images: image: repository: ccr.ccs.tencentyun.com/seembox/ixsystems_nextcloud-fpm tag: 31.0.8-fpm-954edb5c notify_push_image: repository: ixsystems/nextcloud-notify-push tag: 1.2.0-337ad10d nginx_image: repository: nginxinc/nginx-unprivileged tag: 1.29.1 postgres_17_image: repository: postgres tag: 17.6-bookworm redis_image: repository: valkey/valkey tag: 8.1.3 imaginary_image: repository: ghcr.io/nextcloud-releases/aio-imaginary tag: "20250905_100617" postgres_upgrade_image: repository: ixsystems/postgres-upgrade tag: 1.0.4 consts: nextcloud_container_name: nextcloud cron_container_name: cron perms_container_name: permissions redis_container_name: redis postgres_container_name: postgres nginx_container_name: nginx imaginary_container_name: imaginary notify_push_container_name: notify-push db_user: nextcloud db_name: nextcloud internal_nextcloud_port: 9000 internal_imaginary_port: 9000 internal_notify_push_port: 7867 html_path: /var/www/html data_path: /nc-data ssl_key_path: /etc/nginx-certs/private.key ssl_cert_path: /etc/nginx-certs/public.crt notes: | To use `occ` commands, you just shell into the nextcloud container and run `occ` directly. No need to use neither `sudo` or `php`. For example `occ status`.