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4.7 KiB

Alias Tag Date DocType Hierarchy TimeStamp location CollapseMetaTable
docker
Computer
Server
Container
2021-09-19 Personal NonRoot
51.514678599999996
-0.18378583926867909
Yes

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Configuring docker

title: Summary
collapse: open
This note runs through [docker](https://docker.com), a free tool to create containers to run independent applications.

style: number


Installation

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Program installation

  1. Prerequisites
~~~bash
sudo apt update
sudo apt install curl apt-transport-https ca-certificates software-properties-common
~~~

If the packages are already installed and to the latest version, the OS will skip.

  1. Pull the software signature key & image
~~~bash
curl -fsSL https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu/gpg | sudo apt-key ad
sudo add-apt-repository "deb [arch=amd64] https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu focal stable"
~~~
  1. Install docker
~~~bash
sudo apt update
sudo apt install docker-ce docker-ce-cli containerd.io
~~~
  1. Test install
~~~bash
sudo systemctl status docker
~~~

Configuring user permissions

#^Top Users with sudo rights need to be added to the 'docker' group for being able to instruct docker:

~~~bash
sudo gpasswd -a (username) docker
sudo newgrp docker
~~~

Installing docker-compose

Docker-compose is a script generatir enabling leaner execution and update of each container. The following commands install the wizard.

~~~bash
sudo curl -L "https://github.com/docker/compose/releases/download/1.29.2/docker-compose-$(uname -s)-$(uname -m)" -o /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
~~~

File permissions need to be changed for docker-compose to be executable:

~~~bash
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
~~~

Installation can be checked as follows:

~~~bash
sudo dockercompose --version
~~~


docker elements

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docker network

In order for docker to work, each container needs an internal IP address. This is defined by an internal docker network as follows:

~~~bash
sudo docker network create --driver=bridge --subnet=xxx.yyy.zzz.0/24 --gateway=xxx.yyy.zzz.1 dockernet
~~~

x, y, z to be defined by the user.

Creating containers

Containers are created through docker-compose. Tutorial exist for each application to run in docker. In short:

  1. A directory for the app must be created
  2. A yaml file for docker-compose must be created in the folder
  3. The docker-compose command for initialisation must be run from the folder:
~~~bash
sudo docker-compose up -d
~~~

Maintaining containers

#^Top Maintaining containers with docker is arduous and easier to do with docker-compose. Easiest is to create aliases in the .bashrc of home directory by adding:

~~~bash
alias dc-up='sudo docker-compose --compatibility up -d'
alias dc-update='sudo docker-compose pull && sudo docker-compose --compatibility up -d'
alias dc-update-all='for d in ./*/ ; do (cd "$d" && dc-update); done'
~~~

To the following file:

~/.bashrc

The command needs to be run periodically.

Updating containers

For updating containers, just amend the docker-compose file and run the following command to preserve the mounted data:

~~~bash
docker-compose up -d
~~~

From within the container folder.

Update environment variables

#^Top Docker does not have a standard way to update environment variables, and requires to take down and then re-initialise a container with the appropriate variable fed in the run script. To avoid that, the followong steps can be taken:

  1. stop docker
~~~bash
sudo systemctl stop docker
~~~
  1. Edit the json config file
/var/lib/docker/containers/(container id)/config.v2.json

Within the 'Env' declaration, add the requested data field:

~~~bash
"DATA_FIELD=data_value"
~~~
  1. Restart docker
~~~bash
sudo systemctl start docker
~~~


Basic commands

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List containers

~~~bash
docker container ls
~~~

Execute commands in container

~~~bash
docker exec -it -u (username) (command)
~~~

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