It is aimed at beginners and should get you up and running quickly.
We'll use [docker compose](https://docs.docker.com/compose/) to make handling the bunch of containers easier.
> If you have any issues setting up vikunja, please don't hesitate to reach out to us via [matrix](https://riot.im/app/#/room/!dCRiCiLaCCFVNlDnYs:matrix.org?via=matrix.org), the [community forum](https://community.vikunja.io/) or even [email](mailto:hello@vikunja.io).
## Preparations (optional)
Create a directory for the project where all data and the compose file will live in.
## Create all necessary files
Create a `docker-compose.yml` file with the following contents in your directory:
Especially when using mysql, this can happen on first start, because the mysql database container will take a few seconds to start.
Vikunja does not know the container is not ready, therefore it will just try to connect to the db, fail since it is not ready and exit.
If you're using the docker compose example from above, you may notice the `restart: unless-stopped` option at the api service.
This tells docker to restart the api container if it exits, unless you explicitly stop it.
Therefore, it should "magically fix itself" by automatically restarting the container.
After a few seconds (or minutes) you should see a log message like this one from the mariadb container:
```
2020-05-24 11:42:15 0 [Note] mysqld: ready for connections.
Version: '10.4.12-MariaDB-1:10.4.12+maria~bionic' socket: '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' port: 3306 mariadb.org binary distribution
```
The next restart of Vikunja should be successful.
If not, there might be a different error or a bug with Vikunja, please reach out to us in that case.
(If you have an idea about how we could improve this, we'd like to hear it!)
#### "Not a directory"
If you get an error like this one:
```
ERROR: for vikunja_proxy_1 Cannot start service proxy: OCI runtime create failed: container_linux.go:349: starting container process caused "process_linux.go:449: container init caused \"rootfs_linux.go:58: mounting \\\"vikunja/nginx.conf\\\" to rootfs \\\"/var/lib/docker/overlay2/9c8b8f9419c29dad0d1233fbb0a3c36cf403dabd7a55d6f0a47b0c1dd6029994/merged\\\" at \\\"/var/lib/docker/overlay2/9c8b8f9419c29dad0d1233fbb0a3c36cf403dabd7a55d6f0a47b0c1dd6029994/merged/etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf\\\" caused \\\"not a directory\\\"\"": unknown: Are you trying to mount a directory onto a file (or vice-versa)? Check if the specified host path exists and is the expected type
```
this means docker tried to mount a directory from the host to a file in the container.
This can happen if you did not create the `nginx.conf` file.
Because there is a volume mount for it in the `docker-compose.yml`, Docker will create a folder because non exists, assuming you want to mount a folder into the container.
To fix this, create the file and restart the containers again.
#### Migration failed: commands out of sync
If you get an error like this one:
```
2020/05/23 15:53:38 Config File "config" Not Found in "[/app/vikunja /etc/vikunja /app/vikunja/.config/vikunja]"
2020/05/23 15:53:38 Using default config.
2020-05-23T15:53:38.762747276Z: CRITICAL ▶ migration/Migrate 002 Migration failed: commands out of sync. Did you run multiple statements at once?
```
This is a mysql issue.
Currently, we don't have a better solution than to completely wipe the database files and start over.
To do this, first stop everything by running `sudo docker-compose down`, then remove the `db/` folder in your current folder with `sudo rm -rf db` and start the whole stack again with `sudo docker-compose up -d`.
## Try it
Head over to `http://<host-ip or url>/api/v1/info` in a browser.
You should see something like this:
{{<highlightjson>}}
{
"version": "0.13.1+19-e9bc3246ce",
"frontend_url": "http://localhost:8080/",
"motd": "test",
"link_sharing_enabled": true,
"max_file_size": "20MB",
"registration_enabled": true,
"available_migrators": [
"wunderlist",
"todoist"
],
"task_attachments_enabled": true
}
{{</highlight>}}
This shows you can reach the api through the api proxy.
Now head over to `http://<host-ip or url>/` which should show the login mask.
## Make it persistent
Currently, Vikunja runs in foreground in your terminal.
For a real-world scenario this is not the best way.
Back in your terminal, stop the stack by pressing `CTRL-C` on your keyboard.
Then run `sudo docker-compose up -d` in your again.
The `-d` flag at the end of the command will tell docker to run the containers in the background.
If you need to check the logs after that, you can run `sudo docker-compose logs`.
Vikunja does not have any default users, you'll need to register and account.
After that, you can use it.
## Tear it all down
If you want to completely stop all containers run `sudo docker-compose down` in your terminal.
## Improve this guide
We'll happily accept suggestions and improvements for this guide.
Please [reach out to us](https://vikunja.io/contact/) if you have any.