Docker (Apple Silicon/M1 Preview) MySQL "no matching manifest for linux/arm64/v8 in the manifest list entries"

I'm running the latest build of the Docker Apple Silicon Preview. I created the tutorial container/images and it works fine. When I went to create a custom YAML file and run docker-compose I get the following error when pulling mysql:

ERROR: no matching manifest for linux/arm64/v8 in the manifest list entries

Here is a snippet from my YAMl file:

version: '3'
services: # Database db: image: mysql-server:5.7 volumes: - db_data:/var/lib/mysql restart: always environment: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: pass MYSQL_DATABASE: wp MYSQL_USER: wp MYSQL_PASSWORD: wp networks: - wpsite 

I've tried :latest and :8 which result in the same error. It pulls phpmyadmin and wordpress fine.

5

17 Answers

Well, technically it will not solve your issue (running MySQL on ARM), but for the time being, you could add platform to your service like:

services: db: platform: linux/x86_64 image: mysql:5.7 ...

Alternatively, consider using MariaDB, which should work as a drop-in replacement like e.g. this:

services: db: image: mariadb:10.5.8 ...

Both ways work for me on M1 with the Docker Preview

14

same problem for m1 mac just run this command

docker pull --platform linux/x86_64 mysql
3

From this answer, I added this to my local docker-compose.override.yml

services: mysql: platform: linux/amd64
1

Oracle maintains a MySQL 8.0.23 docker image for arm64.

To use it in your docker-compose file

version: "3.8"
services: mysql: container_name: mycontainername image: mysql/mysql-server:8.0.23 ports: - "3306:3306" environment: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: root MYSQL_DATABASE: mydatabasename MYSQL_ROOT_HOST: "%" command: --lower_case_table_names=1
4

Docker on its official documentation says:

Not all images are available for ARM64 architecture. You can add--platform linux/amd64 to run an Intel image under emulation. In particular, the mysql image is not available for ARM64. You can work around this issue by using a mariadb image.

(source here)

So what you should do to make your project work is to add platform: linux/amd64 to your docker-compose.yml.

It would look like:

services: mysql: image: mysql:5.7 platform: linux/amd64 ...

As you can imagine probably the performance won't be the same.

I had a similar issue, solved with this line in my dockerfile:

before

FROM ubuntu:18.04

after

FROM --platform=linux/x86_64 ubuntu:18.04
1

For anyone struggling to make it work with a specific version, the following didn't work for me:

docker run --platform linux/x86_64 mysql:5.7.26 -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=pass

but this did:

 docker run --platform linux/x86_64 mysql:5.7 -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=pass

This works for me in mac M1, specifying platform key inside service.

services: mysql: platform: linux/amd64 image: mysql:latest command: --default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password restart: always environment: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: example ports: - 3306:3306

can try start/run a container (for mac m1)

docker run -d -p 3306:3306 --name mysql --platform linux/x86_64 --env MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=12345 mysql
0

Please refer to the following link for known issues. In your Mac's terminal run

softwareupdate --install-rosetta

and then in docker-compose have something along the lines of

mysql_gdpr: platform: linux/x86_64 image: mysql/mysql-server:8.0.23 ports: - "3306:3306" environment: MYSQL_DATABASE: "user_security" MYSQL_RANDOM_ROOT_PASSWORD: 1 MYSQL_USER: "security" MYSQL_PASSWORD: "pleasechangeit"
2

Look at his github post

Since "Oracle only supplies pre-compile Arm64" binaries, you have it there with

Image --> mysql:8.0-oracle

docker run -d --name mysql-8 -p 3306:3306 -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=<your_password> mysql:8.0-oracle

Please note that when using --platform linux/x86_64 on arm64/v8 you may lose Linux Native AIO support.

Check out the docker container logs:

[ERROR] [MY-012585] [InnoDB] Linux Native AIO interface is not supported on this platform. Please check your OS documentation and install appropriate binary of InnoDB.
[Warning] [MY-012654] [InnoDB] Linux Native AIO disabled.

Consider using mysql/mysql-server instead, as it has arm64/v8 support out of the box.

This Github repo allows to build a MySQL 5.7 aarch64 image.

Building it with the following command (naming it the same as the official mysql:5.7 image) it will be used by default by all your docker-compose configurations or Dockerfiles that specify mysql:5.7.

docker build -t mysql:5.7 .

It means that you won't have updates from the official MySQL Dockerhub repo anymore, but as a temporary drop-in replacement I find it useful.

I've also encountered this issue on M1 Pro and to solve the most stable way for me was to disable buildkit in the Docker engine settings, meaning setting to false instead the default true. There is also an open issue here

Attempts to run x86 containers on M1 machines under emulation can crash. Even when the containers do run correctly under emulation, they will be slower and use more memory than the native equivalent. From here

0

Change the platform in docker command

Param : --platform linux/x86_64

This is for anyone who is here for the same issue but with the ibmcom/db2

You can use the below command to pull the db2 image

docker pull --platform linux/x86_64 ibmcom/db2:latest

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