Bitnami Secure Image for NATS
NATS is an open source, lightweight and high-performance messaging system. It is ideal for distributed systems and supports modern cloud architectures and pub-sub, request-reply and queuing models.
Overview of NATS 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
Use this quick command to run the container.
docker run -it --name nats bitnami/nats:latest
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.
How to deploy NATS in Kubernetes
Deploying Bitnami applications as Helm Charts is the easiest way to get started with our applications on Kubernetes. Read more about the installation in the Bitnami NATS Chart GitHub repository.
Why use a non-root container?
Non-root container images add an extra layer of security and are generally recommended for production environments. However, because they run as a non-root user, privileged tasks are typically off-limits. Learn more about non-root containers in our docs.
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.
Get this image
The recommended way to get the Bitnami NATS Docker Image is to pull the prebuilt image from the Docker Hub Registry.
docker pull bitnami/nats: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/nats:[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.
Connecting to other containers
Using Docker container networking, a NATS server running inside a container can easily be accessed by your application containers using a NATS client.
Containers attached to the same network can communicate with each other using the container name as the host name.
Using the command line
In this example, we will create a NATS client instance that will connect to the server instance that is running on the same docker network as the client.
-
Create a network
docker network create app-tier --driver bridge -
Launch the NATS server instance
Use the
--network app-tierargument to thedocker runcommand to attach the NATS container to theapp-tiernetwork.docker run -d --name nats-server \ --network app-tier \ --publish 4222:4222 \ --publish 6222:6222 \ --publish 8222:8222 \ --volume /path/to/nats-server.conf:/etc/nats-server.conf:ro \ bitnami/nats:latest -c /etc/nats-server.conf -
Launch your NATS client instance
You can create a NATS client instance as shown below:
docker run -it --rm \
--network app-tier \
--volume /path/to/your/workspace:/go \
bitnami/natscli -s nats://nats-server:4222 <your-nats-command>
Using a Docker Compose file
When not specified, Docker Compose automatically sets up a new network and attaches all deployed services to that network. However, we will explicitly define a new bridge network named app-tier. In this example we assume that you want to connect to the NATS server from your own custom application image which is identified in the following snippet by the service name myapp.
version: '2'
networks:
app-tier:
driver: bridge
services:
nats:
image: bitnami/nats:latest
ports:
- 4222:4222
- 6222:6222
- 8222:8222
networks:
- app-tier
volumes:
- /path/to/nats-server.conf:/etc/nats-server.conf:ro
myapp:
image: YOUR_APPLICATION_IMAGE
networks:
- app-tier
Important
- Update the
YOUR_APPLICATION_IMAGEplaceholder in the above snippet with your application image.- In your application container, use the host name
natsto connect to the NATS server.
Launch the containers using:
docker-compose up -d
Configuration
The following sections describe how to run commands and where to find further documentation.
Running commands
To run commands inside this container you can use docker run, for example to execute nats-server -c nats-server.cfg you can follow the example below:
docker run -d --name nats-server -p 4222:4222 -p 6222:6222 -p 8222:8222 \
--volume /path/to/nats-server.conf:/etc/nats-server.conf:ro \
bitnami/nats:latest -c /etc/nats-server.conf
Additional documentation
For additional documentation, please check NATS documentation.
Notable changes
The following subsections describe notable changes.
2.10.24-debian-12-r3
- This image revision dramatically reduces the image given it removes the existing OS distribution. Instead, it simply includes the NATS binary on top of a scratch base image.
2.6.4-debian-10-r14
- The configuration logic is now based on Bash scripts in the rootfs/ folder.
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.

