Step 1: Running Navidrome
As mentionned before, I am going to explain how to run Navidrome using Docker Compose. If you have trouble following some steps, I will link to short videos showing how to do them.
Start by creating a folder and cd into it. video
Edit a file named docker-compose.yml and paste in this inside:
services:
navidrome:
image: deluan/navidrome:latest
user: 1000:1000
ports:
- "4533:4533" # change it to `127.0.0.1:4533:4533` after you've set up the reverse proxy, if you plan on setting one up
restart: unless-stopped
environment:
ND_SCANSCHEDULE: 1h # at what frequency navidrome should scan for new content. set to 0 to disable
ND_LOGLEVEL: info
ND_SESSIONTIMEOUT: 24h
ND_BASEURL: "https://music.example.com" # change this to the url you want navidrome to be accessible at. remove this line if no remote access is planned
volumes:
- "./data:/data" # where navidrome's config etc. will be stored
- "../music:/music:ro" # where we will put our music. `ro` means read-only so navidrome cannot edit/remove files
There are many, many more configuration options that you can find here.
After that, run sudo docker compose up -d and sudo docker compose logs -f. The first command start the containers required for navidrome (which is just navidrome in this case) and the second one prints the containers logs in the terminal, -f meaning follow, so keep printing new logs as they arrive. video
If everything went correctly, Navidrome should now be accessible at http://<server ip>:4533! If not, read the logs and troubleshoot yourself! (jk, I will add some troubleshooting steps!)
It should ask you to create an admin user, enter a username and password (a strong one if you plan on having remote access!) and confirm.
You should now be on Navidrome's home page, which is recently added albums.