1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/moby/moby.git synced 2022-11-09 12:21:53 -05:00

Merge branch 'master' of ssh://github.com/dotcloud/docker

This commit is contained in:
Solomon Hykes 2013-04-23 22:57:50 -07:00
commit 370fafacbf
16 changed files with 358 additions and 165 deletions

57
Vagrantfile vendored
View file

@ -2,19 +2,12 @@
# vi: set ft=ruby :
def v10(config)
config.vm.box = "quantal64_3.5.0-25"
config.vm.box_url = "http://get.docker.io/vbox/ubuntu/12.10/quantal64_3.5.0-25.box"
config.vm.box = 'precise64'
config.vm.box_url = 'http://files.vagrantup.com/precise64.box'
config.vm.share_folder "v-data", "/opt/go/src/github.com/dotcloud/docker", File.dirname(__FILE__)
# Ensure puppet is installed on the instance
config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "apt-get -qq update; apt-get install -y puppet"
config.vm.provision :puppet do |puppet|
puppet.manifests_path = "puppet/manifests"
puppet.manifest_file = "quantal64.pp"
puppet.module_path = "puppet/modules"
end
# Install ubuntu packaging dependencies and create ubuntu packages
config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "echo 'deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/dotcloud/lxc-docker/ubuntu precise main' >>/etc/apt/sources.list"
config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => 'export DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive; apt-get -qq update; apt-get install -qq -y --force-yes lxc-docker'
end
Vagrant::VERSION < "1.1.0" and Vagrant::Config.run do |config|
@ -30,11 +23,11 @@ Vagrant::VERSION >= "1.1.0" and Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
config.vm.box = "dummy"
config.vm.box_url = "https://github.com/mitchellh/vagrant-aws/raw/master/dummy.box"
aws.access_key_id = ENV["AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID"]
aws.secret_access_key = ENV["AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY"]
aws.secret_access_key = ENV["AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY"]
aws.keypair_name = ENV["AWS_KEYPAIR_NAME"]
aws.ssh_private_key_path = ENV["AWS_SSH_PRIVKEY"]
aws.region = "us-east-1"
aws.ami = "ami-ae9806c7"
aws.ami = "ami-d0f89fb9"
aws.ssh_username = "ubuntu"
aws.instance_type = "t1.micro"
end
@ -51,7 +44,39 @@ Vagrant::VERSION >= "1.1.0" and Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
end
config.vm.provider :virtualbox do |vb|
config.vm.box = "quantal64_3.5.0-25"
config.vm.box_url = "http://get.docker.io/vbox/ubuntu/12.10/quantal64_3.5.0-25.box"
config.vm.box = 'precise64'
config.vm.box_url = 'http://files.vagrantup.com/precise64.box'
end
end
Vagrant::VERSION >= "1.2.0" and Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
config.vm.provider :aws do |aws, override|
config.vm.box = "dummy"
config.vm.box_url = "https://github.com/mitchellh/vagrant-aws/raw/master/dummy.box"
aws.access_key_id = ENV["AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID"]
aws.secret_access_key = ENV["AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY"]
aws.keypair_name = ENV["AWS_KEYPAIR_NAME"]
override.ssh.private_key_path = ENV["AWS_SSH_PRIVKEY"]
override.ssh.username = "ubuntu"
aws.region = "us-east-1"
aws.ami = "ami-d0f89fb9"
aws.instance_type = "t1.micro"
end
config.vm.provider :rackspace do |rs|
config.vm.box = "dummy"
config.vm.box_url = "https://github.com/mitchellh/vagrant-rackspace/raw/master/dummy.box"
config.ssh.private_key_path = ENV["RS_PRIVATE_KEY"]
rs.username = ENV["RS_USERNAME"]
rs.api_key = ENV["RS_API_KEY"]
rs.public_key_path = ENV["RS_PUBLIC_KEY"]
rs.flavor = /512MB/
rs.image = /Ubuntu/
end
config.vm.provider :virtualbox do |vb|
config.vm.box = 'precise64'
config.vm.box_url = 'http://files.vagrantup.com/precise64.box'
end
end

View file

@ -51,6 +51,7 @@ docs:
cp sources/dotcloud.yml $(BUILDDIR)/html/
cp sources/CNAME $(BUILDDIR)/html/
cp sources/.nojekyll $(BUILDDIR)/html/
cp sources/nginx.conf $(BUILDDIR)/html/
@echo
@echo "Build finished. The HTML pages are in $(BUILDDIR)/html."

View file

@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ Save the changed we just made in the container to a new image called "_/builds/g
WEB_WORKER=$(docker run -d -p 5000 $BUILD_IMG /usr/local/bin/runapp)
- **"docker run -d "** run a command in a new container. We pass "-d" so it runs as a daemon.
**"-p 5000"* the web app is going to listen on this port, so it must be mapped from the container to the host system.
- **"-p 5000"** the web app is going to listen on this port, so it must be mapped from the container to the host system.
- **"$BUILD_IMG"** is the image we want to run the command inside of.
- **/usr/local/bin/runapp** is the command which starts the web app.

View file

@ -71,34 +71,40 @@
<h2>
<a name="installing-on-ubuntu-1204-and-1210" class="anchor" href="#installing-on-ubuntu-1204-and-1210"><span class="mini-icon mini-icon-link"></span>
</a>Installing on Ubuntu</h2>
<p><strong>Requirements</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Ubuntu 12.04 (LTS) (64-bit)</li>
<li> or Ubuntu 12.10 (quantal) (64-bit)</li>
</ul>
<ol>
<li>
<p>Install dependencies:</p>
<p><strong>Install dependencies</strong></p>
The linux-image-extra package is only needed on standard Ubuntu EC2 AMIs in order to install the aufs kernel module.
<pre>sudo apt-get install linux-image-extra-`uname -r`</pre>
<div class="highlight">
<pre>sudo apt-get install lxc wget bsdtar curl</pre>
<pre>sudo apt-get install linux-image-extra-<span class="sb">`</span>uname -r<span class="sb">`</span></pre></div>
<p>The <code>linux-image-extra</code> package is needed on standard Ubuntu EC2 AMIs in order to install the aufs kernel module.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Install the latest docker binary:</p>
<p><strong>Install Docker</strong></p>
<p>Add the Ubuntu PPA (Personal Package Archive) sources to your apt sources list, update and install.</p>
<p>You may see some warnings that the GPG keys cannot be verified.</p>
<div class="highlight">
<pre>sudo sh -c "echo 'deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/dotcloud/lxc-docker/ubuntu precise main' >> /etc/apt/sources.list"</pre>
<pre>sudo apt-get update</pre>
<pre>sudo apt-get install lxc-docker</pre>
</div>
</li>
<li>
<p><strong>Run!</strong></p>
<div class="highlight">
<pre>wget http://get.docker.io/builds/<span class="k">$(</span>uname -s<span class="k">)</span>/<span class="k">$(</span>uname -m<span class="k">)</span>/docker-master.tgz</pre>
<pre>tar -xf docker-master.tgz</pre>
<pre>docker run -i -t ubuntu /bin/bash</pre>
</div>
</li>
<li>
<p>Run your first container!</p>
<div class="highlight"><pre><span class="nb">cd </span>docker-master</pre>
<pre>sudo ./docker run -i -t base /bin/bash</pre>
</div>
<p>Done!</p>
<p>Consider adding docker to your <code>PATH</code> for simplicity.</p>
</li>
Continue with the <a href="http://docs.docker.io/en/latest/examples/hello_world/">Hello world</a> example.
</ol>
</section>
@ -117,7 +123,7 @@
vagrant and an Ubuntu virtual machine.</strong></p>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://docs.docker.io/en/latest/installation/macos/">Mac OS X and other linuxes</a></li>
<li><a href="http://docs.docker.io/en/latest/installation/vagrant/">Mac OS X and other linuxes</a></li>
<li><a href="http://docs.docker.io/en/latest/installation/windows/">Windows</a></li>
</ul>

View file

@ -1,8 +1,9 @@
Amazon EC2
==========
Please note this is a community contributed installation path. The only 'official' installation is using the :ref:`ubuntu_linux` installation path. This version
may be out of date because it depends on some binaries to be updated and published
Please note this is a community contributed installation path. The only 'official' installation is using the
:ref:`ubuntu_linux` installation path. This version may sometimes be out of date.
Installation
------------
@ -17,7 +18,7 @@ Docker can now be installed on Amazon EC2 with a single vagrant command. Vagrant
vagrant plugin install vagrant-aws
3. Get the docker sources, this will give you the latest Vagrantfile and puppet manifests.
3. Get the docker sources, this will give you the latest Vagrantfile.
::

View file

@ -3,6 +3,10 @@
Arch Linux
==========
Please note this is a community contributed installation path. The only 'official' installation is using the
:ref:`ubuntu_linux` installation path. This version may sometimes be out of date.
Installing on Arch Linux is not officially supported but can be handled via
either of the following AUR packages:
@ -40,6 +44,7 @@ new kernel will be compiled and this can take quite a while.
yaourt -S lxc-docker-git
Starting Docker
---------------
@ -52,6 +57,7 @@ There is a systemd service unit created for docker. To start the docker service
sudo systemctl start docker
To start on system boot:
::

View file

@ -0,0 +1,53 @@
.. _binaries:
Binaries
========
**Please note this project is currently under heavy development. It should not be used in production.**
Right now, the officially supported distributions are:
- Ubuntu 12.04 (precise LTS) (64-bit)
- Ubuntu 12.10 (quantal) (64-bit)
Install dependencies:
---------------------
::
sudo apt-get install lxc bsdtar
sudo apt-get install linux-image-extra-`uname -r`
The linux-image-extra package is needed on standard Ubuntu EC2 AMIs in order to install the aufs kernel module.
Install the docker binary:
::
wget http://get.docker.io/builds/Linux/x86_64/docker-master.tgz
tar -xf docker-master.tgz
sudo cp ./docker-master /usr/local/bin
Note: docker currently only supports 64-bit Linux hosts.
Run the docker daemon
---------------------
::
sudo docker -d &
Run your first container!
-------------------------
::
docker run -i -t ubuntu /bin/bash
Continue with the :ref:`hello_world` example.

View file

@ -13,8 +13,9 @@ Contents:
:maxdepth: 1
ubuntulinux
binaries
archlinux
macos
vagrant
windows
amazon
upgrading

View file

@ -1,66 +0,0 @@
Mac OS X and other linux
========================
Please note this is a community contributed installation path. The only 'official' installation is using the :ref:`ubuntu_linux` installation path. This version
may be out of date because it depends on some binaries to be updated and published
Requirements
------------
We currently rely on some Ubuntu-linux specific packages, this will change in the future, but for now we provide a
streamlined path to install Virtualbox with a Ubuntu 12.10 image using Vagrant.
1. Install virtualbox from https://www.virtualbox.org/ (or use your package manager)
2. Install vagrant from http://www.vagrantup.com/ (or use your package manager)
3. Install git if you had not installed it before, check if it is installed by running
``git`` in a terminal window
We recommend having at least about 2Gb of free disk space and 2Gb RAM (or more).
Installation
------------
1. Fetch the docker sources
.. code-block:: bash
git clone https://github.com/dotcloud/docker.git
2. Run vagrant from the sources directory
.. code-block:: bash
vagrant up
Vagrant will:
* Download the Quantal64 base ubuntu virtual machine image from get.docker.io/
* Boot this image in virtualbox
Then it will use Puppet to perform an initial setup in this machine:
* Download & untar the most recent docker binary tarball to vagrant homedir.
* Debootstrap to /var/lib/docker/images/ubuntu.
* Install & run dockerd as service.
* Put docker in /usr/local/bin.
* Put latest Go toolchain in /usr/local/go.
You now have a Ubuntu Virtual Machine running with docker pre-installed.
To access the VM and use Docker, Run ``vagrant ssh`` from the same directory as where you ran
``vagrant up``. Vagrant will make sure to connect you to the correct VM.
.. code-block:: bash
vagrant ssh
Now you are in the VM, run docker
.. code-block:: bash
docker
Continue with the :ref:`hello_world` example.

View file

@ -1,56 +1,61 @@
.. _ubuntu_linux:
Installing on Ubuntu Linux
==========================
Ubuntu Linux
============
**Please note this project is currently under heavy development. It should not be used in production.**
Installing on Ubuntu 12.04 and 12.10
Right now, the officially supported distributions are:
* Ubuntu 12.04 (precise LTS)
* Ubuntu 12.10 (quantal)
- Ubuntu 12.04 (precise LTS) (64-bit)
- Ubuntu 12.10 (quantal) (64-bit)
Install dependencies:
---------------------
Dependencies
------------
::
The linux-image-extra package is only needed on standard Ubuntu EC2 AMIs in order to install the aufs kernel module.
sudo apt-get install lxc bsdtar
sudo apt-get install linux-image-extra-`uname -r`
.. code-block:: bash
The linux-image-extra package is needed on standard Ubuntu EC2 AMIs in order to install the aufs kernel module.
Install the docker binary
-------------------------
::
wget http://get.docker.io/builds/Linux/x86_64/docker-master.tgz
tar -xf docker-master.tgz
sudo cp ./docker-master /usr/local/bin
Note: docker currently only supports 64-bit Linux hosts.
sudo apt-get install linux-image-extra-`uname -r`
Run the docker daemon
---------------------
Installation
------------
::
sudo docker -d &
Run your first container!
-------------------------
::
docker run -i -t ubuntu /bin/bash
Docker is available as a Ubuntu PPA (Personal Package Archive),
`hosted on launchpad <https://launchpad.net/~dotcloud/+archive/lxc-docker>`_
which makes installing Docker on Ubuntu very easy.
Check out more examples
-----------------------
Continue with the :ref:`hello_world` example.
Add the custom package sources to your apt sources list. Copy and paste the following lines at once.
.. code-block:: bash
sudo sh -c "echo 'deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/dotcloud/lxc-docker/ubuntu precise main' >> /etc/apt/sources.list"
Update your sources. You will see a warning that GPG signatures cannot be verified.
.. code-block:: bash
sudo apt-get update
Now install it, you will see another warning that the package cannot be authenticated. Confirm install.
.. code-block:: bash
sudo apt-get install lxc-docker
Verify it worked
.. code-block:: bash
docker
**Done!**, now continue with the :ref:`hello_world` example.

View file

@ -3,7 +3,8 @@
Upgrading
============
We assume you are upgrading from within the operating system which runs your docker daemon.
These instructions are for upgrading your Docker binary for when you had a custom (non package manager) installation.
If you istalled docker using apt-get, use that to upgrade.
Get the latest docker binary:

View file

@ -0,0 +1,70 @@
.. _install_using_vagrant:
Using Vagrant
=============
Please note this is a community contributed installation path. The only 'official' installation is using the
:ref:`ubuntu_linux` installation path. This version may sometimes be out of date.
**Requirements:**
This guide will setup a new virtual machine with docker installed on your computer. This works on most operating
systems, including MacOX, Windows, Linux, FreeBSD and others. If you can install these and have at least 400Mb RAM
to spare you should be good.
Install Vagrant and Virtualbox
------------------------------
1. Install virtualbox from https://www.virtualbox.org/ (or use your package manager)
2. Install vagrant from http://www.vagrantup.com/ (or use your package manager)
3. Install git if you had not installed it before, check if it is installed by running
``git`` in a terminal window
Spin it up
----------
1. Fetch the docker sources (this includes the Vagrantfile for machine setup).
.. code-block:: bash
git clone https://github.com/dotcloud/docker.git
2. Run vagrant from the sources directory
.. code-block:: bash
vagrant up
Vagrant will:
* Download the 'official' Precise64 base ubuntu virtual machine image from vagrantup.com
* Boot this image in virtualbox
* Add the `Docker PPA sources <https://launchpad.net/~dotcloud/+archive/lxc-docker>`_ to /etc/apt/sources.lst
* Update your sources
* Install lxc-docker
You now have a Ubuntu Virtual Machine running with docker pre-installed.
Connect
-------
To access the VM and use Docker, Run ``vagrant ssh`` from the same directory as where you ran
``vagrant up``. Vagrant will connect you to the correct VM.
.. code-block:: bash
vagrant ssh
Run
-----
Now you are in the VM, run docker
.. code-block:: bash
docker
Continue with the :ref:`hello_world` example.

View file

@ -3,8 +3,8 @@
:keywords: Docker, Docker documentation, Windows, requirements, virtualbox, vagrant, git, ssh, putty, cygwin
Windows
=========
Windows (with Vagrant)
======================
Please note this is a community contributed installation path. The only 'official' installation is using the :ref:`ubuntu_linux` installation path. This version
may be out of date because it depends on some binaries to be updated and published

6
docs/sources/nginx.conf Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
# rule to redirect original links created when hosted on github pages
rewrite ^/documentation/(.*).html http://docs.docker.io/en/latest/$1/ permanent;
# rewrite the stuff which was on the current page
rewrite ^/gettingstarted.html$ /gettingstarted/ permanent;

View file

@ -1,30 +1,110 @@
lxc-docker (0.1.8-1) precise; urgency=low
- Dynamically detect cgroup capabilities
- Issue stability warning on kernels <3.8
- 'docker push' buffers on disk instead of memory
- Fix 'docker diff' for removed files
- Fix 'docker stop' for ghost containers
- Fix handling of pidfile
- Various bugfixes and stability improvements
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Mon, 22 Apr 2013 00:00:00 -0700
lxc-docker (0.1.7-1) precise; urgency=low
- Container ports are available on localhost
- 'docker ps' shows allocated TCP ports
- Contributors can run 'make hack' to start a continuous integration VM
- Streamline ubuntu packaging & uploading
- Various bugfixes and stability improvements
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Thu, 18 Apr 2013 00:00:00 -0700
lxc-docker (0.1.6-1) precise; urgency=low
Improvements [+], Updates [*], Bug fixes [-]:
+ Multiple improvements, updates and bug fixes
- Record the author an image with 'docker commit -author'
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Wed, 17 Apr 2013 20:43:43 -0700
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Wed, 17 Apr 2013 00:00:00 -0700
lxc-docker (0.1.4.1-1) precise; urgency=low
lxc-docker (0.1.5-1) precise; urgency=low
Improvements [+], Updates [*], Bug fixes [-]:
* Test PPA
- Disable standalone mode
- Use a custom DNS resolver with 'docker -d -dns'
- Detect ghost containers
- Improve diagnosis of missing system capabilities
- Allow disabling memory limits at compile time
- Add debian packaging
- Documentation: installing on Arch Linux
- Documentation: running Redis on docker
- Fixed lxc 0.9 compatibility
- Automatically load aufs module
- Various bugfixes and stability improvements
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Mon, 15 Apr 2013 12:14:50 -0700
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Wed, 17 Apr 2013 00:00:00 -0700
lxc-docker (0.1.4-1) precise; urgency=low
Improvements [+], Updates [*], Bug fixes [-]:
* Changed default bridge interface do 'docker0'
- Fix a race condition when running the port allocator
- Full support for TTY emulation
- Detach from a TTY session with the escape sequence `C-p C-q`
- Various bugfixes and stability improvements
- Minor UI improvements
- Automatically create our own bridge interface 'docker0'
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Fri, 12 Apr 2013 12:20:06 -0700
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Tue, 9 Apr 2013 00:00:00 -0700
lxc-docker (0.1.0-1) unstable; urgency=low
lxc-docker (0.1.3-1) precise; urgency=low
* Initial release
- Choose TCP frontend port with '-p :PORT'
- Layer format is versioned
- Major reliability improvements to the process manager
- Various bugfixes and stability improvements
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Mon, 25 Mar 2013 05:51:12 -0700
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Thu, 4 Apr 2013 00:00:00 -0700
lxc-docker (0.1.2-1) precise; urgency=low
- Set container hostname with 'docker run -h'
- Selective attach at run with 'docker run -a [stdin[,stdout[,stderr]]]'
- Various bugfixes and stability improvements
- UI polish
- Progress bar on push/pull
- Use XZ compression by default
- Make IP allocator lazy
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Wed, 3 Apr 2013 00:00:00 -0700
lxc-docker (0.1.1-1) precise; urgency=low
- Display shorthand IDs for convenience
- Stabilize process management
- Layers can include a commit message
- Simplified 'docker attach'
- Fixed support for re-attaching
- Various bugfixes and stability improvements
- Auto-download at run
- Auto-login on push
- Beefed up documentation
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Sun, 31 Mar 2013 00:00:00 -0700
lxc-docker (0.1.0-1) precise; urgency=low
- First release
- Implement registry in order to push/pull images
- TCP port allocation
- Fix termcaps on Linux
- Add documentation
- Add Vagrant support with Vagrantfile
- Add unit tests
- Add repository/tags to ease image management
- Improve the layer implementation
-- dotCloud <ops@dotcloud.com> Sat, 23 Mar 2013 00:00:00 -0700

View file

@ -15,9 +15,12 @@ accessed adding the following line to /etc/apt/sources.list ::
Releasing a new package
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The most relevant information to update is the changelog file:
The most relevant information to update is the packaging/ubuntu/changelog file:
Each new release should create a new first paragraph with new release version,
changes, and the maintainer information.
changes, and the maintainer information. The core of this paragraph is
located on CHANGELOG.md. Make sure to transcribe it and translate the formats
(eg: packaging/ubuntu/changelog uses 2 spaces for body change descriptions
instead of 1 space from CHANGELOG.md)
Assuming your PPA GPG signing key is on /media/usbdrive/docker.key, load it
into the GPG_KEY environment variable with::
@ -28,8 +31,9 @@ into the GPG_KEY environment variable with::
After this is done and you are ready to upload the package to the PPA, you have
a couple of choices:
* Follow README.debian to generate the actual source packages and upload them
to the PPA
* Follow packaging/ubuntu/README.ubuntu to generate the actual source packages
and upload them to the PPA
* Let vagrant do all the work for you::
( cd docker/packaging/ubuntu; vagrant up )