A very small Docker image (~80KB) to run any static website, based on the BusyBox httpd static file server.
For more details, check out my article.
Check the Releases page for new versions and breaking changes.
The image is hosted on Docker Hub and comes with linux/amd64, linux/arm64 and linux/arm/v7 builds:
FROM lipanski/docker-static-website:latest
# Copy your static files
COPY . .Build the image:
docker build -t my-static-website .Run the image:
docker run -it --rm -p 3000:3000 my-static-websiteBrowse to http://localhost:3000.
If you need to configure the server in a different way, you can override the CMD line:
FROM lipanski/docker-static-website:latest
# Copy your static files
COPY . .
CMD ["/busybox-httpd", "-f", "-v", "-p", "3000"]NOTE: Sending a TERM signal to your TTY running the container won't get propagated due to how busybox is built. Instead you can call docker stop (or docker kill if can't wait 15 seconds). Alternatively you can run the container with docker run -it --rm --init which will propagate signals to the process correctly.
For every file that should be served gzipped, add a matching [FILENAME].gz to your image.
Add a httpd.conf file and use the P directive:
P:/some/old/path:[http://]hostname[:port]/some/new/path
Add a httpd.conf file and use the E404 directive:
E404:e404.html
...where e404.html is your custom 404 page.
Note that the error page directive is only processed for your main httpd.conf file. It will raise an error if you use it in httpd.conf files added to subdirectories.
Add a httpd.conf file and use the A and D directives:
A:172.20. # Allow address from 172.20.0.0/16
A:10.0.0.0/25 # Allow any address from 10.0.0.0-10.0.0.127
A:127.0.0.1 # Allow local loopback connections
D:* # Deny from other IP connections
You can also allow all requests with some exceptions:
D:1.2.3.4
D:5.6.7.8
A:* # This line is optional
Add a httpd.conf file, listing the paths that should be protected and the corresponding credentials:
/admin:my-user:my-password # Require user my-user with password my-password whenever calling /admin
By default, the BusyBox server will look for a httpd.conf file under:
/etc/httpd.conf- project root
- project subdirectories (used to configure path-specific behaviour)
Read the source code comments.
Create a docker-compose.yml file:
---
version: "3.9"
services:
webserver:
image: lipanski/docker-static-website:latest
restart: always
ports:
- "3000:3000"
volumes:
- /some/local/path:/home/static
- ./httpd.conf:/home/static/httpd.conf:ro
Make sure to change /some/local/path to the path to your static files. Include an empty or valid httpd.conf file.
If you use Podman, consider appending the Z option to volumes for SELinux labels to apply.
Clone the busybox repo and create a blank config:
make allnoconfig
Copy the resulting .config to this project, diff it against the old one and re-enable everything that seems reasonable (mostly the HTTPD features).
Uncomment the COPY . . line in the Dockerfile, add a dummy index.html and build a test image:
docker build -t docker-static-website-test .
Then run it:
docker run -it --rm --init -p 3000:3000 docker-static-website-test
Browse to http://localhost:3000 and check that the contents of the index.html file were rendered correctly.
Images are build automatically by Github Actions whenever a new tag is pushed:
git tag 1.2.3
git push --tags
Build the image:
docker build -t lipanski/docker-static-website:1.2.3 -t lipanski/docker-static-website:latest .
Push the image to Docker Hub:
docker push lipanski/docker-static-website:1.2.3
docker push lipanski/docker-static-website:latest