This is the repository for the official Docker image for Clojure. It is automatically pulled and built by Stackbrew into the Docker registry. This image runs on OpenJDK 8, 11, 14, 15, and 16 and includes Leiningen, boot, and/or tools-deps (see below for tags and building instructions).
The version tags on these images look like (openjdk-major-version-)lein-N.N.N(-distro),
(openjdk-major-version-)boot-N.N.N(-distro), and (openjdk-major-version-)tools-deps(-distro).
These refer to which version of leiningen, boot, or tools-deps is packaged in the image (because they can then install
and use any version of Clojure at runtime). The lein (or lein-slim-buster, openjdk-14-lein, etc.)
images will always have a recent version of leiningen installed. If you want boot, specify either clojure:boot,
clojure:boot-slim-buster, or clojure:boot-N.N.N, clojure:boot-N.N.N-slim-buster,
clojure:openjdk-14-boot-N.N.N-slim-buster, etc. (where N.N.N is the version of boot you want installed). If
you want to use tools-deps, specify either clojure:tools-deps, clojure:tools-deps-slim-buster or other similar
variants.
As of 2020-3-20 the clojure:latest (also clojure because latest is the default) now has leiningen, boot, and
tools-deps installed.
Previously this tag only had leiningen installed. Installing the others is helpful for quick start examples, newcomers,
etc. as leiningen is by no means the de facto standard build tool these days. The downside is that the image is larger.
But for the latest tag it's a good trade off because for anything real we have always recommended using more specific
tags. No other tags are affected by this change.
Java has recently introduced a new release cadence of every 6 months and dropped the leading 1 major version number.
As of 2019-9-25, our images will default to the latest LTS release of OpenJDK (currently 11). But we also now provide
the ability to specify which version of Java you'd like via Docker tags:
JDK 1.8 tools-deps image: clojure:openjdk-8-tools-deps
JDK 11 variant of that image: clojure:openjdk-11-tools-deps or clojure:tool-deps
JDK 14 with the latest release of leiningen: clojure:openjdk-14
JDK 15 with boot 2.8.3: clojure:openjdk-15-boot-2.8.3
The upstream OpenJDK images are built on a few different variants of Debian Linux, so we have exposed those in our Docker tags as well. The default is now Debian slim-buster. But you can also specify which distro you'd like by appending it to the end of your Docker tag as in the following examples (but note that not every combination is provided upstream and thus likewise for us):
JDK 1.8 leiningen on Debian slim-buster: clojure:openjdk-8 or clojure:openjdk-8-lein or clojure:openjdk-8-lein-stretch
JDK 1.8 leiningen on Debian buster: clojure:openjdk-8-buster or clojure:openjdk-8-lein-buster
JDK 11 tools-deps on Debian slim-buster: clojure:tools-deps or clojure:openjdk-11-tools-deps or clojure:openjdk-11-tools-deps-slim-buster
JDK 15 tools-deps on Alpine: clojure:openjdk-15-tools-deps-alpine
Most of the upstream alpine-based openjdk builds have been deprecated, so we have followed suit. As of 2020-8-14 we provide an alpine variant for OpenJDK 16 builds, but that's it. And it is likely that that build will go away once OpenJDK 17 is released (as has happened with other recent releases).
For other versions of OpenJDK, we recommend migrating to the slim-buster variant instead. The older alpine images
won't go away, but neither will they receive security updates, version bumps, etc. We recommend that you cease using
them until / unless official upstream support resumes.
These images are based on the Debian buster distribution but have fewer packages installed and are thus much smaller
than the stretch or buster images. Their use is recommended.
Run an interactive shell from this image.
docker run -i -t clojure /bin/bash
Then within the shell, create a new Leiningen project and start a Clojure REPL.
lein new hello-world
cd hello-world
lein repl
The Dockerfiles are generated by the docker-clojure Clojure app in this repo.
You'll need the tools-deps distribution of Clojure installed to run the
build. Often this just means installing the clojure package for your system.
The ./build-images.sh script will generate the Dockerfiles and build all of the images.
The docker-clojure build tool has a test suite that can be run via the
./test.sh script.