Bitnami Secure Image for Apache Solr
Apache Solr is an extremely powerful, open source enterprise search platform built on Apache Lucene. It is highly reliable and flexible, scalable, and designed to add value very quickly after launch.
Overview of Apache Solr Trademarks: This software listing is packaged by Bitnami. The respective trademarks mentioned in the offering are owned by the respective companies, and use of them does not imply any affiliation or endorsement.
TL;DR
docker run --name solr bitnami/solr:latest
You can find the available configuration options in the Environment Variables section.
Why use Bitnami Secure Images?
Those are hardened, minimal CVE images built and maintained by Bitnami. Bitnami Secure Images are based on the cloud-optimized, security-hardened enterprise OS Photon Linux. Why choose BSI images?
- Hardened secure images of popular open source software with Near-Zero Vulnerabilities
- Vulnerability Triage & Prioritization with VEX Statements, KEV and EPSS Scores
- Compliance focus with FIPS, STIG, and air-gap options, including secure bill of materials (SBOM)
- Software supply chain provenance attestation through in-toto
- First class support for the internet’s favorite Helm charts
Each image comes with valuable security metadata. You can view the metadata in our public catalog here. Note: Some data is only available with commercial subscriptions to BSI.
If you are looking for our previous generation of images based on Debian Linux, please see the Bitnami Legacy registry.
Supported tags and respective Dockerfile links
Learn more about the Bitnami tagging policy and the difference between rolling tags and immutable tags in our documentation page.
You can see the equivalence between the different tags by taking a look at the tags-info.yaml file present in the branch folder, i.e bitnami/ASSET/BRANCH/DISTRO/tags-info.yaml.
Subscribe to project updates by watching the bitnami/containers GitHub repository.
Get this image
The recommended way to get the Bitnami Solr Docker Image is to pull the prebuilt image from the Docker Hub Registry.
docker pull bitnami/solr:latest
To use a specific version, you can pull a versioned tag. You can view the list of available versions in the Docker Hub Registry.
docker pull bitnami/solr:[TAG]
If you wish, you can also build the image yourself by cloning the repository, changing to the directory containing the Dockerfile and executing the docker build command. Remember to replace the APP, VERSION and OPERATING-SYSTEM path placeholders in the example command below with the correct values.
git clone https://github.com/bitnami/containers.git
cd bitnami/APP/VERSION/OPERATING-SYSTEM
docker build -t bitnami/APP:latest .
Using docker-compose.yaml
Please be aware this file has not undergone internal testing. Consequently, we advise its use exclusively for development or testing purposes. For production-ready deployments, we highly recommend utilizing its associated Bitnami Helm chart.
Persisting your application
If you remove the container all your data and configurations will be lost, and the next time you run the image the database will be reinitialized. To avoid this loss of data, you should mount a volume that will persist even after the container is removed.
For persistence you should mount a volume at the /bitnami path. The above examples define a docker volume namely solr_data. The Solr application state will persist as long as this volume is not removed.
To avoid inadvertent removal of this volume you can mount host directories as data volumes. Alternatively you can make use of volume plugins to host the volume data.
Note
As this is a non-root container, the mounted files and directories must have the proper permissions for the UID
1001.
Connecting to other containers
Using Docker container networking, a Solr server running inside a container can easily be accessed by your application containers.
Containers attached to the same network can communicate with each other using the container name as the hostname.
Configuration
The following sections describe environment variables and related settings.
Environment variables
The following tables list the main variables you can set.
Customizable environment variables
| Name | Description | Default Value |
|---|---|---|
SOLR_ENABLE_CLOUD_MODE |
Starts solr in cloud mode | no |
SOLR_NUMBER_OF_NODES |
Number of nodes of the solr cloud cluster | 1 |
SOLR_HOST |
Solr Host name | nil |
SOLR_HOST_BIND |
Configuration to listen on a specific IP address or host name | 0.0.0.0 |
SOLR_HEAP |
Solr Heap | nil |
SOLR_SECURITY_MANAGER_ENABLED |
Solr Java security manager | false |
SOLR_JAVA_MEM |
Solr JVM memory | -Xms512m -Xmx512m |
SOLR_PORT_NUMBER |
Solr port number | 8983 |
SOLR_CORES |
Solr CORE name | nil |
SOLR_COLLECTION |
Solr COLLECTION name | nil |
SOLR_COLLECTION_REPLICAS |
Solar collection replicas | 1 |
SOLR_COLLECTION_SHARDS |
Solar collection shards | 1 |
SOLR_ENABLE_AUTHENTICATION |
Enables authentication | no |
SOLR_ADMIN_USERNAME |
Administrator Username | admin |
SOLR_ADMIN_PASSWORD |
Administrator password | bitnami |
SOLR_CLOUD_BOOTSTRAP |
Indicates if this node is the one that performs the boostraping | no |
SOLR_CORE_CONF_DIR |
Solar CORE configuration directory | ${SOLR_SERVER_DIR}/solr/configsets/_default/conf |
SOLR_SSL_ENABLED |
Indicates if Solr starts with SSL enabled | no |
SOLR_SSL_CHECK_PEER_NAME |
Indicates if Solr should check the peer names | false |
SOLR_SSL_KEY_STORE_PASSWORD |
Password for the Solr SSL keystore | nil |
SOLR_SSL_TRUST_STORE_PASSWORD |
Password for the Solr SSL truststore | nil |
SOLR_ZK_MAX_RETRIES |
Maximum retries when waiting for zookeeper configuration operations to finish | 5 |
SOLR_ZK_SLEEP_TIME |
Sleep time when waiting for zookeeper configuration operations to finish | 5 |
SOLR_ZK_CHROOT |
ZooKeeper ZNode chroot where to store solr data. Default: /solr | /solr |
SOLR_ZK_HOSTS |
ZooKeeper nodes (comma-separated list of host:port) |
nil |
Read-only environment variables
| Name | Description | Value |
|---|---|---|
BITNAMI_VOLUME_DIR |
Directory where to mount volumes. | /bitnami |
SOLR_BASE_DIR |
Solr installation directory. | ${BITNAMI_ROOT_DIR}/solr |
SOLR_JAVA_HOME |
JAVA installation directory. | ${BITNAMI_ROOT_DIR}/java |
SOLR_BIN_DIR |
Solr directory for binary executables. | ${SOLR_BASE_DIR}/bin |
SOLR_TMP_DIR |
Solr directory for temp files. | ${SOLR_BASE_DIR}/tmp |
SOLR_PID_DIR |
Solr directory for PID files. | ${SOLR_BASE_DIR}/tmp |
SOLR_LOGS_DIR |
Solr directory for logs files. | ${SOLR_BASE_DIR}/logs |
SOLR_SERVER_DIR |
Solr directory for server files. | ${SOLR_BASE_DIR}/server |
SOLR_VOLUME_DIR |
Solr persistence directory. | ${BITNAMI_VOLUME_DIR}/solr |
SOLR_DATA_TO_PERSIST |
Solr data to persist. | server/solr |
SOLR_PID_FILE |
Solr PID file | ${SOLR_PID_DIR}/solr-${SOLR_PORT_NUMBER}.pid |
SOLR_DAEMON_USER |
Solr system user | solr |
SOLR_DAEMON_GROUP |
Solr system group | solr |
SOLR_ZK_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT |
ZooKeeper connection attempt timeout. | 10 |
When you start the solr image, you can adjust the configuration of the instance by passing one or more environment variables either on the docker-compose file or on the docker run command line.
Using your Apache Solr Cores configuration files
In order to load your own configuration files, you will have to make them available to the container. You can do it mounting a volume in the desired location and setting the environment variable with the customized value (as it is pointed above, the default value is data_driven_schema_configs).
FIPS configuration in Bitnami Secure Images
The Bitnami Apache Solr Docker image from the Bitnami Secure Images catalog includes extra features and settings to configure the container with FIPS capabilities. You can configure the next environment variables:
OPENSSL_FIPS: whether OpenSSL runs in FIPS mode or not.yes(default),no.
Logging
The Bitnami Solr Docker image sends the container logs to the stdout. To view the logs:
docker logs solr
or using Docker Compose:
docker-compose logs solr
You can configure the containers logging driver using the --log-driver option if you wish to consume the container logs differently. In the default configuration docker uses the json-file driver.
Notable changes
The following subsections describe notable changes.
8.11.3-debian-12-r2 and 9.5.0-debian-12-r7
- Remove HDFS modules due to CVEs
8.8.0-debian-10-r11
- Adds SSL support.
8.8.0-debian-10-r9
- The Solr container initialization logic has been moved to Bash scripts.
- The size of the container image has been decreased.
- Added the support for cloud mode.
- Added support for authentication and admin user creation.
- Data migration for the upgrades. If you are running an older version of this container, run this version as user
rootand it will migrate your current data.
7.4.0-r23
- The Solr container has been migrated to a non-root user approach. Previously the container ran as the
rootuser and the Solr daemon was started as thesolruser. From now on, both the container and the Solr daemon run as user1001. As a consequence, the data directory must be writable by that user. You can revert this behavior by changingUSER 1001toUSER rootin the Dockerfile.
License
Copyright © 2026 Broadcom. The term "Broadcom" refers to Broadcom Inc. and/or its subsidiaries.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

