Docker-Devbox (DDB) is a set of utilities that allow easy setup, login and teardown of Docker containers, much in the vein of Vagrant. In addition, it provides per-user container customization, systemd and shares the invoking user's account and home directory into the containers for a consistent user experience.
DDB is intended for use in expendable development systems. It is not for use in production.
DDB will run Docker as the invoking user if that user is the superuser
or is in the docker
group. Otherwise, it will attempt to escalate
to the superuser using sudo(8)
. If you have containers and images
built as the superuser with older versions of DDB, it can be forced
into the old behavior by setting the environment variable
DDB_FORCE_ROOT
to any non-empty value.
Containers being run as the superuser are accessible to any other user with the same rights. The separation between users provided is for convenience, not security.
DDB has been tested on several distributions of Linux and macOS but should work on any operating system that can provide the following:
-
A POSIX-compliant shell and standard utilities, including
m4
. -
functioning instance of Docker or Podman with the latter configured to behave like Docker (i.e., it responds to
docker
commands). -
An account that is the superuser or can become the superuser via
sudo(8)
. For low-friction operation, it is recommended thatsudo
be configured to allow repeated use after providing a password or invocation of Docker (usually/bin/docker
) without requiring a password.
Clone this repository into a convenient place, such as
/opt/docker-devbox
, which will be used in subsequent examples.
In your shell's rc
(note that only Bourne-like, POSIX shells are
supported), add the following:
eval $(/opt/docker-devbox/setup)
To add convenience aliases (described below):
eval $(/opt/docker-devbox/setup --aliases)
# Set up Docker DevBox
you@host$ eval $(/opt/docker-devbox/setup --aliases)
# Build a customized-for-you image of EL9 plus Unibuild
you@host$ ddb build el9u
# Start that image in a container
you@host$ ddb boot tester el9u
Starting tester as el9u
f245ebc74207b5485a80602e4b676bd98443cdba2bb11cb8310ac7331eba555a
# Log into the container and do your business
you@host$ ddb login tester
you@tester$ ...do things...
you@tester$ exit
# Destroy the container
you@host$ ddb halt tester
The process of using DDB begins with creating a container from an
existing Docker image such as almalinux:8
or debian:10
. Any
container that Docker can pull
can be used.
The BASE
parameter names one of the base containers listed in
/opt/docker-devbox/etc/bases
to be used as the basis for the
DBB-customized container. The contents of that file may be customized
as needed. Note that DDB is built to support most currently-supported
variants of Red Hat and Debian Linux; running containers with other
distributions will require customization.
DDB will build a new image from the base, apply its own customizations
and then run the script found in ~/.ddb/prep.m4
if it exists. The
file is processed using M4 with the following macros made available
for making decisions about what to do:
Macro | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
__OS |
Operating system as reported by uname(1) |
Linux |
__DISTRO |
Operating system distribution, empty of not applicable | CentOS |
__FAMILY |
Operating system family, empty where not applicable | RedHat |
__RELEASE |
Operating system release | 7.9.2009 |
__CODENAME |
Codename of operating system release | Core |
__MAJOR |
Major version of RELEASE , empty if not present |
7 |
__MINOR |
Minor version of RELEASE , empty if not present |
9 |
__PATCH |
Patch version of RELEASE , empty if not present |
2009 |
__PACKAGING |
Type of packaging used by this system (Currently deb or rpm ) |
rpm |
__ARCH |
Machine architecture as reported by uname(1) |
x86_64 |
A sample of this file can be found in
/opt/docker-devbox/etc/prep-example.m4
.
Example:
[yourlogin@host ~]$ ddb build el8
... (Much Output Deleted) ...
Complete!
COMMIT ddb__yourlogin__el8
--> 65bce79d0be
Successfully tagged localhost/ddb__yourlogin__el8:latest
65bce79d0be3049a6f955e31c4b12fefebfe64606998c4be5af0cdcf5b4f0d90
[yourlogin@host ~]$
NOTE: The actual name of the image within Docker will be
ddb__USERNAME__BASE
, where USERNAME
is the invoking user's login
and BASE
is the shorthand for the base image provided when build
was invoked (e.g., ddb__steveb__el8
). This allows for multiple
users on the same system to have their own customized containers.
Additional macros may be supplied to the build process two ways:
On the command line, one or more instances of --define MACRO=VALUE
may be used when invoking build
, e.g.:
ddb build --define FOO=bar --define BAZ=quux
In the bases file (etc/bases
), macros can be defined after the name
of the base image, e.g.:
nine-plus almalinux:9 FOO=bar BAZ=quux
Note: All user-defined macros are, like those provided by
Unibuild, prefixed with a double underscore to prevent them from
colliding with useful words (e.g., FOO
will become __FOO
).
Once an image has been built, it can be instantiated as a container by booting it.
Example:
[yourlogin@host ~]$ ddb boot devel el8
[yourlogin@host ~]$
Aliases:
ddbb
=ddb boot
ddbbl
=ddb boot --login
NOTE: The actual name of the Docker container will be
ddb__USERNAME__NAME
, where USERNAME
is the invoking user's login
and NAME
is the NAME
parameter provided when boot
was invoked
(e.g., ddb__steveb__devel
). This allows for multiple users on the
same system to have their own same-named containers.
NOTE: The container is started in privileged mode. This will change in the near future.
This command starts a login shell in the container using your account.
Example:
[yourlogin@host ~]$ ddb login devel
[yourlogin@devel ~]$
... Do some things ...
[yourlogin@devel ~]$ exit
[yourlogin@host ~]$
Aliases:
ddbl
=ddb login
This command lists the containers running on your behalf.
[yourlogin@host ~]$ ddb ps
devel
test
issue-1234
[yourlogin@host ~]$
This command boots a container based on IMAGE
, logs into it and then
destroys it once the login session has exited.
Example:
[yourlogin@host ~]$ ddb ps
(No output)
[yourlogin@host ~]$ ddb quick el9u
Starting quick-GQTXmh6T from image el9u
b6067fd9d973c17b83c1ced2a8519d6ea40140eb15a438145c35be46f9707fc1
[yourlogin@quick-GQTXmh6T]$
[yourlogin@quick-GQTXmh6T]$ exit
logout
[yourlogin@host ~]$ ddb ps
(No output)
[yourlogin@host ~]$
Aliases:
ddbq
=ddb quick
This command halts and destroys running containers.
If given the --all
switch, all containers being run on the invoking
user's behalf will be destroyed.
Example:
[yourlogin@host ~]$ ddb halt devel
Powering off.
[yourlogin@host ~]$
Aliases:
ddbh
=ddb halt
This command will remove all DDB-created images and containers and
will prune all dangling Docker resources if the --prune
switch is
present. Note that pruning may remove non-DDB resources.
Some of the ideas for docker-devbox came from Akihiro Suda's containerized systemd.