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Docker

note

The easiest way to get started with Typebot is with the official managed service in the Cloud. It takes 1 minute to try out the tool for free. You'll have high availability, backups, security, and maintenance all managed for you by me, Baptiste, Typebot's founder.

That's also the best way to support my work, open-source software, and you'll get great service!

Requirements

You need a server with Docker installed. If your server doesn't come with Docker pre-installed, you can follow their docs to install it.

Installation

1. Download the compose file

On your server, download the latest docker-compose.yml file:

 wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/baptisteArno/typebot.io/latest/docker-compose.yml

2. Add the required configuration

The compose file has placeholders for the required parameters. To set the parameters you'll first need a random 32-character secret key which will be used to encrypt sensitive data. Here is a simple way to generate one:

openssl rand -base64 24 | tr -d '\n' ; echo

Now edit docker-compose.yml and:

  • Replace <your-encryption-secret> with the generated secret.
  • Replace <your-builder-url> with the public URL of the builder (i.e. https://typebot.domain.com:8080).
  • Replace <your-viewer-url> with the public URL of the viewer (i.e. https://typebot.domain.com:8081).
  • Replace <your-admin-email> with the email address of the administrator.
  • Configure at least one authentication provider (Email, Google, GitHub, Facebook or GitLab). More info here: Configuration.

By default the compose file will pull the latest stable Typebot images: baptistearno/typebot-builder:latest and baptistearno/typebot-viewer:latest. You can decide to replace latest with a specific version or with main to get the latest modifications. You can find all the existing tags here

3. Start the server

Once you've added your configuration to the compose file, you're ready to start up the server:

docker-compose up -d

When you run this command it does the following:

  • Create a database
  • Run the migrations
  • Start the builder on port 8080
  • Start the viewer on port 8081

You can now navigate to http://typebot.domain.com:8080 and see the login screen. Login with the admin email to have access to a Team plan workspace automatically.

Typebot server itself does not perform SSL termination. It only runs on unencrypted HTTP. If you want to run on HTTPS you also need to set up a reverse proxy in front of the server. See below instructions.

Update Typebot

Typebot is updated regularly, but it is up to you to apply these updates on your server. By virtue of using Docker, these updates are safe and easy to apply.

docker-compose down --remove-orphans
docker-compose pull typebot-builder
docker-compose pull typebot-viewer
docker-compose up -d

The self-hosted version is somewhat of a LTS, only getting the changes after they have been battle tested on the hosted version. If you want features as soon as they are available, consider becoming a hosted customer.

Optional extras

Reverse proxy

By default, Typebot runs on unencrypted HTTP on ports 8080 for the builder and 8081 for the viewer. We recommend running it on HTTPS behind a reverse proxy of some sort. You may or may not already be running a reverse proxy on your host, let's look at both options:

No existing reverse proxy

If your DNS is managed by a service that offers a proxy option with automatic SSL management, feel free to use that. For example, you could use Cloudflare as a reverse proxy in front of Typebot.

Alternatively, you can run your Caddy server as a reverse proxy. This way your SSL certificate will be stored on the host machine and managed by Let's Encrypt. The Caddy server will expose port 443, terminate SSL traffic and proxy the requests to your Typebot server.

Here is an example of a docker-compose file using Caddy as a reverse proxy:

version: '3.3'
services:
caddy-gen:
container_name: caddy-gen
image: 'wemakeservices/caddy-gen:latest'
restart: always
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/tmp/docker.sock:ro
- caddy-certificates:/data/caddy
ports:
- '80:80'
- '443:443'
depends_on:
- typebot-builder
- typebot-viewer

typebot-builder:
labels:
virtual.host: 'typebot.domain.com' # change to your domain name
virtual.port: '3000'
virtual.tls-email: 'admin@example.com' # change to your email

typebot-viewer:
labels:
virtual.host: 'bot.domain.com' # change to your domain name
virtual.port: '3000'
virtual.tls-email: 'admin@example.com' # change to your email

volumes:
caddy-certificates:
driver: local

This config requires you to add the following DNS entry:

typebot IN A <server_ip>
bot IN A <server_ip>

You can merge this compose file with the first one. Make sure that NEXTAUTH_URL is set to https://typebot.domain.com and NEXT_PUBLIC_VIEWER_URL is set to https://bot.domain.com.

When running the compose file, it should automatically enable SSL on your server and you should be able to navigate to:

  • https://typebot.domain.com for the builder
  • https://bot.domain.com for the viewer

Existing reverse proxy

If you're already running a reverse proxy, the most important things to note are:

  1. Configure the virtual hosts to match the NEXTAUTH_URL and NEXT_PUBLIC_VIEWER_URL in your docker-compose configuration.
  2. Proxy the traffic to 127.0.0.1:8080 or {ip-address}:8080 and to 127.0.0.1:8081 or {ip-address}:8081 if running on a remote machine

SMTP

I highly recommend using an external SMTP service. There are tons of options out there, including SendInBlue, Mailgun and SendGrid. It will avoid severe headaches 😅. Then, you will only need to add the required SMTP configuration variables.

If, however, you don't want to, you can instantiate an SMTP server in the docker-compose file.

version: '3.3'
services:
mail:
image: bytemark/smtp
restart: always
typebot-builder:
environment:
- SMTP_HOST=mail
- NEXT_PUBLIC_SMTP_FROM=notifications@typebot.domain.com # change to your domain name
typebot-viewer:
- SMTP_HOST=mail
- NEXT_PUBLIC_SMTP_FROM=notifications@typebot.domain.com # change to your domain name

You will probably need to make sure that typebot.domain.com has a valid SPF record and that your server IP has a rDNS set up.

You can merge this compose file with the main one.

S3 storage

If you don't already have an S3 storage available, you could include it in your docker-compose file:

version: '3.3'
services:
minio:
image: minio/minio
command: server /data
ports:
- '9000:9000'
environment:
MINIO_ROOT_USER: minio
MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD: minio123
volumes:
- s3_data:/data
# This service just makes sure a bucket with the right policies is created
createbuckets:
image: minio/mc
depends_on:
- minio
entrypoint: >
/bin/sh -c "
sleep 10;
/usr/bin/mc config host add minio http://minio:9000 minio minio123;
/usr/bin/mc mb minio/typebot;
/usr/bin/mc anonymous set public minio/typebot/public;
exit 0;
"
typebot-builder:
environment:
- S3_ACCESS_KEY=minio
- S3_SECRET_KEY=minio123
- S3_BUCKET=typebot
- S3_ENDPOINT=storage.domain.com # change to your domain name
typebot-viewer:
environment:
- S3_ACCESS_KEY=minio
- S3_SECRET_KEY=minio123
- S3_BUCKET=typebot
- S3_ENDPOINT=storage.domain.com # change to your domain name

volumes:
s3_data:

This config requires you to add the following DNS entry:

storage IN A <server_ip>

You can merge this compose file with the main one.

Config example with all the extras

Here is a config example that spins up Typebot with HTTPS, SMTP and S3 storage.

version: '3.3'
services:
caddy-gen:
image: 'wemakeservices/caddy-gen:latest'
restart: always
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/tmp/docker.sock:ro
- caddy-certificates:/data/caddy
ports:
- '80:80'
- '443:443'
depends_on:
- typebot-builder
- typebot-viewer
typebot-db:
image: postgres:13
restart: always
volumes:
- db_data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
environment:
- POSTGRES_DB=typebot
- POSTGRES_PASSWORD=typebot
typebot-builder:
labels:
virtual.host: 'typebot.domain.com' # change to your domain
virtual.port: '3000'
virtual.tls-email: 'admin@example.com' # change to your email
image: baptistearno/typebot-builder:latest
restart: always
depends_on:
- typebot-db
ports:
- '8080:3000'
extra_hosts:
- 'host.docker.internal:host-gateway'
# See https://docs.typebot.io/self-hosting/configuration for more configuration options
environment:
- DATABASE_URL=postgresql://postgres:typebot@typebot-db:5432/typebot
- NEXTAUTH_URL=https://typebot.domain.com
- NEXT_PUBLIC_VIEWER_URL=https://bot.domain.com
- ENCRYPTION_SECRET=Tz9sL3FBc+XnO86KS9ScPuYj79Y4rII/Ie+FkaNNUrk=
- ADMIN_EMAIL=baptiste.arnaud95@gmail.com
- SMTP_HOST=mail
- NEXT_PUBLIC_SMTP_FROM=notifications@typebot.domain.com
- S3_ACCESS_KEY=minio
- S3_SECRET_KEY=minio123
- S3_BUCKET=typebot
- S3_ENDPOINT=storage.domain.com
typebot-viewer:
labels:
virtual.host: 'bot.domain.com' # change to your domain
virtual.port: '3000'
virtual.tls-email: 'admin@example.com' # change to your email
image: baptistearno/typebot-viewer:latest
restart: always
ports:
- '8081:3000'
# See https://docs.typebot.io/self-hosting/configuration for more configuration options
environment:
- DATABASE_URL=postgresql://postgres:typebot@typebot-db:5432/typebot
- NEXT_PUBLIC_VIEWER_URL=https://bot.domain.com
- ENCRYPTION_SECRET=Tz9sL3FBc+XnO86KS9ScPuYj79Y4rII/Ie+FkaNNUrk=
- SMTP_HOST=mail
- NEXT_PUBLIC_SMTP_FROM=notifications@typebot.domain.com
- S3_ACCESS_KEY=minio
- S3_SECRET_KEY=minio123
- S3_BUCKET=typebot
- S3_ENDPOINT=storage.domain.com
mail:
image: bytemark/smtp
restart: always
minio:
labels:
virtual.host: 'storage.domain.com' # change to your domain
virtual.port: '9000'
virtual.tls-email: 'admin@example.com' # change to your email
image: minio/minio
command: server /data
ports:
- '9000:9000'
environment:
MINIO_ROOT_USER: minio
MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD: minio123
volumes:
- s3_data:/data
# This service just make sure a bucket with the right policies is created
createbuckets:
image: minio/mc
depends_on:
- minio
entrypoint: >
/bin/sh -c "
sleep 10;
/usr/bin/mc config host add minio http://minio:9000 minio minio123;
/usr/bin/mc mb minio/typebot;
/usr/bin/mc anonymous set public minio/typebot/public;
exit 0;
"
volumes:
db_data:
s3_data:
caddy-certificates:
driver: local
note

If you're self-hosting Typebot, sponsoring me is a great way to give back to the community and to contribute to the long-term sustainability of the project.

Thank you for supporting independent creators of Free Open Source Software!

note

This doc has been inspired by Plausible docs. They have a similar self-hosting solutions, and their documentation is 🔥.