Hosting
Hosting Chronicle means running the Chronicle Kernel as a standalone server process. The Kernel is the heart of the system — it manages the event store, processes projections, coordinates observers, and exposes the API that client applications connect to. All event-sourced state flows through it, so the Kernel must be running before any client can append or query events.
Chronicle ships as a Docker image, making it straightforward to run anywhere containers are supported — locally for development, in CI, or in production clusters.
Getting Started
Section titled “Getting Started”For day-to-day development, Docker Compose is the fastest way to get a Kernel and MongoDB running locally. Aspire is an alternative if your team uses the .NET Aspire application model.
Going to Production
Section titled “Going to Production”Running the Kernel in production requires two things beyond a basic Docker deployment:
- Production — how to deploy the Chronicle Docker image with MongoDB, including port configuration, Docker Compose setup, health checks, and security considerations.
- Data Protection Key Encryption — Chronicle uses ASP.NET Core Data Protection to protect sensitive values at rest. In production you must supply a certificate so that data protection keys are encrypted. Without this, the Kernel will either fail to start or leave keys unprotected.
Both steps are required. A production deployment that skips key encryption is not secure.
All Hosting Topics
Section titled “All Hosting Topics”- Production — Docker-based production deployment
- Data Protection Key Encryption — Certificate-backed key encryption for production
- Configuration — Complete configuration reference
- Aspire — Microsoft Aspire hosting integration
- Docker Compose — Multi-container setup for development and testing
- Local Certificates — TLS certificates for local development