json | Passed via `--secret=id=apps_json,src=apps.json`. Never use `--build-arg` for this file. | | **Dependencies** | | | PYTHON_VERSION | Python version for the base image | | NODE_VERSION | Node.js version | | WKHTMLTOPDF_VERSION | wkhtmltopdf version | | **bench only** | | | DEBIAN_BASE | Debian base version for the bench image, defaults to `bookworm` | | WKHTMLTOPDF_DISTRO | use the specified distro for debian package. Default is `bookworm` | # Deploy the stack ## env file The compose file requires several environment variables. You can either export them on your system or create a `.env` file. ```bash cp example.env custom.env ``` Edit `custom.env` to customize variables for your setup. The template includes common variables, but you can add, modify, or remove any as needed. See [env-variables.md](04-env-variables.md) for detailed descriptions of all available variables. For this setup, make sure **at least** the following values are added to `custom.env`: ```txt CUSTOM_IMAGE=custom CUSTOM_TAG=16 PULL_POLICY=missing ``` > The `CUSTOM_*` variables ensure the image reference points to the recently built image. > `PULL_POLICY` ensures Docker does not attempt to pull the image, but instead uses the locally built one (the default pull policy is `always`). **⚠️ This is not meant to be a complete `.env` configuration guide. These are only the minimal additions required for this example. Please have a look at [env-variables.md](04-env-variables.md) for a full description of all available variables and adjust them according to your needs.** ## Creating the final compose file Combine the base compose file with appropriate overrides for your use case. This example adds MariaDB, Redis, and exposes ports on `:8080`: ```bash docker compose --env-file custom.env \ -f compose.yaml \ -f overrides/compose.mariadb.yaml \ -f overrides/compose.redis.yaml \ -f overrides/compose.noproxy.yaml \ config > compose.custom.yaml ``` This generates `compose.custom.yaml`, which you'll use to start all containers. Customize the overrides and environment variables according to your requirements. > **NOTE**: podman compose is just a wrapper, it uses docker-compose if it is available or podman-compose if not. podman-compose have an issue reading .env files ([Issue](https://github.com/containers/podman-compose/issues/475)) and might create an issue when running the containers. --- **Next:** [Start Setup →](03-start-setup.md) **Back:** [Container Overview ←](01-overview.md) **See also:** [Setup Examples](06-setup-examples.md) for practical deployment scenarios.