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latest 2.6.0 License MIT Build Status Say Thanks!

1. What is ActiveMQ Artemis?

Apache ActiveMQ Artemis is an open source project to build a multi-protocol, embeddable, very high performance, clustered, asynchronous messaging system. Apache ActiveMQ Artemis is an example of Message Oriented Middleware (MoM).

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2. Tags and Dockerfile links

Debian Based Alpine Based
latest latest-alpine
2.6.2 2.6.2-alpine
2.6.1 2.6.1-alpine
2.6.0 2.6.0-alpine
2.5.0 2.5.0-alpine
2.4.0 2.4.0-alpine
2.3.0 2.3.0-alpine
2.2.0 2.2.0-alpine
2.1.0 2.1.0-alpine
2.0.0 2.0.0-alpine
1.5.6 1.5.6-alpine
1.5.5 1.5.5-alpine
1.5.4 1.5.4-alpine
1.5.3 1.5.3-alpine
1.5.2 1.5.2-alpine
1.5.1 1.5.1-alpine
1.5.0 1.5.0-alpine
1.4.0 1.4.0-alpine
1.3.0 1.3.0-alpine
1.2.0 1.2.0-alpine
1.1.0 1.1.0-alpine
1.0.0 1.0.0-alpine

3. About this image

The ActiveMQ Artemis images come in two flavors, both equally supported :

  • Debian based: the default one.
  • Alpine based: much lighter.

All versions of ActiveMQ Artemis are provided for the time being but versions previous to 1.5.5 shall be considered deprecated and could be removed at any time.

This image shall not be considered production ready as is. If you plan to use this image in a production environment, fork the image in order to maintain stability as the build is reproducible in a best effort basis. Then at each rebase, make sure you tests the changes you are importing.

4. How to use this image

You can find how to run this image in the section Running the image. Beware as the default configuration is not recommended for production usage, at the very least you'll want to set your own login and password. This is described with detail in section Setting the username and password. In case you also want to set some customized memory limits, this is described in Setting the memory values.

ActiveMQ Artemis typically persists the queue state to disk. In order to leverage the most of your disk ActiveMQ artemis might require some fine-tuning. The good news is that this process is fully automated and its described in Performing a performance journal test.

JMX uses RMI and therefore random ports. This is extremely bad for automatization in Docker and in general. For that reason its not supported for most of the use cases. However, when using this image in orchestrators like Kubernetes you might want to connect from a sidecar where it does make sense. How to enable JMX is described in section Enabling JMX.

The Jolokia console CORS header won't be a problem by default as it set to *, however if you want to narrow it down for improved security don't miss the section Settings the console's allow origin.

In rare ocassions you might find the need of running ActiveMQ Artemis without security. This is described in section Disabling security.

Some of the configurations mentioned above are scripted automations that modify the configuration files. You might have your own configuration that you want to provide as a whole. In that case disregard the aforementioned sections and find how to pass your own configuration in section Using external configuration files.

If instead you want to use the configuration parameters and make some non-mayor changes to the configuration you could use the mechanisms to apply some small transformations using XSLT as described in section Overriding parts of the configuration.

5. Running the image

There are different methods to run a Docker image, from interactive Docker to Kubernetes and Docker Compose. This documentation will cover only Docker with an interactive terminal mode. You should refer to the appropriate documentation for more information around other execution methods.

To run ActiveMQ with AMQP, JMS and the web console open (if your are running 2.3.0 or later), run the following command:

docker run -it --rm \
  -p 8161:8161 \
  -p 61616:61616 \
  vromero/activemq-artemis

After a few seconds you'll see in the output a block similar to:

_        _               _
/ \  ____| |_  ___ __  __(_) _____
/ _ \|  _ \ __|/ _ \  \/  | |/  __/
/ ___ \ | \/ |_/  __/ |\/| | |\___ \
/_/   \_\|   \__\____|_|  |_|_|/___ /
Apache ActiveMQ Artemis x.x.x

HH:mm:ss,SSS INFO  [...] AMQ101000: Starting ActiveMQ Artemis Server

At this point you can open the web server port at 8161 and check the web console using the default username and password of artemis / simetraehcapa.

5.1 Setting the username and password

If you wish to change the default username and password of artemis / simetraehcapa, you can do so with the ARTEMIS_USERNAME and ARTEMIS_PASSWORD environment variables:

docker run -it --rm \
  -e ARTEMIS_USERNAME=myuser \
  -e ARTEMIS_PASSWORD=otherpassword \
  vromero/activemq-artemis

5.2 Setting the memory values

By default this image does leverage the new features that came in Java 8u131 related to memory ergonomics in containerized environments, more information about it here.

It does use a -XX:MaxRAMFraction=2 meaning that half of the memory made avaiable to the container will be used by the Java heap, leaving the other half for other types of Java memory and other OS purposes. However, in some circumstances it might be advisable to fine tune the memory to manual values, in that case you can set the memory that you application needs by using the parameters ARTEMIS_MIN_MEMORY and ARTEMIS_MAX_MEMORY:

docker run -it --rm \
  -e 'ARTEMIS_MIN_MEMORY=1512M' \
  -e 'ARTEMIS_MAX_MEMORY=3048M' \
  vromero/activemq-artemis

The previous example will launch Apache ActiveMQ Artemis in docker with 1512 MB of memory, with a maximum usage of 3048 MB of memory. The format of the values passed is the same than the format used for the Java -Xms and -Xmx parameters and its documented here.

5.3 Performing a performance journal test

Different kinds of volumes need different values in fine tuning. In ActiveMQ Artemis the journal-buffer-timeout is oftentimes configured for this purpose. Since 1.5.3 it is possible to calculate the optimal value automatically. This image supports this automation using the environment variable: ARTEMIS_PERF_JOURNAL with one of the following values:

Value Description
AUTO (default) Checks for the existence of a .perf-journal-completed file in the data volume, if it doesn't exist performs the calculation, applies the configuration and creates the file.
NEVER Never do the performance journal configuration
ALWAYS Always do the performance journal configuration

It is safe to leave it as AUTO even for the casual usage of this image given that the image already have incorporated a .perf-journal-completed for its internal directory used when no volume is mounted. One example of execution with the performance journal calibration set to be executed always can be found in the next listing:

docker run -it --rm \
  -e ARTEMIS_PERF_JOURNAL=ALWAYS \
  vromero/activemq-artemis

5.4 Enabling JMX

Due to the JMX's nature, often with dynamics ports for RMI and the need having configure the public IP address to reach the RMI server. It is discouraged to use JMX in Docker. Although in certain scenarios, it could be advisable, as when deploying in a container orchestrator such as Kubernetes or Mesos, and deploying along side this container a side car. For such cases the following environment variable could be used: ENABLE_JMX.

It is also possible to set the JMX port and the JMX RMI port with these two environment variables respectively: JMX_PORT (default: 1099) and JMX_RMI_PORT (default: 1098).

Given that JMX is intended for side cars, it is attached only to localhost and not protected with SSL. Likewise, its ports are not declared in the Dockerfile.

docker run -it --rm \
  -e ENABLE_JMX=true \
  -e JMX_PORT=1199 \
  -e JMX_RMI_PORT=1198 \
  vromero/activemq-artemis

5.5 Prometheus metrics

When using this image in a orchestrated environmnet like in Kubernetes. It is often useful to have metrics endpoints compatible with prometheus to ease monitoring.

This image can export such metrics in port 9404 thanks to the integration with the Prometheus JMX exporter. In order to enable it the environmnet variable ENABLE_JMX_EXPORTER should be present, it will also inderectly enable JMX as if ENABLE_JMX was set.

To see what is exported just:

docker run -it --rm \
  -p9404:9404 \
  -e ENABLE_JMX_EXPORTER=true \
  vromero/activemq-artemis

And then in a different terminal run:

curl http://127.0.0.1:9404

To obtain the following and more:

# HELP artemis_disk_scan_period How often to check for disk space usage, in milliseconds (org.apache.activemq.artemis<broker="0.0.0.0"><>DiskScanPeriod)
# TYPE artemis_disk_scan_period counter
artemis_disk_scan_period 5000.0
# HELP artemis_durable_delivering_count number of durable messages that this queue is currently delivering to its consumers (org.apache.activemq.artemis<broker="0.0.0.0", component=addresses, address="DLQ", subcomponent=queues, routing-type="anycast", queue="DLQ"><>DurableDeliveringCount)
# TYPE artemis_durable_delivering_count counter
artemis_durable_delivering_count{queue="DLQ",address="DLQ",} 0.0
artemis_durable_delivering_count{queue="ExpiryQueue",address="ExpiryQueue",} 0.0
# HELP artemis_journal_min_files Number of journal files to pre-create (org.apache.activemq.artemis<broker="0.0.0.0"><>JournalMinFiles)
# TYPE artemis_journal_min_files counter
artemis_journal_min_files 2.0
# HELP artemis_message_expiry_thread_priority Priority of the thread used to scan message expiration (org.apache.activemq.artemis<broker="0.0.0.0"><>MessageExpiryThreadPriority)
# TYPE artemis_message_expiry_thread_priority counter
artemis_message_expiry_thread_priority 3.0
# HELP artemis_messages_killed number of messages removed from this queue since it was created due to exceeding the max delivery attempts (org.apache.activemq.artemis<broker="0.0.0.0", component=addresses, address="DLQ", subcomponent=queues, routing-type="anycast", queue="DLQ"><>MessagesKilled)
# TYPE artemis_messages_killed counter
artemis_messages_killed{queue="DLQ",address="DLQ",} 0.0
artemis_messages_killed{queue="ExpiryQueue",address="ExpiryQueue",} 0.0
# HELP artemis_address_memory_usage_percentage Memory used by all the addresses on broker as a percentage of global maximum limit (org.apache.activemq.artemis<broker="0.0.0.0"><>AddressMemoryUsagePercentage)
# TYPE artemis_address_memory_usage_percentage counter
artemis_address_memory_usage_percentage 0.0
# HELP artemis_journal_sync_non_transactional Whether the journal is synchronized when receiving non-transactional datar (org.apache.activemq.artemis<broker="0.0.0.0"><>JournalSyncNonTransactional)
# TYPE artemis_journal_sync_non_transactional counter
artemis_journal_sync_non_transactional 1.0
# HELP artemis_journal_buffer_size Size of the internal buffer on the journal (org.apache.activemq.artemis<broker="0.0.0.0"><>JournalBufferSize)
# TYPE artemis_journal_buffer_size counter
artemis_journal_buffer_size 501760.0
# HELP artemis_journal_max_io Maximum number of write requests that can be in the AIO queue at any given time (org.apache.activemq.artemis<broker="0.0.0.0"><>JournalMaxIO)
# TYPE artemis_journal_max_io counter
artemis_journal_max_io 4096.0

5.6 Settings the console's allow origin

ActiveMQ Artemis console uses Jolokia. In the default vanilla non-docker installation Jolokia does set a CORS header to allow only localhost. In the docker image this create problems as things are rarely accesed as localhost.

Therefore the docker image does set the CORS header to * by default. However there is a mechanism to narrow it down to whatever value is best suited to you for improved security through the environmnet property: JOLOKIA_ALLOW_ORIGIN.

docker run -it --rm \
  -e JOLOKIA_ALLOW_ORIGIN=192.168.1.1 \
  vromero/activemq-artemis

5.7 Overriding parts of the configuration

ActiveMQ Artemis support disabling the security using the element <security-enabled>false</security-enabled> as described in the official documentation. This docker image makes it simple to set that element using the environment property: DISABLE_SECURITY:

docker run -it --rm \
  -e DISABLE_SECURITY=true \
  vromero/activemq-artemis

Please keep in mind no production system, possible no environment at all, should ever disable security. Make sure you read the falacy number one of the falacies of the distributed computing before disabling the security.

5.8 Using external configuration files

It is possible to mount a whole artemis etc directory in this image in the volume /var/lib/artemis/etc. Be careful as this might be an overkill for many situations where only small tweaks are necessary.

When using this technique be aware that the configuration files of Artemis might change from version to version. Generally speaking, when in need to configure Artemis beyond what it is offered by this image using environment variables, it is recommended to use the partial override mechanism described in the next section.

5.9 Overriding parts of the configuration

The default ActiveMQ Artemis configuration can be partially modified, instead of completely replaced as in the previous section, using two mechanisms. Merge snippets and XSLT tranformations.

Merging snippets

Multiple files with snippets of configuration can be dropped in the /var/lib/artemis/etc-override volume. Those configuration files must be named following the name convention broker-{{num}}.xml where num is a numeric representation of the snippet. The configuration files will be merged with the default configuration. An alphabetical precedence of the file names will be considered for the merge and in case of collision the latest change will be treated as final.

For instance lets say that you want to add a diverts section, you could have a local directory, lets say /var/artemis-data/etc-override where you could place a broker-00.xml file that looks like the following listing:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="no"?>

<configuration xmlns="urn:activemq" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="urn:activemq /schema/artemis-configuration.xsd">
   <!-- from 1.0.0 to 1.5.5 the following line should be : <core xmlns="urn:activemq:core"> -->
   <core xmlns="urn:activemq:core" xsi:schemaLocation="urn:activemq:core ">
      <diverts>
         <divert name="order-divert">
            <routing-name>order-divert</routing-name>
            <address>orders</address>
            <forwarding-address>spyTopic</forwarding-address>
            <exclusive>false</exclusive>
         </divert>
      </diverts>
   </core>
</configuration>

Please notice the core element change along with the versions:

  • 1.0.0 up to 1.5.5: <core xmlns="urn:activemq:core">
  • 2.0.0 onwards: <core xmlns="urn:activemq:core" xsi:schemaLocation="urn:activemq:core ">

Configuration transformations

For the use cases where instead of merging, the desired outcome is a deletion or some other kind of advanced transformation a file named broker-00.xslt in /var/lib/artemis/etc-override is supported. For instance to delete the jms definitions that is present by default in the broker.xml file shown below:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="no"?>

<configuration xmlns="urn:activemq" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="urn:activemq /schema/artemis-configuration.xsd">
  ...
  <jms xmlns="urn:activemq:jms">
    <queue name="myfancyqueue"/>
    <queue name="myotherqueue"/>
  </jms>
  ...
</configuration>

A file name broker-00.xslt with content like the following listing, could be used:

<xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
  xmlns:activemq="urn:activemq" xmlns:jms="urn:activemq:jms">

 <xsl:output omit-xml-declaration="yes"/>

    <xsl:template match="node()|@*">
      <xsl:copy>
         <xsl:apply-templates select="node()|@*"/>
      </xsl:copy>
    </xsl:template>

    <xsl:template match="*[local-name()='jms']"/>
</xsl:stylesheet>

If you would like to see the final result of your transformations, execute the following:

docker run -it --rm \
  -v /var/artemis-data/override:/var/lib/artemis/etc-override \
  vromero/activemq-artemis \
  cat ../etc/broker.xml

5.10 Mount points

Mount point Description
/var/lib/artemis/data Holds the data files used for storing persistent messages
/var/lib/artemis/etc Hold the instance configuration files
/var/lib/artemis/etc-override Hold the instance configuration files
/var/lib/artemis/lock Hold the command line locks (typically not useful to mount)

5.11 Exposed ports

Port Description
8161 Web Server
9404 JMX Exporter
61616 Core,MQTT,AMQP,HORNETQ,STOMP,Openwire
5445 HORNETQ,STOMP
5672 AMQP
1883 MQTT
61613 STOMP

6. Running in orchestrators

At the moment only docker is directly supported for this image. However there is an attempt to create a helm chart for Kubernetes and some configuration tuning for OpenShift.

6.1 Running in Kubernetes

ActiveMQ Artemis can leverage JGroups to discover the members of the cluster. And JGroups can be extended with a plugin called jgroups-kubernetes that allows JGroups to discover using Kubernetes.

jgroups-kubernetes version 0.9.3 is included in the classpath of this image, however everything about the configuration of jgroups and jgroups-kubernetes is left to the user.

If you rather prefer a easier solution to run a cluster of ActiveMQ Artemis nodes, there is an attempt to create a Helm chart by the same author of this image. It can be found here. It does leverage jgroups-kubernetes in a transparent way.

6.2 OpenShift

OpenShift has diverted a bit from Kubernetes (e.g: automounts empty volumes in all declared volumes without the user asking for it at all) and Docker (e.g: runs on an random user).

The biggest problem to run this image is the automount of empty directories because it empties the etc directory. In order to restore it the environment variable RESTORE_CONFIGURATION has been created. It can be used as follows:

oc new-app --name=artemis vromero/activemq-artemis -e RESTORE_CONFIGURATION=true

7. License

View license information for the software contained in this image.

8. User Feedback

8.1 Issues

If you have any problems with or questions about this image, please contact us through a GitHub issue.

8.2 Contributing

You are invited to contribute new features, fixes, or updates, large or small; we are always thrilled to receive pull requests, and do our best to process them as fast as we can.

Before you start to code, we recommend discussing your plans through a GitHub issue, especially for more ambitious contributions. This gives other contributors a chance to point you in the right direction, give you feedback on your design, and help you find out if someone else is working on the same thing.

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