* Update landing page / README.md * Update GETTING_STARTED.md * Update installation.md * Update getting_the_image_info.md * update signing_the_url.md * Update watermark.md * Update presets.md * Update object_detection.md * Update autoquality.md * Update serving_local_files.md * Update docs/serving_files_from_s3.md * Update configuration.md * Update generating_the_url.md * Update chained_pipelines.md but chained pipelines section is not finished * Update serving_files_from_google_cloud_storage.md * Update new_relic.md * Update prometheus.md * Update datadog.md * Update image_formats_support.md * Update about_processing_pipeline.md * Update healthcheck.md * Update memory_usage_tweaks.md * Remove GIF/ICO/BMP/HEIF/AVIF support sections from docs/image_formats_support.md * Minor fixes of the docs * Update serving_files_from_azure_blob_storage.md * Fix issue with x and y offset for 're' watermark property * Fix params description in docs/watermark.md * Fix Alexander Madyankin GH name * Special thanks to Travis * Fix README Co-authored-by: DarthSim <darthsim@gmail.com>
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Installation
There are four ways you can install imgproxy:
Docker
imgproxy can (and this is highly recommended) be used as a standalone application inside a Docker container. Just pull the official image from Docker Hub:
docker pull darthsim/imgproxy:latest
docker run -p 8080:8080 -it darthsim/imgproxy
You can also build your own image. imgproxy is ready to be dockerized out of the box:
docker build -f docker/Dockerfile -t imgproxy .
docker run -p 8080:8080 -it imgproxy
Helm
imgproxy can be easily deployed to your Kubernetes cluster using Helm and our official Helm chart:
helm repo add imgproxy https://helm.imgproxy.net/
# With Helm 3
helm upgrade -i imgproxy imgproxy/imgproxy
# With Helm 2
helm upgrade -i --name imgproxy imgproxy/imgproxy
Check out the chart's README for more info.
Heroku
imgproxy can be deployed to Heroku with the click of a button:
That being said, you can also do it manually in just a few steps:
git clone https://github.com/imgproxy/imgproxy.git && cd imgproxy
heroku create your-application
heroku stack:set container
git push heroku master
Packages
Arch Linux and derivatives
imgproxy package is available from AUR.
macOS + Homebrew
imgproxy is available from Homebrew:
brew install imgproxy
From the source
You can get the imgproxy source code by cloning the GitHub repo:
git clone https://github.com/imgproxy/imgproxy.git
cd imgproxy
...or by downloading the source tarball:
mkdir imgproxy
cd imgproxy
curl -Ls https://github.com/imgproxy/imgproxy/archive/master.tar.gz \
| tar -xz --strip-components 1 -C .
You can also download a specific version:
mkdir imgproxy
cd imgproxy
curl -Ls https://github.com/imgproxy/imgproxy/archive/v2.13.1.tar.gz \
| tar -xz --strip-components 1 -C .
Ubuntu
First, install libvips.
The Ubuntu apt repository contains a pretty old version of libvips. You can use PPA to access a more recent version of libvips:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:dhor/myway
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install libvips-dev
But if you want to use all the features of imgproxy, it's recommended to build libvips from the source: https://github.com/libvips/ libvips/wiki/Build-for-Ubuntu
Next, install the latest version of Go:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:longsleep/golang-backports
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install golang-go
And finally, install imgproxy itself:
CGO_LDFLAGS_ALLOW="-s|-w" \
go build -o /usr/local/bin/imgproxy
macOS + Homebrew
brew install vips go
PKG_CONFIG_PATH="$(brew --prefix libffi)/lib/pkgconfig" \
CGO_LDFLAGS_ALLOW="-s|-w" \
CGO_CFLAGS_ALLOW="-Xpreprocessor" \
go build -o /usr/local/bin/imgproxy