Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: O.S. Tezer <ostezer@gmail.com> (github: ostezer)
2.8 KiB
page_title: Installation on Red Hat Enterprise Linux page_description: Please note this project is currently under heavy development. It should not be used in production. page_keywords: Docker, Docker documentation, requirements, linux, rhel, centos
Red Hat Enterprise Linux
Note
: Docker is still under heavy development! We don’t recommend using it in production yet, but we’re getting closer with each release. Please see our blog post, Getting to Docker 1.0
Note
: This is a community contributed installation path. The only ‘official’ installation is using the Ubuntu installation path. This version may be out of date because it depends on some binaries to be updated and published
Docker is available for RHEL on EPEL. These instructions should work for both RHEL and CentOS. They will likely work for other binary compatible EL6 distributions as well, but they haven’t been tested.
Please note that this package is part of Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (EPEL), a community effort to create and maintain additional packages for the RHEL distribution.
Also note that due to the current Docker limitations, Docker is able to run only on the 64 bit architecture.
You will need RHEL 6.5 or higher, with a RHEL 6 kernel version 2.6.32-431 or higher as this has specific kernel fixes to allow Docker to work.
Installation
Firstly, you need to install the EPEL repository. Please follow the EPEL installation instructions.
The docker-io
package provides Docker on EPEL.
If you already have the (unrelated) docker
package
installed, it will conflict with docker-io
.
There’s a bug
report filed for
it. To proceed with docker-io
installation, please
remove docker
first.
Next, let’s install the docker-io
package which
will install Docker on our host.
sudo yum -y install docker-io
To update the docker-io
package
sudo yum -y update docker-io
Now that it’s installed, let’s start the Docker daemon.
sudo service docker start
If we want Docker to start at boot, we should also:
sudo chkconfig docker on
Now let’s verify that Docker is working.
sudo docker run -i -t fedora /bin/bash
Done!, now continue with the Hello World example.
Issues?
If you have any issues - please report them directly in the Red Hat Bugzilla for docker-io component.