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⛴ Docker image of Nextcloud

What is Nextcloud?

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A safe home for all your data. Access & share your files, calendars, contacts, mail & more from any device, on your terms.

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This Docker micro-service image is developed and maintained by the Nextcloud community. Nextcloud GmbH does not offer support for this Docker image. When you are looking to get professional support, you can become an enterprise customer or use Nextcloud All-in-One docker image - as the name suggests, Nextcloud All-in-One provides easy deployment and maintenance of Nextcloud Hub included in this one Nextcloud instance.

How to use this image

This image is designed to be used in a micro-service environment. There are two versions of the image you can choose from.

The apache tag contains a full Nextcloud installation including an apache web server. It is designed to be easy to use and gets you running pretty fast. This is also the default for the latest tag and version tags that are not further specified.

The second option is a fpm container. It is based on the php-fpm image and runs a fastCGI-Process that serves your Nextcloud page. To use this image it must be combined with any webserver that can proxy the http requests to the FastCGI-port of the container.

Try in PWD

Using the apache image

The apache image contains a webserver and exposes port 80. To start the container type:

$ docker run -d -p 8080:80 nextcloud

Now you can access Nextcloud at http://localhost:8080/ from your host system.

Using the fpm image

To use the fpm image, you need an additional web server, such as nginx, that can proxy http-request to the fpm-port of the container. For fpm connection this container exposes port 9000. In most cases, you might want to use another container or your host as proxy. If you use your host you can address your Nextcloud container directly on port 9000. If you use another container, make sure that you add them to the same docker network (via docker run --network <NAME> ... or a docker-compose file). In both cases you don't want to map the fpm port to your host.

$ docker run -d nextcloud:fpm

As the fastCGI-Process is not capable of serving static files (style sheets, images, ...), the webserver needs access to these files. This can be achieved with the volumes-from option. You can find more information in the docker-compose section.

Using an external database

By default, this container uses SQLite for data storage but the Nextcloud setup wizard (appears on first run) allows connecting to an existing MySQL/MariaDB or PostgreSQL database. You can also link a database container, e. g. --link my-mysql:mysql, and then use mysql as the database host on setup. More info is in the docker-compose section.

Persistent data

The Nextcloud installation and all data beyond what lives in the database (file uploads, etc.) are stored in the unnamed docker volume volume /var/www/html. The docker daemon will store that data within the docker directory /var/lib/docker/volumes/.... That means your data is saved even if the container crashes, is stopped or deleted.

A named Docker volume or a mounted host directory should be used for upgrades and backups. To achieve this, you need one volume for your database container and one for Nextcloud.

Nextcloud:

  • /var/www/html/ folder where all Nextcloud data lives
$ docker run -d \
-v nextcloud:/var/www/html \
nextcloud

Database:

  • /var/lib/mysql MySQL / MariaDB Data
  • /var/lib/postgresql/data PostgreSQL Data
$ docker run -d \
-v db:/var/lib/mysql \
mariadb:10.6

If you want to get fine grained access to your individual files, you can mount additional volumes for data, config, your theme and custom apps. The data, config files are stored in respective subfolders inside /var/www/html/. The apps are split into core apps (which are shipped with Nextcloud and you don't need to take care of) and a custom_apps folder. If you use a custom theme it would go into the themes subfolder.

Overview of the folders that can be mounted as volumes:

  • /var/www/html Main folder, needed for updating
  • /var/www/html/custom_apps installed / modified apps
  • /var/www/html/config local configuration
  • /var/www/html/data the actual data of your Nextcloud
  • /var/www/html/themes/<YOUR_CUSTOM_THEME> theming/branding

If you want to use named volumes for all of these, it would look like this:

$ docker run -d \
-v nextcloud:/var/www/html \
-v apps:/var/www/html/custom_apps \
-v config:/var/www/html/config \
-v data:/var/www/html/data \
-v theme:/var/www/html/themes/<YOUR_CUSTOM_THEME> \
nextcloud

If mounting additional volumes, you should note that data inside the main folder (/var/www/html) may be removed during installation and upgrades, unless listed in upgrade.exclude. You should consider:

  • Confirming that upgrade.exclude contains the files and folders that should persist during installation and upgrades; or
  • Mounting storage volumes to locations outside of /var/www/html.

Using the Nextcloud command-line interface

To use the Nextcloud command-line interface (aka. occ command):

$ docker exec --user www-data CONTAINER_ID php occ

or for docker-compose:

$ docker-compose exec --user www-data app php occ

Auto configuration via environment variables

The Nextcloud image supports auto configuration via environment variables. You can preconfigure everything that is asked on the install page on first run. To enable auto configuration, set your database connection via the following environment variables. You must specify all of the environment variables for a given database or the database environment variables defaults to SQLITE. ONLY use one database type!

SQLite:

  • SQLITE_DATABASE Name of the database using sqlite

MYSQL/MariaDB:

  • MYSQL_DATABASE Name of the database using mysql / mariadb.
  • MYSQL_USER Username for the database using mysql / mariadb.
  • MYSQL_PASSWORD Password for the database user using mysql / mariadb.
  • MYSQL_HOST Hostname of the database server using mysql / mariadb.

PostgreSQL:

  • POSTGRES_DB Name of the database using postgres.
  • POSTGRES_USER Username for the database using postgres.
  • POSTGRES_PASSWORD Password for the database user using postgres.
  • POSTGRES_HOST Hostname of the database server using postgres.

As an alternative to passing sensitive information via environment variables, _FILE may be appended to the previously listed environment variables, causing the initialization script to load the values for those variables from files present in the container. See Docker secrets section below.

If you set any group of values (i.e. all of MYSQL_DATABASE, MYSQL_USER, MYSQL_PASSWORD, MYSQL_HOST), they will not be asked in the install page on first run. With a complete configuration by using all variables for your database type, you can additionally configure your Nextcloud instance by setting admin user and password (only works if you set both):

  • NEXTCLOUD_ADMIN_USER Name of the Nextcloud admin user.
  • NEXTCLOUD_ADMIN_PASSWORD Password for the Nextcloud admin user.

If you want, you can set the data directory, otherwise default value will be used.

  • NEXTCLOUD_DATA_DIR (default: /var/www/html/data) Configures the data directory where nextcloud stores all files from the users.

One or more trusted domains can be set through environment variable, too. They will be added to the configuration after install.

  • NEXTCLOUD_TRUSTED_DOMAINS (not set by default) Optional space-separated list of domains

The install and update script is only triggered when a default command is used (apache-foreground or php-fpm). If you use a custom command you have to enable the install / update with

  • NEXTCLOUD_UPDATE (default: 0)

You might want to make sure the htaccess is up to date after each container update. Especially on multiple swarm nodes as any discrepancy will make your server unusable.

  • NEXTCLOUD_INIT_HTACCESS (not set by default) Set it to true to enable run occ maintenance:update:htaccess after container initialization.

If you want to use Redis you have to create a separate Redis container in your setup / in your docker-compose file. To inform Nextcloud about the Redis container, pass in the following parameters:

  • REDIS_HOST (not set by default) Name of Redis container
  • REDIS_HOST_PORT (default: 6379) Optional port for Redis, only use for external Redis servers that run on non-standard ports.
  • REDIS_HOST_PASSWORD (not set by default) Redis password

The use of Redis is recommended to prevent file locking problems. See the examples for further instructions.

To use an external SMTP server, you have to provide the connection details. To configure Nextcloud to use SMTP add:

  • SMTP_HOST (not set by default): The hostname of the SMTP server.
  • SMTP_SECURE (empty by default): Set to ssl to use SSL, or tls to use STARTTLS.
  • SMTP_PORT (default: 465 for SSL and 25 for non-secure connections): Optional port for the SMTP connection. Use 587 for an alternative port for STARTTLS.
  • SMTP_AUTHTYPE (default: LOGIN): The method used for authentication. Use PLAIN if no authentication is required.
  • SMTP_NAME (empty by default): The username for the authentication.
  • SMTP_PASSWORD (empty by default): The password for the authentication.
  • MAIL_FROM_ADDRESS (not set by default): Set the local-part for the 'from' field in the emails sent by Nextcloud.
  • MAIL_DOMAIN (not set by default): Set a different domain for the emails than the domain where Nextcloud is installed.

Check the Nextcloud documentation for other values to configure SMTP.

To use an external S3 compatible object store as primary storage, set the following variables:

  • OBJECTSTORE_S3_HOST: The hostname of the object storage server
  • OBJECTSTORE_S3_BUCKET: The name of the bucket that Nextcloud should store the data in
  • OBJECTSTORE_S3_KEY: AWS style access key
  • OBJECTSTORE_S3_SECRET: AWS style secret access key
  • OBJECTSTORE_S3_PORT: The port that the object storage server is being served over
  • OBJECTSTORE_S3_SSL (default: true): Whether or not SSL/TLS should be used to communicate with object storage server
  • OBJECTSTORE_S3_REGION: The region that the S3 bucket resides in.
  • OBJECTSTORE_S3_USEPATH_STYLE (default: false): Not required for AWS S3
  • OBJECTSTORE_S3_LEGACYAUTH (default: false): Not required for AWS S3
  • OBJECTSTORE_S3_OBJECT_PREFIX (default: urn:oid:): Prefix to prepend to the fileid
  • OBJECTSTORE_S3_AUTOCREATE (default: true): Create the container if it does not exist

Check the Nextcloud documentation for more information.

To use an external OpenStack Swift object store as primary storage, set the following variables:

  • OBJECTSTORE_SWIFT_URL: The Swift identity (Keystone) endpoint
  • OBJECTSTORE_SWIFT_AUTOCREATE (default: false): Whether or not Nextcloud should automatically create the Swift container
  • OBJECTSTORE_SWIFT_USER_NAME: Swift username
  • OBJECTSTORE_SWIFT_USER_PASSWORD: Swift user password
  • OBJECTSTORE_SWIFT_USER_DOMAIN (default: Default): Swift user domain
  • OBJECTSTORE_SWIFT_PROJECT_NAME: OpenStack project name
  • OBJECTSTORE_SWIFT_PROJECT_DOMAIN (default: Default): OpenStack project domain
  • OBJECTSTORE_SWIFT_SERVICE_NAME (default: swift): Swift service name
  • OBJECTSTORE_SWIFT_REGION: Swift endpoint region
  • OBJECTSTORE_SWIFT_CONTAINER_NAME: Swift container (bucket) that Nextcloud should store the data in

Check the Nextcloud documentation for more information.

To customize other PHP limits you can simply change the following variables:

  • PHP_MEMORY_LIMIT (default 512M) This sets the maximum amount of memory in bytes that a script is allowed to allocate. This is meant to help prevent poorly written scripts from eating up all available memory but it can prevent normal operation if set too tight.
  • PHP_UPLOAD_LIMIT (default 512M) This sets the upload limit (post_max_size and upload_max_filesize) for big files. Note that you may have to change other limits depending on your client, webserver or operating system. Check the Nextcloud documentation for more information.

Using the apache image behind a reverse proxy and auto configure server host and protocol

The apache image will replace the remote addr (IP address visible to Nextcloud) with the IP address from X-Real-IP if the request is coming from a proxy in 10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12 or 192.168.0.0/16 by default. If you want Nextcloud to pick up the server host (HTTP_X_FORWARDED_HOST), protocol (HTTP_X_FORWARDED_PROTO) and client IP (HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR) from a trusted proxy, then disable rewrite IP and add the reverse proxy's IP address to TRUSTED_PROXIES.

  • APACHE_DISABLE_REWRITE_IP (not set by default): Set to 1 to disable rewrite IP.

  • TRUSTED_PROXIES (empty by default): A space-separated list of trusted proxies. CIDR notation is supported for IPv4.

If the TRUSTED_PROXIES approach does not work for you, try using fixed values for overwrite parameters.

  • OVERWRITEHOST (empty by default): Set the hostname of the proxy. Can also specify a port.
  • OVERWRITEPROTOCOL (empty by default): Set the protocol of the proxy, http or https.
  • OVERWRITECLIURL (empty by default): Set the cli url of the proxy (e.g. https://mydnsname.example.com)
  • OVERWRITEWEBROOT (empty by default): Set the absolute path of the proxy.
  • OVERWRITECONDADDR (empty by default): Regex to overwrite the values dependent on the remote address.

Check the Nexcloud documentation for more details.

Keep in mind that once set, removing these environment variables won't remove these values from the configuration file, due to how Nextcloud merges configuration files together.

Running this image with docker-compose

The easiest way to get a fully featured and functional setup is using a docker-compose file. There are too many different possibilities to setup your system, so here are only some examples of what you have to look for.

At first, make sure you have chosen the right base image (fpm or apache) and added features you wanted (see below). In every case, you would want to add a database container and docker volumes to get easy access to your persistent data. When you want to have your server reachable from the internet, adding HTTPS-encryption is mandatory! See below for more information.

Base version - apache

This version will use the apache image and add a mariaDB container. The volumes are set to keep your data persistent. This setup provides no ssl encryption and is intended to run behind a proxy.

Make sure to pass in values for MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD and MYSQL_PASSWORD variables before you run this setup.

version: '2'

volumes:
  nextcloud:
  db:

services:
  db:
    image: mariadb:10.6
    restart: always
    command: --transaction-isolation=READ-COMMITTED --log-bin=binlog --binlog-format=ROW
    volumes:
      - db:/var/lib/mysql
    environment:
      - MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=
      - MYSQL_PASSWORD=
      - MYSQL_DATABASE=nextcloud
      - MYSQL_USER=nextcloud

  app:
    image: nextcloud
    restart: always
    ports:
      - 8080:80
    links:
      - db
    volumes:
      - nextcloud:/var/www/html
    environment:
      - MYSQL_PASSWORD=
      - MYSQL_DATABASE=nextcloud
      - MYSQL_USER=nextcloud
      - MYSQL_HOST=db

Then run docker-compose up -d, now you can access Nextcloud at http://localhost:8080/ from your host system.

Base version - FPM

When using the FPM image, you need another container that acts as web server on port 80 and proxies the requests to the Nextcloud container. In this example a simple nginx container is combined with the Nextcloud-fpm image and a MariaDB database container. The data is stored in docker volumes. The nginx container also needs access to static files from your Nextcloud installation. It gets access to all the volumes mounted to Nextcloud via the volumes_from option.The configuration for nginx is stored in the configuration file nginx.conf, that is mounted into the container. An example can be found in the examples section here.

As this setup does not include encryption, it should be run behind a proxy.

Make sure to pass in values for MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD and MYSQL_PASSWORD variables before you run this setup.

version: '2'

volumes:
  nextcloud:
  db:

services:
  db:
    image: mariadb:10.6
    restart: always
    command: --transaction-isolation=READ-COMMITTED --log-bin=binlog --binlog-format=ROW
    volumes:
      - db:/var/lib/mysql
    environment:
      - MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=
      - MYSQL_PASSWORD=
      - MYSQL_DATABASE=nextcloud
      - MYSQL_USER=nextcloud

  app:
    image: nextcloud:fpm
    restart: always
    links:
      - db
    volumes:
      - nextcloud:/var/www/html
    environment:
      - MYSQL_PASSWORD=
      - MYSQL_DATABASE=nextcloud
      - MYSQL_USER=nextcloud
      - MYSQL_HOST=db

  web:
    image: nginx
    restart: always
    ports:
      - 8080:80
    links:
      - app
    volumes:
      - ./nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf:ro
    volumes_from:
      - app

Then run docker-compose up -d, now you can access Nextcloud at http://localhost:8080/ from your host system.

Docker Secrets

As an alternative to passing sensitive information via environment variables, _FILE may be appended to the previously listed environment variables, causing the initialization script to load the values for those variables from files present in the container. In particular, this can be used to load passwords from Docker secrets stored in /run/secrets/<secret_name> files. For example:

version: '3.2'

services:
  db:
    image: postgres
    restart: always
    volumes:
      - db:/var/lib/postgresql/data
    environment:
      - POSTGRES_DB_FILE=/run/secrets/postgres_db
      - POSTGRES_USER_FILE=/run/secrets/postgres_user
      - POSTGRES_PASSWORD_FILE=/run/secrets/postgres_password
    secrets:
      - postgres_db
      - postgres_password
      - postgres_user

  app:
    image: nextcloud
    restart: always
    ports:
      - 8080:80
    volumes:
      - nextcloud:/var/www/html
    environment:
      - POSTGRES_HOST=db
      - POSTGRES_DB_FILE=/run/secrets/postgres_db
      - POSTGRES_USER_FILE=/run/secrets/postgres_user
      - POSTGRES_PASSWORD_FILE=/run/secrets/postgres_password
      - NEXTCLOUD_ADMIN_PASSWORD_FILE=/run/secrets/nextcloud_admin_password
      - NEXTCLOUD_ADMIN_USER_FILE=/run/secrets/nextcloud_admin_user
    depends_on:
      - db
    secrets:
      - nextcloud_admin_password
      - nextcloud_admin_user
      - postgres_db
      - postgres_password
      - postgres_user

volumes:
  db:
  nextcloud:

secrets:
  nextcloud_admin_password:
    file: ./nextcloud_admin_password.txt # put admin password in this file
  nextcloud_admin_user:
    file: ./nextcloud_admin_user.txt # put admin username in this file
  postgres_db:
    file: ./postgres_db.txt # put postgresql db name in this file
  postgres_password:
    file: ./postgres_password.txt # put postgresql password in this file
  postgres_user:
    file: ./postgres_user.txt # put postgresql username in this file

Currently, this is only supported for NEXTCLOUD_ADMIN_PASSWORD, NEXTCLOUD_ADMIN_USER, MYSQL_DATABASE, MYSQL_PASSWORD, MYSQL_USER, POSTGRES_DB, POSTGRES_PASSWORD, POSTGRES_USER, REDIS_HOST_PASSWORD, SMTP_PASSWORD, OBJECTSTORE_S3_KEY, and OBJECTSTORE_S3_SECRET.

If you set any group of values (i.e. all of MYSQL_DATABASE_FILE, MYSQL_USER_FILE, MYSQL_PASSWORD_FILE, MYSQL_HOST), the script will not use the corresponding group of environment variables (MYSQL_DATABASE, MYSQL_USER, MYSQL_PASSWORD, MYSQL_HOST).

Make your Nextcloud available from the internet

Until here, your Nextcloud is just available from your docker host. If you want your Nextcloud available from the internet adding SSL encryption is mandatory.

HTTPS - SSL encryption

There are many different possibilities to introduce encryption depending on your setup.

We recommend using a reverse proxy in front of your Nextcloud installation. Your Nextcloud will only be reachable through the proxy, which encrypts all traffic to the clients. You can mount your manually generated certificates to the proxy or use a fully automated solution which generates and renews the certificates for you.

In our examples section we have an example for a fully automated setup using a reverse proxy, a container for Let's Encrypt certificate handling, database and Nextcloud. It uses the popular nginx-proxy and docker-letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion containers. Please check the according documentations before using this setup.

First use

When you first access your Nextcloud, the setup wizard will appear and ask you to choose an administrator account username, password and the database connection. For the database use db as host and nextcloud as table and user name. Also enter the password you chose in your docker-compose.yml file.

Update to a newer version

Updating the Nextcloud container is done by pulling the new image, throwing away the old container and starting the new one.

It is only possible to upgrade one major version at a time. For example, if you want to upgrade from version 14 to 16, you will have to upgrade from version 14 to 15, then from 15 to 16.

Since all data is stored in volumes, nothing gets lost. The startup script will check for the version in your volume and the installed docker version. If it finds a mismatch, it automatically starts the upgrade process. Don't forget to add all the volumes to your new container, so it works as expected.

$ docker pull nextcloud
$ docker stop <your_nextcloud_container>
$ docker rm <your_nextcloud_container>
$ docker run <OPTIONS> -d nextcloud

Beware that you have to run the same command with the options that you used to initially start your Nextcloud. That includes volumes, port mapping.

When using docker-compose your compose file takes care of your configuration, so you just have to run:

$ docker-compose pull
$ docker-compose up -d

Adding Features

A lot of people want to use additional functionality inside their Nextcloud installation. If the image does not include the packages you need, you can easily build your own image on top of it. Start your derived image with the FROM statement and add whatever you like.

FROM nextcloud:apache

RUN ...

The examples folder gives a few examples on how to add certain functionalities, like including the cron job, smb-support or imap-authentication.

If you use your own Dockerfile, you need to configure your docker-compose file accordingly. Switch out the image option with build. You have to specify the path to your Dockerfile. (in the example it's in the same directory next to the docker-compose file)

  app:
    build: .
    restart: always
    links:
      - db
    volumes:
      - data:/var/www/html/data
      - config:/var/www/html/config
      - apps:/var/www/html/apps

If you intend to use another command to run the image, make sure that you set NEXTCLOUD_UPDATE=1 in your Dockerfile. Otherwise the installation and update will not work.

FROM nextcloud:apache

...

ENV NEXTCLOUD_UPDATE=1

CMD ["/usr/bin/supervisord"]

Updating your own derived image is also very simple. When a new version of the Nextcloud image is available run:

docker build -t your-name --pull .
docker run -d your-name

or for docker-compose:

docker-compose build --pull
docker-compose up -d

The --pull option tells docker to look for new versions of the base image. Then the build instructions inside your Dockerfile are run on top of the new image.

Migrating an existing installation

You're already using Nextcloud and want to switch to docker? Great! Here are some things to look out for:

  1. Define your whole Nextcloud infrastructure in a docker-compose file and run it with docker-compose up -d to get the base installation, volumes and database. Work from there.
  2. Restore your database from a mysqldump (nextcloud_db_1 is the name of your db container)
    • To import from a MySQL dump use the following commands
    docker cp ./database.dmp nextcloud_db_1:/dmp
    docker-compose exec db sh -c "mysql --user USER --password PASSWORD nextcloud < /dmp"
    docker-compose exec db rm /dmp
    • To import from a PostgreSQL dump use to following commands
    docker cp ./database.dmp nextcloud_db_1:/dmp
    docker-compose exec db sh -c "psql -U USER --set ON_ERROR_STOP=on nextcloud < /dmp"
    docker-compose exec db rm /dmp
  3. Edit your config.php
    1. Set database connection
      • In case of MySQL database
      'dbhost' => 'db:3306',
      • In case of PostgreSQL database
      'dbhost' => 'db:5432',
    2. Make sure you have no configuration for the apps_paths. Delete lines like these
      'apps_paths' => array (
          0 => array (
              'path' => OC::$SERVERROOT.'/apps',
              'url' => '/apps',
              'writable' => true,
          ),
      ),
    3. Make sure to have the apps directory non writable and the custom_apps directory writable
      'apps_paths' => array (
        0 => array (
          'path' => '/var/www/html/apps',
          'url' => '/apps',
          'writable' => false,
        ),
        1 => array (
          'path' => '/var/www/html/custom_apps',
          'url' => '/custom_apps',
          'writable' => true,
        ),
      ),
    4. Make sure your data directory is set to /var/www/html/data
      'datadirectory' => '/var/www/html/data',
  4. Copy your data (nextcloud_app_1 is the name of your Nextcloud container):
    docker cp ./data/ nextcloud_app_1:/var/www/html/
    docker-compose exec app chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/html/data
    docker cp ./theming/ nextcloud_app_1:/var/www/html/
    docker-compose exec app chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/html/theming
    docker cp ./config/config.php nextcloud_app_1:/var/www/html/config
    docker-compose exec app chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/html/config
    If you want to preserve the metadata of your files like timestamps, copy the data directly on the host to the named volume using plain cp like this:
    cp --preserve --recursive ./data/ /path/to/nextcloudVolume/data
  5. Copy only the custom apps you use (or simply redownload them from the web interface):
    docker cp ./custom_apps/ nextcloud_data:/var/www/html/
    docker-compose exec app chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/html/custom_apps

Questions / Issues

If you got any questions or problems using the image, please visit our Github Repository and write an issue.

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📱🗞️ Android client for the Nextcloud news/feed reader app
Java
682
star
17

notes

✎ Distraction-free notes and writing
JavaScript
604
star
18

photos

📸 Your memories under your control
JavaScript
574
star
19

contacts

📇 Contacts app for Nextcloud
JavaScript
565
star
20

tasks

✅ Tasks app for Nextcloud
JavaScript
563
star
21

text

📑 Collaborative document editing using Markdown
JavaScript
546
star
22

cookbook

🍲 A library for all your recipes
HTML
532
star
23

recognize

👁 👂 Smart media tagging for Nextcloud: recognizes faces, objects, landscapes, music genres
PHP
532
star
24

maps

🌍🌏🌎 The whole world fits inside your cloud!
JavaScript
490
star
25

documentation

📘 Nextcloud documentation
HTML
490
star
26

social

🎉 Social can be used for work, or to connect to the fediverse!
PHP
464
star
27

talk-android

📱😀 Video & audio calls through Nextcloud on Android
Kotlin
461
star
28

previewgenerator

Nextcloud app to do preview generation in the background.
PHP
456
star
29

richdocuments

📑 Collabora Online for Nextcloud
PHP
353
star
30

forms

📝 Simple form & survey app for Nextcloud
JavaScript
316
star
31

helm

A community maintained helm chart for deploying Nextcloud on Kubernetes.
Smarty
315
star
32

twofactor_totp

🔑 Second factor TOTP (RFC 6238) provider for Nextcloud
JavaScript
286
star
33

groupfolders

📁👩‍👩‍👧‍👦 Admin-configured folders shared by everyone in a group. https://github.com/nextcloud-releases/groupfolders
PHP
279
star
34

end_to_end_encryption

🔐 Server API to support End-to-End Encryption
PHP
275
star
35

appstore

🏪 App Store for Nextcloud
Python
262
star
36

polls

🗳️ Polls app for Nextcloud
JavaScript
255
star
37

providers

community-maintained list of Nextcloud providers
234
star
38

nextcloud.com

🌏 Our website
PHP
208
star
39

notify_push

Update notifications for nextcloud clients
Rust
202
star
40

backup

Backup now. Restore later.
PHP
202
star
41

nextcloud-vue

🍱 Vue.js components for Nextcloud app development ✌ https://npmjs.org/@nextcloud/vue
Vue
198
star
42

client_theming

💻 Nextcloud themed desktop client - Moved over to https://github.com/nextcloud/desktop
Shell
197
star
43

fulltextsearch

🔍 Core of the full-text search framework for Nextcloud
PHP
197
star
44

ocsms

📱 Nextcloud/ownCloud PhoneSync server application
JavaScript
189
star
45

tables

🍱 Nextcloud tables app
JavaScript
144
star
46

circles

👪 Create groups with other users on a Nextcloud instance and share with them
PHP
143
star
47

ansible-collection-nextcloud-admin

The ansible galaxy for your nextcloud administrative needs.
Jinja
138
star
48

registration

User registration app for Nextcloud
JavaScript
136
star
49

documentserver_community

Document server for onlyoffice
PHP
128
star
50

cms_pico

🗃 Integrate Pico CMS and let your users manage their own websites
PHP
127
star
51

talk-ios

📱😀 Video & audio calls through Nextcloud on iOS
Objective-C
123
star
52

neon

A framework for building convergent cross-platform Nextcloud clients using Flutter.
Dart
122
star
53

passman-webextension

Webextension for the Passman Nextcloud app. Also offers browser extension & Android app.
JavaScript
115
star
54

activity

⚡ Activity app for Nextcloud
JavaScript
115
star
55

twofactor_u2f

🔑 U2F second factor provider for Nextcloud
JavaScript
112
star
56

talk-desktop

💬💻 Nextcloud Talk Desktop Client Preview
JavaScript
110
star
57

gallery

DEPRECATED Gallery app was replaced by Photos
JavaScript
110
star
58

twofactor_gateway

🔑 Second factor provider using an external messaging gateway (SMS, Telegram, Signal)
PHP
109
star
59

external

🌐 Embed external sites in your Nextcloud
JavaScript
104
star
60

notifications

🔔 Notifications app for Nextcloud
PHP
102
star
61

user_external

👥 External user authentication methods like IMAP, SMB and FTP
PHP
101
star
62

news-updater

📰 Fast, parallel feed updater for the News app; written in Python
Python
100
star
63

integration_google

🇬 Google integration into Nextcloud
JavaScript
98
star
64

nextcloud-filelink

✉️ 📤 "Nextcloud for Filelink" is a Thunderbird extension which makes it easy to send large attachments with Thunderbird by uploading them first to a Nextcloud server and by then inserting the link into the body of your email.
JavaScript
96
star
65

serverinfo

📊 A monitoring app which creates a server info dashboard for admins
JavaScript
94
star
66

user_saml

🔒 App for authenticating Nextcloud users using SAML https://apps.nextcloud.com/apps/user_saml
PHP
93
star
67

collectives

Collectives is a Nextcloud App for activist and community projects to organize together.
JavaScript
93
star
68

health

Nextcloud health app
JavaScript
92
star
69

passman-android

🔑 Android app for Passman.
C++
92
star
70

files_videoplayer

📼 Old video viewer for Nextcloud
JavaScript
91
star
71

android-library

☎️ Nextcloud Android library
Java
85
star
72

files_pdfviewer

📖 A PDF viewer for Nextcloud
JavaScript
85
star
73

suspicious_login

Detect and warn about suspicious IPs logging into Nextcloud
PHP
84
star
74

viewer

🖼 Simple file viewer with slideshow for media
JavaScript
83
star
75

unsplash

📸🔀☁️ Random Nextcloud log in background from Unsplash
JavaScript
82
star
76

fulltextsearch_elasticsearch

🔍 Use Elasticsearch to index the content of your Nextcloud
PHP
77
star
77

user_oidc

OIDC connect user backend for Nextcloud
PHP
76
star
78

files_antivirus

👾 Antivirus app for Nextcloud Files
JavaScript
74
star
79

files_texteditor

📄 Text editor for plaintext files
JavaScript
71
star
80

Android-SingleSignOn

Single sign-on for Nextcloud (Android Library Project)
Java
70
star
81

user_sql

🔒 App for authenticating Nextcloud users using SQL
PHP
66
star
82

workflow_script

Rule based processing of files through specified external scripts
PHP
65
star
83

files_rightclick

👉 Right click menu for Nextcloud
JavaScript
64
star
84

ransomware_protection

An app that prevents uploading files that have names that are linked to known ransomware
PHP
62
star
85

windows-universal

📱 Nextcloud Windows Mobile app
C#
59
star
86

security-advisories

👮 Security advisories of Nextcloud
PHP
59
star
87

dashboard

ARCHIVED, new Dashboard is in the server
PHP
58
star
88

integration_openproject

Integration of OpenProject project manager in Nextcloud
PHP
56
star
89

integration_whiteboard

✏ A whiteboard for Nextcloud, using Spacedeck
PHP
53
star
90

encryption-recovery-tools

This project contains tools to recover files that have been encrypted with the Nextcloud End-to-End Encryption or Nextcloud Server-Side Encryption.
PHP
53
star
91

files_automatedtagging

🔖 An app for Nextcloud that assigns tags to newly uploaded files based on some conditions
JavaScript
53
star
92

logreader

📜 Log reader for Nextcloud
JavaScript
52
star
93

calendar_resource_management

Resources back-end for the Nextcloud CalDAV server
PHP
52
star
94

impersonate

👻 Allow administrators to become a different user
JavaScript
52
star
95

cdav-library

📅 📇 CalDAV and CardDAV client library for JavaScript
JavaScript
51
star
96

3rdparty

🔋 3rd party libraries that are needed to run Nextcloud
PHP
51
star
97

files_fulltextsearch

🔍 Index the content of your files
PHP
50
star
98

files_accesscontrol

🚫 App to manage access control for files
PHP
49
star
99

bruteforcesettings

🕵 Allow admins to configure the brute force settings
JavaScript
49
star
100

twofactor_webauthn

WebAuthn Two-Factor Provider for Nextcloud
PHP
49
star