arangodb
ArangoDB Overview
Secure your stack with a hardened ArangoDB image freshly-built by Minimus. Minimus images always include the most up-to-date package version for all packages and dependencies.
ArangoDB is a native graph multi-model database that unifies graph, document, key-value, vector, and full-text search in one engine with one query language.
Try It Out
Prerequisites
- A running Kubernetes cluster (v1.30 or higher is required by KEDA)
- Helm v3.8 or higher for OCI support (Installation instructions)
kubectlinstalled and configured
Step 1: Start Cluster
If you have a cluster to work with, skip this step. Otherwise, start a Minikube cluster. Deployment instructions
Step 2: Add Repository to your Local Client
Add the Helm chart to your local Helm client.
helm repo add arangodb https://arangodb.github.io/kube-arangodb
helm repo updateStep 3: Deploy Helm Chart
Create values.yaml with the following code:
operator:
enableCRDManagement: false
enableCRDCreation: false
features:
storageCRD: false
architectures:
- amd64
- arm64Install the deployment:
helm install arangodb arangodb/kube-arangodb \
-f values.yaml \
--wait --timeout 360sStep 4: Create file single-server.yaml
Save the file to substitute ArangoDB Minimus image and the relevant architecture: amd64 or arm64. The below example assumes amd64.
apiVersion: "database.arangodb.com/v1"
kind: "ArangoDeployment"
metadata:
name: "example-simple-single"
spec:
mode: Single
image: reg.mini.dev/arangodb
architecture:
- amd64
tls:
ttl: 2160hApply configured ArangoDB deployment:
kubectl apply -f single-server.yaml --wait=true --timeout 360s
kubectl wait --for=condition=Ready arangodeployment/example-simple-single --timeout=360s
kubectl wait --for=condition=Ready pod -l app=arangodb --timeout=360sNext, you'll need to port-forward the server pod that's running the server.
Run the following kubectl command to list the ArangoDB pods and locate the pod name for your example server:
kubectl get pods -l app=arangodbOpen a new terminal window and use kubectl port-forward to map the pod's port 8529 to your local port 8529.
Replace <pod-name> with the actual name of the pod you found above:
kubectl port-forward pod/<pod-name> 8529:8529Once port-forwarding is set up, you can continue following the subsequent steps using your original terminal window.
Step 5: Run Sample Commands
Check ArangoDB API version:
curl -k -u root: https://localhost:8529/_api/versionCreate a new database testdb using the ArangoDB shell (arangosh) command-line client tool and print all databases:
ARANGO_POD=$(kubectl get pods -l app=arangodb -o jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}')
kubectl exec $ARANGO_POD -c server -- \
arangosh --server.endpoint ssl://localhost:8529 \
--server.username root \
--server.password "" \
--javascript.execute-string 'db._createDatabase("testdb"); db._databases().forEach(function(d) { print(d); });'Visit the Arangodb Web UI at https://localhost:8529/_db/_system/_admin/aardvark/index.html.
Step 6: Clean Up
Uninstall the chart to delete the namespace and its resources, including Pods, Deployments, Services, Secrets, ConfigMaps, etc.:
helm uninstall arangodbTechnical Considerations
The ArangoDB image provided by Minimus is a FIPS-validated, slim, security-hardened alternative to the public image from Docker Hub. The images are largely interchangeable, with a few differences as noted below.
ArangoDB built by Minimus:
- Runs as root by default to support required functions. The public image also runs as root.
- Drill down on the version specification tab to see the default user, listening ports, entrypoint, volumes, environment variables, etc.
The Payoff
A hardened, minimal image that will remain more secure for the long run and accrue vulnerabilities at a slower rate.
- See the risk reduction dashboard for a detailed CVE comparison over the past 30 days.
- Review the compliance report to see the default hardening and security configurations for the image.
Terms & Info
Trademark
This catalog is published by Minimus. All product names, logos, and marks, other than those belonging to Minimus, shown are owned by their respective rights holders and appear here only to identify the open source software each image contains. Minimus claims no ownership of those marks and implies no affiliation with, endorsement by, certification by, or sponsorship by any rights holder.
Disclaimer
Images are provided "as-is" without warranty of any kind. "Hardened" refers to the security configuration applied at the time of build and does not constitute a guarantee of ongoing security or absence of vulnerabilities. The free tier is provided without support, SLA, or guaranteed patching timelines. Security updates may be applied to paid subscriptions before or instead of free tier images. By pulling or using any image you agree to our Terms of Use.