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moby--moby/docs/installation/binaries.md
Mary Anthony e310d070f4 Creating Engine specific menu
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Signed-off-by: Mary Anthony <mary@docker.com>
2016-01-26 15:58:53 -08:00

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Binaries

This instruction set is meant for hackers who want to try out Docker on a variety of environments.

Before following these directions, you should really check if a packaged version of Docker is already available for your distribution. We have packages for many distributions, and more keep showing up all the time!

Check runtime dependencies

To run properly, docker needs the following software to be installed at runtime:

  • iptables version 1.4 or later
  • Git version 1.7 or later
  • procps (or similar provider of a "ps" executable)
  • XZ Utils 4.9 or later
  • a properly mounted cgroupfs hierarchy (having a single, all-encompassing "cgroup" mount point is not sufficient)

Check kernel dependencies

Docker in daemon mode has specific kernel requirements. For details, check your distribution in Installation.

A 3.10 Linux kernel is the minimum requirement for Docker. Kernels older than 3.10 lack some of the features required to run Docker containers. These older versions are known to have bugs which cause data loss and frequently panic under certain conditions.

The latest minor version (3.x.y) of the 3.10 (or a newer maintained version) Linux kernel is recommended. Keeping the kernel up to date with the latest minor version will ensure critical kernel bugs get fixed.

Warning

: Installing custom kernels and kernel packages is probably not supported by your Linux distribution's vendor. Please make sure to ask your vendor about Docker support first before attempting to install custom kernels on your distribution.

Warning

: Installing a newer kernel might not be enough for some distributions which provide packages which are too old or incompatible with newer kernels.

Note that Docker also has a client mode, which can run on virtually any Linux kernel (it even builds on OS X!).

Enable AppArmor and SELinux when possible

Please use AppArmor or SELinux if your Linux distribution supports either of the two. This helps improve security and blocks certain types of exploits. Your distribution's documentation should provide detailed steps on how to enable the recommended security mechanism.

Some Linux distributions enable AppArmor or SELinux by default and they run a kernel which doesn't meet the minimum requirements (3.10 or newer). Updating the kernel to 3.10 or newer on such a system might not be enough to start Docker and run containers. Incompatibilities between the version of AppArmor/SELinux user space utilities provided by the system and the kernel could prevent Docker from running, from starting containers or, cause containers to exhibit unexpected behaviour.

Warning

: If either of the security mechanisms is enabled, it should not be disabled to make Docker or its containers run. This will reduce security in that environment, lose support from the distribution's vendor for the system, and might break regulations and security policies in heavily regulated environments.

Get the Docker binary

You can download either the latest release binary or a specific version. After downloading a binary file, you must set the file's execute bit to run it.

To set the file's execute bit on Linux and OS X:

$ chmod +x docker

To get the list of stable release version numbers from GitHub, view the docker/docker releases page.

Note

  1. You can get the MD5 and SHA256 hashes by appending .md5 and .sha256 to the URLs respectively

  2. You can get the compressed binaries by appending .tgz to the URLs

Get the Linux binary

To download the latest version for Linux, use the following URLs:

https://get.docker.com/builds/Linux/i386/docker-latest

https://get.docker.com/builds/Linux/x86_64/docker-latest

To download a specific version for Linux, use the following URL patterns:

https://get.docker.com/builds/Linux/i386/docker-<version>

https://get.docker.com/builds/Linux/x86_64/docker-<version>

For example:

https://get.docker.com/builds/Linux/i386/docker-1.9.1

https://get.docker.com/builds/Linux/x86_64/docker-1.9.1

Get the Mac OS X binary

The Mac OS X binary is only a client. You cannot use it to run the docker daemon. To download the latest version for Mac OS X, use the following URLs:

https://get.docker.com/builds/Darwin/x86_64/docker-latest

To download a specific version for Mac OS X, use the following URL patterns:

https://get.docker.com/builds/Darwin/x86_64/docker-<version>

For example:

https://get.docker.com/builds/Darwin/x86_64/docker-1.9.1

Get the Windows binary

You can only download the Windows client binary for version 1.9.1 onwards. Moreover, the binary is only a client, you cannot use it to run the docker daemon. To download the latest version for Windows, use the following URLs:

https://get.docker.com/builds/Windows/i386/docker-latest.exe

https://get.docker.com/builds/Windows/x86_64/docker-latest.exe

To download a specific version for Windows, use the following URL pattern:

https://get.docker.com/builds/Windows/i386/docker-<version>.exe

https://get.docker.com/builds/Windows/x86_64/docker-<version>.exe

For example:

https://get.docker.com/builds/Windows/i386/docker-1.9.1.exe

https://get.docker.com/builds/Windows/x86_64/docker-1.9.1.exe

Run the Docker daemon

# start the docker in daemon mode from the directory you unpacked
$ sudo ./docker daemon &

Giving non-root access

The docker daemon always runs as the root user, and the docker daemon binds to a Unix socket instead of a TCP port. By default that Unix socket is owned by the user root, and so, by default, you can access it with sudo.

If you (or your Docker installer) create a Unix group called docker and add users to it, then the docker daemon will make the ownership of the Unix socket read/writable by the docker group when the daemon starts. The docker daemon must always run as the root user, but if you run the docker client as a user in the docker group then you don't need to add sudo to all the client commands.

Warning

: The docker group (or the group specified with -G) is root-equivalent; see Docker Daemon Attack Surface details.

Upgrades

To upgrade your manual installation of Docker, first kill the docker daemon:

$ killall docker

Then follow the regular installation steps.

Run your first container!

# check your docker version
$ sudo ./docker version

# run a container and open an interactive shell in the container
$ sudo ./docker run -i -t ubuntu /bin/bash

Continue with the User Guide.