![n8n.io - Workflow Automation](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/65276001/173571060-9f2f6d7b-bac0-43b6-bdb2-001da9694058.png) # n8n - Secure Workflow Automation for Technical Teams n8n is a workflow automation platform that gives technical teams the flexibility of code with the speed of no-code. With 400+ integrations, native AI capabilities, and a fair-code license, n8n lets you build powerful automations while maintaining full control over your data and deployments. ![n8n.io - Screenshot](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/n8n-io/n8n/master/assets/n8n-screenshot-readme.png) ## Key Capabilities - **Code When You Need It**: Write JavaScript/Python, add npm packages, or use the visual interface - **AI-Native Platform**: Build AI agent workflows based on LangChain with your own data and models - **Full Control**: Self-host with our fair-code license or use our [cloud offering](https://app.n8n.cloud/login) - **Enterprise-Ready**: Advanced permissions, SSO, and air-gapped deployments - **Active Community**: 400+ integrations and 900+ ready-to-use [templates](https://n8n.io/workflows) ## Contents - [n8n - Workflow automation tool](#n8n---workflow-automation-tool) - [Key Capabilities](#key-capabilities) - [Contents](#contents) - [Demo](#demo) - [Available integrations](#available-integrations) - [Documentation](#documentation) - [Start n8n in Docker](#start-n8n-in-docker) - [Start n8n with tunnel](#start-n8n-with-tunnel) - [Use with PostgreSQL](#use-with-postgresql) - [Passing sensitive data using files](#passing-sensitive-data-using-files) - [Example server setups](#example-server-setups) - [Updating](#updating) - [Pull latest (stable) version](#pull-latest-stable-version) - [Pull specific version](#pull-specific-version) - [Pull next (unstable) version](#pull-next-unstable-version) - [Updating with Docker Compose](#updating-with-docker-compose) - [Setting Timezone](#setting-the-timezone) - [Build Docker-Image](#build-docker-image) - [What does n8n mean and how do you pronounce it?](#what-does-n8n-mean-and-how-do-you-pronounce-it) - [Support](#support) - [Jobs](#jobs) - [License](#license) ## Demo This [:tv: short video (< 4 min)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpjQTGKm-ok) goes over key concepts of creating workflows in n8n. ## Available integrations n8n has 200+ different nodes to automate workflows. A full list can be found at [https://n8n.io/integrations](https://n8n.io/integrations). ## Documentation The official n8n documentation can be found at [https://docs.n8n.io](https://docs.n8n.io). Additional information and example workflows are available on the website at [https://n8n.io](https://n8n.io). ## Start n8n in Docker In the terminal, enter the following: ```bash docker volume create n8n_data docker run -it --rm \ --name n8n \ -p 5678:5678 \ -v n8n_data:/home/node/.n8n \ docker.n8n.io/n8nio/n8n ``` This command will download the required n8n image and start your container. You can then access n8n by opening: [http://localhost:5678](http://localhost:5678) To save your work between container restarts, it also mounts a docker volume, `n8n_data`. The workflow data gets saved in an SQLite database in the user folder (`/home/node/.n8n`). This folder also contains important data like the webhook URL and the encryption key used for securing credentials. If this data can't be found at startup n8n automatically creates a new key and any existing credentials can no longer be decrypted. ## Start n8n with tunnel > **WARNING**: This is only meant for local development and testing and should **NOT** be used in production! n8n must be reachable from the internet to make use of webhooks - essential for triggering workflows from external web-based services such as GitHub. To make this easier, n8n has a special tunnel service which redirects requests from our servers to your local n8n instance. You can inspect the code running this service here: [https://github.com/n8n-io/localtunnel](https://github.com/n8n-io/localtunnel) To use it simply start n8n with `--tunnel` ```bash docker volume create n8n_data docker run -it --rm \ --name n8n \ -p 5678:5678 \ -v n8n_data:/home/node/.n8n \ docker.n8n.io/n8nio/n8n \ start --tunnel ``` ## Use with PostgreSQL By default, n8n uses SQLite to save credentials, past executions and workflows. However, n8n also supports using PostgreSQL. > **WARNING**: Even when using a different database, it is still important to persist the `/home/node/.n8n` folder, which also contains essential n8n user data including the encryption key for the credentials. In the following commands, replace the placeholders (depicted within angled brackets, e.g. ``) with the actual data: ```bash docker volume create n8n_data docker run -it --rm \ --name n8n \ -p 5678:5678 \ -e DB_TYPE=postgresdb \ -e DB_POSTGRESDB_DATABASE= \ -e DB_POSTGRESDB_HOST= \ -e DB_POSTGRESDB_PORT= \ -e DB_POSTGRESDB_USER= \ -e DB_POSTGRESDB_SCHEMA= \ -e DB_POSTGRESDB_PASSWORD= \ -v n8n_data:/home/node/.n8n \ docker.n8n.io/n8nio/n8n ``` A full working setup with docker-compose can be found [here](https://github.com/n8n-io/n8n-hosting/blob/main/docker-compose/withPostgres/README.md). ## Passing sensitive data using files To avoid passing sensitive information via environment variables, "\_FILE" may be appended to some environment variable names. n8n will then load the data from a file with the given name. This makes it possible to load data easily from Docker and Kubernetes secrets. The following environment variables support file input: - DB_POSTGRESDB_DATABASE_FILE - DB_POSTGRESDB_HOST_FILE - DB_POSTGRESDB_PASSWORD_FILE - DB_POSTGRESDB_PORT_FILE - DB_POSTGRESDB_USER_FILE - DB_POSTGRESDB_SCHEMA_FILE ## Example server setups Example server setups for a range of cloud providers and scenarios can be found in the [Server Setup documentation](https://docs.n8n.io/hosting/installation/server-setups/). ## Updating Before you upgrade to the latest version make sure to check here if there are any breaking changes which may affect you: [Breaking Changes](https://github.com/n8n-io/n8n/blob/master/packages/cli/BREAKING-CHANGES.md) From your Docker Desktop, navigate to the Images tab and select Pull from the context menu to download the latest n8n image. You can also use the command line to pull the latest, or a specific version: ### Pull latest (stable) version ```bash docker pull docker.n8n.io/n8nio/n8n ``` ### Pull specific version ```bash docker pull docker.n8n.io/n8nio/n8n:0.220.1 ``` ### Pull next (unstable) version ```bash docker pull docker.n8n.io/n8nio/n8n:next ``` Stop the container and start it again: 1. Get the container ID: ```bash docker ps -a ``` 2. Stop the container with ID container_id: ```bash docker stop [container_id] ``` 3. Remove the container (this does not remove your user data) with ID container_id: ```bash docker rm [container_id] ``` 4. Start the new container: ```bash docker run --name=[container_name] [options] -d docker.n8n.io/n8nio/n8n ``` ### Updating with Docker Compose If you run n8n using a Docker Compose file, follow these steps to update n8n: ```bash # Pull latest version docker compose pull # Stop and remove older version docker compose down # Start the container docker compose up -d ``` ## Setting the timezone To specify the timezone n8n should use, the environment variable `GENERIC_TIMEZONE` can be set. One example where this variable has an effect is the Schedule node. The system's timezone can be set separately with the environment variable `TZ`. This controls the output of certain scripts and commands such as `$ date`. For example, to use the same timezone for both: ```bash docker run -it --rm \ --name n8n \ -p 5678:5678 \ -e GENERIC_TIMEZONE="Europe/Berlin" \ -e TZ="Europe/Berlin" \ docker.n8n.io/n8nio/n8n ``` For more information on configuration and environment variables, please see the [n8n documentation](https://docs.n8n.io/hosting/configuration/environment-variables/). Here's the refined version with good Markdown formatting, ready for your `README`: ## Build Docker Image **Important Note for Releases 1.101.0 and Later:** Building the n8n Docker image now requires a pre-compiled n8n application. ### Recommended Build Process: For the simplest approach that handles both n8n compilation and Docker image creation, run from the root directory: ```bash pnpm build:docker ``` ### Alternative Builders: If you are using a different build system that requires a separate build context, first compile the n8n application: ```bash pnpm run build:deploy ``` Then, ensure your builder's context includes the `compiled` directory generated by this command. ## What does n8n mean and how do you pronounce it? **Short answer:** It means "nodemation" and it is pronounced as n-eight-n. **Long answer:** I get that question quite often (more often than I expected) so I decided it is probably best to answer it here. While looking for a good name for the project with a free domain I realized very quickly that all the good ones I could think of were already taken. So, in the end, I chose nodemation. "node-" in the sense that it uses a Node-View and that it uses Node.js and "-mation" for "automation" which is what the project is supposed to help with. However, I did not like how long the name was and I could not imagine writing something that long every time in the CLI. That is when I then ended up on "n8n". Sure it does not work perfectly but neither does it for Kubernetes (k8s) and I did not hear anybody complain there. So I guess it should be ok. ## Support If you need more help with n8n, you can ask for support in the [n8n community forum](https://community.n8n.io). This is the best source of answers, as both the n8n support team and community members can help. ## Jobs If you are interested in working for n8n and so shape the future of the project check out our [job posts](https://jobs.ashbyhq.com/n8n). ## License You can find the license information [here](https://github.com/n8n-io/n8n/blob/master/README.md#license).